ADHD & Trump’s Behavior: Rambling | by John Kruse MD, PhD | Medium


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Analysis of President Trump's Speech Patterns

This article by John Kruse, MD, PhD, examines President Trump's communication style, linking it to potential symptoms of ADHD. The author focuses on instances of what he terms 'rambling' in Trump's public appearances and interviews.

Key Arguments

The author argues that Trump's lengthy, confused, and often self-contradictory speech patterns may be attributed to executive function deficits common in individuals with ADHD. These deficits impact the ability to organize thoughts and maintain focus, leading to a meandering and tangential speech style.

  • Difficulty organizing thoughts leads to a flurry of related and unrelated ideas.
  • The drive for completeness or accuracy causes revisions and amendments, further contributing to rambling.
  • Poor impulse control compels the speaker to vocalize extraneous thoughts.

The author acknowledges that this analysis does not imply all individuals with ADHD exhibit similar speech patterns, nor that ADHD is the sole explanation for Trump's behavior. The article aims to focus specifically on the ADHD aspects of his communication style without venturing into political commentary or broader mental health assessments.

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A.B.O.U.T. Behavior #11 : Rambling

For one year, my weekly blog will address recent utterances or actions of Mr. Trump that highlight his severe, under-treated, hyperactive, adult ADHD. I do not intend to comment on his politics or policies, except as directly shaped by ADHD. My observations and analyses do not imply that all people with ADH behave like Mr. Trump, not that ADHD is Mr. Trump’s only mental health issue. rambling — lengthy and confused or inconsequential

At the end of two weeks of televised impeachment investigations, Mr. Trump phoned in to Fox & Friends for an hour long conversational interview which the station deemed “wide-ranging” but other media described as “rambling”. Rambling seems a fair description since his comments were lengthy, confused, often self-contradictory, and repeatedly included descriptions and judgments unconnected to his preceding utterances. We are accustomed to such speech from our president. Many other individuals with ADHD are first-class ramblers.

Executive function deficits in directing and maintain attention explain these rambling speech patterns. Many people with ADHD have trouble organizing their thoughts, and when they talk they include a flurry of ideas on related concepts, or meander far afield pursuing unrelated distractions. Another reason for rambling occurs when people try to revise, correct, and amend their previous words because they are striving for completeness or refinement or accuracy.

Executive function problems with poor impulse control also contribute to rambling, because rather than just thinking these extraneous thoughts, people with ADHD are often compelled to speak them out loud.

I have observed that people with more linear thought trajectories and greater ability to censor themselves frequently have difficulty precisely imitating the rambling speech of those with ADHD. When people with severe ADHD begin to discuss topic A, and bright and shiny tangential topic B intrudes, they smoothly segue into topic B. A few beats later, after realizing they have gone off topic, they may pause to reflect, and either return to topic A, or continue in pursuit of B. They may even attempt to explain that they are aware they are switching topics, which actually introduces a third topic, C…

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