The Mel Robbins Podcast - 6 Surprising Signs of Adult ADHD
Episode Date: June 19, 2023More and more adults are being diagnosed with ADHD, so today, we are unpacking the 6 surprising signs of ADHD. I also tell you why so many women, in particular, go undiagnosed. This episode is deeply... personal, but my story is shared by so many women.I lived my entire life with symptoms of ADHD and crushing anxiety because of it. But I was never diagnosed until the age of 47—and I found out by fluke!So in this episode, I go deep into what ADHD is: a neurological disorder that affects the brain structurally and chemically. I explain the signs and the science behind what is going on in your brain to help you live a better life.If you ever wondered if you have ADHD, if you feel like menopause is making it worse, or if you struggle with anxiety, an eating disorder, or low self-esteem, you have to listen. All these might be symptoms of ADHD.This episode goes way beyond an inability to focus, because ADHD is so much more. This is an education in how your brain works, how focus works, and how to help yourself or someone in your life who may have ADHD.I’ve been wanting to record this episode for MONTHS, but I didn’t want to do it until I had first-class resources for you. Because every time I talk about my ADHD story, we get an avalanche of questions from listeners.I have regrets about that lost time when I did not know I had ADHD, and I don’t want you to have them, too. Today you’ll learn: *why women have been profoundly underdiagnosed*four key differences between genders with ADHD*why my diagnosis was both a blessing and a curse*the surprising way most women find out*six symptoms of ADHD that most people don’t catch*the connection between anxiety and depression and ADHD*resources and hacks to help you take charge over your symptoms Xo Mel In this episode, you’ll learn: 2:44: The surprising backdoor way I was diagnosed with ADHD.6:30: What I learned about the “lost generation” that has blown me away.7:45: A terrifyingly important statistic that led to this podcast episode.9:00: The definition of ADHD that may make you feel better about yours.10:15: Why are women underdiagnosed? The differences in symptoms.19:30: This is how ADHD impacts your brain.22:30: Breaking this myth about this symptom of ADHD.24:45: A really clear metaphor to explain how your brain silences noise, or doesn’t.32:00: How is it I have ADHD, yet I can hyper-focus?34:00: More surprising symptoms of ADHD that might make your relationships hard.38:00: This one hack helps me get birthday gifts for others on time.40:00: The jobs I loved because they worked well with ADHD.43:45: Now here’s the good news!45:30: A predictive statistic about children that you’re going to want to hear. Disclaimer
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hey, it's your friend Mel, and welcome to the Mel Robbins podcast.
I got to take a big exhale because today's conversation is going to be a good one.
I have been dying to share a deeply personal story with you.
I was diagnosed with ADHD at the age of 47, and I wanted to talk to you about it because
I'm not the only person who's been diagnosed late in life with ADHD.
In fact, researchers say this is very common with women, and there's an entire generation
of women.
They've labeled them the lost generation, who have struggled with ADHD their entire lives
and never even knew it.
And I was one of them.
And you may be one of them too.
And when I was finally diagnosed, this was just six years ago.
And I'm going to tell you the whole story about how I got diagnosed because it was by mistake.
But when I finally got that diagnosis, it was both a blessing and a curse.
It was a blessing because I finally understood all the things that I had struggled with for
my entire life.
And here's why it was a curse.
It was a curse because I couldn't help but reflect back on the past 47 years.
I felt so much grief about the amount of struggles that I had.
I wondered how things would have been different.
If somebody had figured this out when I was really little,
I wouldn't have struggled with anxiety
or did some of the things I deeply regret.
That's how big of a deal this has been in my life.
And so today, you're going to learn the four key differences
about how ADHD affects boys and girls.
You're going to learn the reason why women go profoundly undiagnosed.
You'll learn the surprising way most women find out that they have ADHD and the connection between
anxiety, depression, eating disorders, and living with undiagnosed ADHD. And you will get a lot of
good news because there is good news. And there's a lot that you can do to support yourself if you or someone you love have ADHD.
And I'm going to focus on the impact on women, but we have fans across the entire gender
spectrum.
And when you hear what I'm about to explain to you, this will help you understand and empower
your sister, your partner, your daughter, your girlfriend, your niece, anybody that you
know. Because this conversation today is going to be full of resources that will help you empower
yourself or other people in your life who have either been diagnosed or who haven't been
diagnosed and are wondering what the hell is wrong with me?
Because that's basically how I felt for the first 47 years of my life.
What the fuck is wrong with me?
So six years ago, our son Oakley,
he was in the fourth grade and I was 47 years old
and he was really struggling in school.
He was interrupting class, he was fidgety,
he didn't pay attention, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah.
And luckily, this was at a time in our life
where we could afford to go outside the school
and get a neuropsych exam,
huge shut out to Dr. Moldover.
