How do I differentiate “me” from the addiction + ADHD mix?
When you live with both ADHD and addiction, it can be hard to know where one ends and the other begins. According to NHS guidance, ADHD traits like impulsivity, emotional volatility, and executive dysfunction can blur the line between who you are and what your symptoms or behaviours look like. This overlap often fuels guilt and confusion, leading many to wonder, “Is this really me, or just the ADHD and addiction talking?”
Why ADHD and addiction merge into identity
NICE guidance (NG87) recognises that ADHD and substance misuse often create what’s called self-concept disturbance, when someone struggles to separate their sense of self from the effects of both conditions. Impulsivity and emotional dysregulation can make reactions feel uncontrollable, and loss of agency can erode confidence in one’s own intentions. A PubMed search found that adults with ADHD and addiction often describe this as identity confusion: feeling that addictive choices define them, even when they understand the neurological roots of those impulses.
Shame, rejection, and self-blame
The Royal College of Psychiatrists explains that rejection sensitivity and chronic shame are common in ADHD and can intensify when addiction is involved. Many people internalise blame for their behaviours, believing the condition reflects their character rather than their symptoms. In a PMC Review , researchers found that shame and self-stigma reinforce identity diffusion, making recovery and self-acceptance harder to sustain.
Rebuilding a separate “you”
The key to recovery is reconstructing identity, learning to distinguish between “the illness” and “the individual.” Therapeutic approaches such as motivational interviewing, psychoeducation, and peer recovery groups can help rebuild self-understanding and reduce self-stigma. Services like Theara Change are developing behavioural and coaching programmes that focus on emotional regulation and identity rebuilding, offering structured psychological support alongside medical treatment.
Takeaway
It is easy to feel lost when ADHD and addiction overlap, but the truth is: you are still there. Recognising that symptoms and behaviours do not define your worth is the first step toward recovery. With compassionate, evidence-based care and space to rediscover your own identity, it becomes possible to separate the condition from the person.

