
Taking Control: The ADHD Podcast When Masking Becomes a Relationship Strategy with Dr. Sharon Saline
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Mar 12, 2026 Dr. Sharon Saline, clinical psychologist and ADHD author, explains masking as hiding traits to avoid rejection. She contrasts masking with normal presentation. The conversation covers social strategies people use, when masking is protective vs harmful, how masking shows up across relationships, and practical ways to lower the mask and find safer spaces to be more authentic.
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Masking Is A Costly Coping Mechanism
- Masking is a coping mechanism where you hide traits or overcompensate to appear organized, calm, or polished.
- Chronic masking raises anxiety, emotional exhaustion, burnout risk, and erodes self-esteem in neurodivergent adults.
Presentation Versus Masking
- Presentation differs from masking: presentation is deliberately showing a role-appropriate part of yourself, masking is hiding from fear of rejection.
- Use simple canned responses like "Let me think about it and get back to you" to avoid automatic masking under pressure.
Masking Springs From Social Anxiety
- Masking sits on the social anxiety spectrum and stems from a core sense of deficiency tied to fear of embarrassment, humiliation, or rejection.
- Related patterns include RSD, perfectionism, and imposter syndrome that reinforce the mask.