And sure enough, findings were very conclusive.
He had profound dyslexia.
He had dysgraphia, which is related to dyslexia.
And the other thing he was diagnosed with is ADHD.
And when I started reading the report
because when you get these assessments done, and I'm
sure a ton of you have had this experience, either with your kids, or maybe it happened
to you when you were a kid, when we got the big report telling us all about Oakley's
brain, I was sitting with this pediatrician, Dr. Blumenthal, and I had known Mark for my
God 16 years at this point, and we're flipping through the thing and Mark's going,
yeah, yeah, this makes a lot of sense,
makes a lot of sense.
You know, and we were going to talk options
about what we could do in terms of therapy or medication
or, you know, ways that we could support oak.
And I kind of looked at Mark and I said, you know,
as I'm reading this mark, this sounds a lot like me.
Do you think that maybe I have ADHD?
And Dr. Blumenfall, I just love this guy.
He leans back in his chair, and he looks at me with this sort of stunned look on his face.
And he's like, do I think you have ADHD?
Mel Robbins, of course you have ADHD.
In fact, you're probably the most ADHD parent.
I have in my entire practice.
You are so successful and you are a complete bird brain.
Do you realize that you will go years
and not bring your kids in for their wellness appointments?
In fact, every fall, we have a joke.
We know that you are gonna be one of those 20 parents
that call on a fucking panic
because you need a physical. You need a physical. that call on a fucking panic because you need a physical.
You need a physical. Your kid's practice starts tomorrow. You need a physical and now you're,
it's a five alarm fire, but you've missed their wellness appointment. And you do it every year,
and you'll leave every exam and you'll go, oh yeah, okay, I'll follow up, I'll call you tomorrow,
I'll tell you about it. You never do. And I just looked at him because I knew he was right.
I always felt so incompetent about my ability
to keep up with appointments or to remember things like that
or any of it.
And then he goes, so do I think you have ADHD?
Of course you have ADHD.
And I looked him square in the eye you guys
and you're and I said him, why did you tell me?
Why did you tell me I had ADHD?
And he goes, I'm not your doctor, Mel.
I'll tell you, I was 47 years old when I realized
that what I had been dealing with for my entire life
may not be anxiety.
It might just be fucking ADHD.
And so I went to my primary care.
She referred me to a specialist, sure enough,
just like my son,
dyslexia, ADHD. And once something happens in my life, I am like a truffle pig,
rootin for a truffle. I literally start digging until I find something. And I made
it my mission six years ago to find out everything I could possibly discover about
ADHD, not only because I wanted to help our son Oakley and eventually her daughter Kendall
and her daughter Sawyer, but also because now that I had this diagnosis, I wanted to understand
what the hell was going on so I could help myself.
And what I learned is incredible.
I am part of a lost generation of women who were diagnosed with anxiety or depression or
an eating disorder or some other condition in my teens and 20s when the underlying problem
all along was that they missed the diagnosis of ADHD.
And that's why I want to talk to you about it.
I have wanted to have a conversation
with you about this ever since we started this podcast eight months ago, but I have been
reluctant to do it because I wanted to make sure I had resources to give you. Because
every time I've talked about this on YouTube or on social or I've talked about it on a
talk show, we receive an avalanche of inbound stories, requests for information.
And so I didn't want to unpack everything I'm going to share with you today until I knew
I could point you in the right direction.
And what we're going to talk about today is really important.
What the research shows is that when you are not properly diagnosed with ADHD and you have it, the outcomes for
girls in particular are horrendous. And the word horrendous is a word that one of the
world's leading experts uses, not me. Let me just read this to you. This comes from Dr.
Ellen Littman, who's a clinical psychologist, co-author of Understanding Girls with ADHD, and this is what she said.
The risk for self-harm and suicide attempts is four times higher for girls with ADHD than girls without.
That's terrifying. So the conversation that we're going to have today, it goes way beyond having
trouble with homework or having trouble focusing.
But I personally believe as I sit here and I look back on my life, I'm now 53 years old, I look back on my life, and I know
that I would not have struggled with anxiety the way that I did had I been properly diagnosed,
medicated and treated for ADHD when I was little, full stop.
And so if you're somebody that is struggled with low self-esteem,
self-losing, anxiety, depression, eating disorders,
and you can't seem to turn the corner on this,
I truly want you to consider what I'm about to share with you,
what I've learned in the last six years of researching this
extensively, talking to the world's leading experts about this, among them, Dr. Ned Hollowell,
who wrote driven distraction. He's like the OG of ADD research at Harvard. He's a world-renowned
psychologist, Dr. Daniel Aiman, the definition of ADHD. And this was new to me. ADHD is a chronic
neurobiological disorder, which affects the brain's structural
and chemical capabilities and the way that your brain communicates and it is also highly
inheritable. And there is good news here. There's a lot of good news that you're going to
learn, but here's what we're going to cover. Okay. The six surprising signs that I didn't know, that I had all six of them, that could be signs
that you, too, have adult ADHD.
