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Masking, Oversharing & Body Doubling

ADHD shapes how you move through social situations — sometimes by hiding, sometimes by spilling too much, and sometimes by leaning on another person’s presence to function. These three sit together because they’re all about other people and your nervous system.

At a party, you’re mentally shouting at yourself: “Don’t interrupt, make eye contact, don’t fidget!” You leave feeling like you just ran a marathon.

You can’t seem to fold laundry alone, but if a friend sits on your bed and talks to you while you do it, you finish the whole pile effortlessly.

Tap any to expand.

Masking

The exhausting “performance” of acting neurotypical to fit in — suppressing the urge to fidget, forcing eye contact, monitoring every word. It works in the moment but burns enormous energy and often leads to burnout.

Oversharing (verbal impulsivity)

A thin filter between brain and mouth, usually driven by a desire to connect quickly. It shows up as vulnerability hangovers (the wave of regret after realizing you told someone too much) and trauma dumping (sharing something heavy in a casual setting because the brain didn’t flag it as “too much for this moment”).

Body doubling

The presence of another person acts as an anchor for focus. They don’t have to help — or even talk. Their being there creates gentle accountability and helps the brain stay on task. Around 80% of people with ADHD report getting noticeably more done when someone else is simply present.

Self-referential empathy

Sharing a personal story to show you relate — “I know how you feel, my cat died last year.” The intent is “I’m with you,” but it can land as making it about yourself.

  • Leaving social events drained, like you performed for hours
  • The next-day cringe after sharing too much with someone you barely know
  • Chores being impossible alone but easy with a friend just hanging out nearby

Unlike masking and oversharing, body doubling is a strength to lean into, not a trait to manage. It’s the basis for several practical techniques.