How to Forgive Yourself for Interrupting Due to ADHD
If you live with ADHD, you have probably had moments where you interrupted someone mid-sentence and then replayed it endlessly afterwards. It is a common experience, but it is important to remember that interrupting is not arrogance or carelessness. It is often a reflection of how ADHD affects impulse control and emotional regulation, not a failure of respect.
Understanding why it happens
According to the Royal College of Psychiatrists, impulsivity and poor emotional regulation can make it harder to pause before speaking. When thoughts come quickly, or emotions run high, people with ADHD may jump in to share before they forget. A 2024 PubMed study by Marques et al. confirmed that difficulties in emotional regulation amplify impulsive behaviours, including conversational interruptions, especially under stress.
Interrupting does not mean you do not care; it reflects a moment where the ADHD brain inhibition system simply reacts faster than it can regulate.
Practising self-forgiveness
Evidence shows that self-compassion is essential for managing ADHD-related guilt and shame. In a 2025 study, Nordby etal. (2024) found that adults who participated in mindfulness and CBT-based ADHD interventions reported stronger emotional acceptance and self-forgiveness. Likewise, Milone et al. (2022) observed that higher self-forgiveness leads to lower guilt and better emotional responsibility.
These findings echo the APA’s guidance that mindfulness and compassion-based therapy can reduce shame and build tolerance for mistakes, helping people see interruptions as moments for learning, not self-blame.
Building emotional balance
According to Mind UK, guilt after interrupting can spiral into low self-worth or avoidance. Approaches such as CBT, mindfulness, and compassion-focused therapy can help shift from negative self-talk to understanding your emotional triggers. A 2023 PubMed study showed that even self-guided CBT tools improved impulsivity control and self-regulation among adults with ADHD.
It is also helpful to reframe impulsivity as a sign of enthusiasm, energy, or creativity, as suggested by Schippers et al. (2022). Seeing your ADHD traits as part of your personality rather than flaws can foster self-acceptance.
Gentle next steps
If you are seeking practical support for emotional regulation or communication skills, behavioural programmes such as Theara Change offer coaching-based strategies rooted in evidence-based psychology to help build emotional awareness and resilience.
Takeaway
Interrupting is part of how ADHD brains process emotion and thought, not a moral failing. According to both NHS and international research, learning self-forgiveness and practising emotional regulation help replace guilt with growth. You do not need to apologise for being human, just understand yourself better and keep learning from each conversation.