We're going to talk about why women were so profoundly underdiagnosed and have been
for decades.
We're going to talk about the mental health implication when you're not properly diagnosed
and when you don't seek either therapeutic or occupational treatment for it.
You're going to learn about the four key differences between how ADHD presents in boys and girls.
And we're going to talk about what to do if you think this is you.
And finally, we're going to get into what's actually happening in your brain when you have ADHD,
because this is so fascinating.
The first place to start is why are so many women underdiagnosed?
Why does this go missing in girls?
Well, the answer is this.
When they first made ADHD a diagnosis back in the late 70s, they only studied boys.
That's it.
They only studied boys.
And boys present very differently than girls.
They have totally different symptoms,
and this is really important to understand
because when I first heard the term ADHD,
I thought of our son,
Leg is jittery, hands are fidgeting,
raising the hand, bumping up and down,
got a run to the bathroom,
bopping around, but to do to do, highly distracted,
but what always confuse me about him
is that he could also laser focus on video games.
So I sort of dismissed ADHD because I'm like, well, he can focus on video games.
So it must be about his interest in things.
No, no, no, no, no.
ADHD has both physical symptoms that you see on the surface.
And those are typically what's present in boys.
The girls typically do not present those jittery, interrupting kind of physical chaos.
Boys present four key differences with ADHD
than girls do.
Here they are.
Number one, when a boy has ADHD,
they have symptoms that appear on the surface.
Impulsive behavior, fidgeting, getting distracted,
being very physical with their inability to concentrate.
Girls, we have the opposite symptoms.
Ars are all internal.
We're restless, we daydream, we're hard on ourselves,
we're forgetful, we're disorganized,
and we start to aim at ourselves as a character flaw.
So when you're a girl with ADHD, you daydream,
you're disorganized, you're hard on yourself,
you make careless mistakes,
you might be called a tomboy or super creative.
But what happens, and this is why this is so scary
and this is what happened to me, is
that when you sit in a classroom and you see all your friends turning things in on time
or staying organized or their lockers are clean and yours is a mess and you're running
late, you start to think you have a character defect.
You start to think there's something wrong with you. And it also gets missed because it's internal.
We're not sitting there bouncing our leg and jumping
and raising our hand.
We have the opposite impact.
The second key difference between boys and girls
is that boys present earlier, typically around the age of seven.
Girls, however, present later on average, like around 12. The third reason why there's a big difference
between girls and boys is because boys wear it on their sleeve. They have trouble controlling their
physical outbursts. Whereas girls, girls are excellent at hiding this. Why? Well, because we feel the pressure to conform,
we do our best to cope, look around,
and see what everybody else is doing,
and we start working harder to compensate
for what we feel is a character default in us,
that we are lesser than, that we're not good enough,
that everybody else seems to get this but me,
and we hide it.
And here's the big fucking difference between girls and boys with ADHD.
Boys tend to get better.
Girls get worse.
And that is exactly what happened to me.
I got way worse.
Way worse.
What goes from daydreaming, following instructions, making careless mistakes,
forgetfulness, all-nighters, not being able to stay organized, that chronic struggle turns
into, I'm fucked up, there's something wrong with me, and a profound correlation between anxiety,
depression, eating disorders, suicidal thoughts.
This is not just me, by the way.
Let me pull some of the research out because the shit is scary.
You can hear me flipping through my papers.
Women with ADHD face the feelings of being overwhelmed and exhausted, the same way that
men do.
However, women increasingly have psychological distress, feel inadequate, low self-esteem,
chronic stress.
This is extremely common.
One clinical psychologist, Dr. Ellen Lippman, wrote the book, Understanding Girls with ADHD.
The outcomes for girls are horrendously negative compared to boys, because ADHD materializes
dramatically differently in girls as they get older.
Anxiety and depression turn into low self-esteem and self-loathing that happened to me.
And the risk for self-harmoned suicide attempts, four to five times greater for girls with ADHD.
This is not about having trouble with homework. This is not about remembering birthdays
because unlike boys, girls symptoms,
veer inward, that's where the anxiety comes in,
that's where the depression comes in,
that's where the eating disorders come in,
that's where the self-harm come in,
is because you actually believe something's wrong with you.
And here's what I'm here to say, there's nothing wrong with you. Absolutely nothing wrong with you.
In fact, ADHD has a high correlation to being a successful entrepreneur, to being highly creative,
to being a problem solver, a risk-taker. There's so much beauty in this.
