Quick answer: Rejection sensitive dysphoria (RSD) is an intense emotional reaction to perceived rejection, criticism, or failure that's common in adults with ADHD. It's a nervous system response that fires faster than typical emotional processing, often fed by years of chronic bracing — and it responds best to regulation-based approaches, not willpower.
A neutral comment lands like an attack. A piece of feedback you know is reasonable still wrecks your whole afternoon. You can name, intellectually, that the reaction is disproportionate — and still feel powerless to stop it.
If this is familiar, you may be experiencing rejection sensitive dysphoria (RSD).
What is rejection sensitive dysphoria?
Rejection sensitive dysphoria is an intense emotional reaction to perceived rejection, criticism, or failure — common in adults with ADHD, though it isn't a formal diagnostic criterion on its own.
This is not oversensitivity in the way it's often dismissed. It's a nervous system response that hits faster and harder than typical emotional processing, often before the rational part of your brain has had a chance to evaluate the situation.
Why RSD shows up alongside ADHD
ADHD brains process emotional information differently — emotions can arrive with more intensity and less of a built-in buffer. Layer years of being told you're "too much," "not trying hard enough," or "not living up to your potential," and the nervous system starts treating any hint of criticism as a threat worth bracing against.
Over time, this creates a feedback loop:
- You brace in anticipation of rejection
- The bracing makes ordinary feedback feel more threatening than it is
- The outsized reaction reinforces the belief that something is wrong with you
- The bracing gets stronger
What actually helps with RSD
RSD doesn't respond well to being told to "just not take it personally." The reaction isn't a thinking problem — it's a regulation problem, which means the fix has to work at that level too.
- Name the pattern without judgment. Recognizing "this is RSD activating" — rather than "I'm being crazy" — creates space between the trigger and the reaction.
- Build nervous system safety as a baseline, not just in the moment of activation. A system that's chronically braced will read more things as threats.
- Practice the pause. Somatic tools that interrupt the speed of the reaction give you room to respond instead of react.
This isn't about feeling less. It's about your nervous system no longer needing to treat every piece of feedback like an emergency.
If this pattern sounds familiar, the PKJ Nervous System Regulation Intensive is built specifically for high-performing adults with ADHD who are done white-knuckling it.
Apply for the Intensive →Related reading
- What Does ADHD Burnout Actually Feel Like for High-Achieving Adults? →
- Why People With ADHD Swing Between Hyperfocus and Burnout →
Frequently asked questions
Is rejection sensitive dysphoria a real diagnosis?
RSD isn't currently a standalone diagnosis in the DSM, but it's a widely recognized pattern among clinicians and people with ADHD, describing an intense emotional reactivity to perceived rejection or criticism.
Can nervous system coaching help with RSD?
Yes. Because RSD is a fast nervous system reaction rather than a purely cognitive pattern, approaches that build regulation capacity — rather than just trying to think differently in the moment — tend to create more durable change.
Does RSD only happen with ADHD?
RSD is most commonly discussed in the context of ADHD, but intense rejection sensitivity can occur in other contexts too. Its frequent co-occurrence with ADHD is thought to be linked to differences in emotional processing and years of accumulated bracing.