But you also need to understand if you're dealing with a neurobiological disorder,
which impacts your prefrontal cortex.
Girls symptoms are almost entirely internal, and they happen later.
Most girls that have undiagnosed ADHD, you know what they start to have on the surface
anxiety.
Because of course, if you're going to go into school every day and you're disorganized
and you make careless mistakes and you're hard on yourself and you start to tell yourself there's something wrong with you.
Of course, you're going to feel anxious about going in.
It makes perfect sense, right?
And that's exactly what happened to me.
In fact, I was treated for decades for anxiety and I am sitting here telling you right now
I 100% believe the issue I had all along was very simple.
I had dyslexia and ADHD, and nobody fucking knew it.
And instead, I developed anxiety.
Why?
Because that's what happens when you have undiagnosed ADHD, and you don't understand why your brain
doesn't work the same way as everybody else.
You don't understand why you're always late, why you can't get it together, why things
are always a mess, whether it's clutter around you, why you're constantly missing deadlines or doctor's appointments or leaving your Kleenex on the counter, or you can't get it together, why things are always a mess, whether it's clutter around you, why you're constantly missing deadlines
or doctor's appointments or leaving your Kleenex on the counter
or you can't forget that, like it's relentless.
And so of course anxiety would develop.
And I'm on a mission today to share absolutely everything that I have learned
in my own deeply personal research to be a better mother of kids with ADHD
and to be a better partner to myself as I live my life as an adult with ADHD.
And what I've learned is life changing. There are things that you can do. There are very surprising signs and I need to say you at all. I am here to entertain you with my story, and I am here to educate you based on my personal
experience, and I am here to empower you to know that this is a reality for so many women
in particular.
So that if it rings true for you, you go seek the professional help that's out there
to get a very clear answer of what's happening for you, you go seek the professional help that's out there to get a very clear answer of
what's happening for you.
That's what this is about, because that's how you create a better life.
All right, when we come back, we're going to start with your brain and ADHD.
And then what we're going to cover a little bit later are the six surprising signs of ADHD
and adults, all of which I had, all of which everybody missed.
Don't you dare go anywhere.
We'll be right back.
Welcome back, I'm Mel Robbins, and today we're talking ADHD in women in particular. And in just a second, we're going to get to the six surprising signs of adult ADHD.
But first, I really want to dig into what's happening in an ADHD brain.
And this comes from research from Dr. Ned Hollowell.
It comes from Dr.
Aiman. I know that Huberman Lab just did a bunch of podcast episodes on this, but this is how
everybody talks about it. So the good thing about ADHD is it seems like the research that's
been going on for decades is very conclusive about the prefrontal cortex and how ADHD impacts it. And just to remind you,
because I wanna make sure we invite everybody
into this conversation, whether you're somebody
that loves the PhD type stuff
and you already understand the prefrontal cortex
or you're somebody that's never even heard that term before.
Everybody is included in the Melrabben's podcast.
So the prefrontal cortex is basically a part of your brain that's behind your forehead
in what they call the frontal lobe.
And your prefrontal cortex has the important job
of switching between different neural networks
that regulate your thoughts, your actions, and emotions.
So for example, if you've ever heard
the term executive functioning, that term gets thrown around
a lot when kids are getting assessed for learning style differences
or for attention.
Executive functioning is also used to refer to your prefrontal cortex and its ability to act
like a secretary to be able to switch gears and help you plan ahead and get organized.
Here's an example.
Imagine you're packing for a two-day business trip,
executive functioning, or your prefrontal cortex.
That's the secretary that kind of talks to you as you're packing.
That goes, okay, okay, you're gonna be gone for two nights,
so you probably need three pairs of underwear.
Are you gonna exercise while you're gone?
Yeah, okay, what's the weather like?
Oh, so I should use shorts, not sweatpants.
Oh, I should probably bring a pair of socks
if I'm gonna go for a long walk.
If I wanna go to Pilates, you're gonna need the grippy socks.
That little voice in your head,
that thing that's helping you plan,
you don't really notice it to you.
That's secretariat, that's your prefrontal cortex.
That is the act of executive functioning.
Pretty cool, huh?
I like to think about the prefrontal cortex,
almost like an old-fashioned phone operator
switcher.
You know, where you see in the movies where somebody unplugs one cord and sticks it into
another hole to connect things.
Another example that a lot of researchers use is an orchestra conductor or a teacher in
a classroom.
Somebody that's responsible for quieting down a large number of people and then calling
on, you know on a certain student.
So, I played the flute in elementary school.
And I remember the orchestra conductor was always like tap, tap, tap, shh at me.
So the first chair of the flute could play the little stands, a song, thingy, majab, and
get everybody started.
Thanks a lot, dude.
And that brings me back to your prefrontal cortex, and the fact that its main role is to be able to switch
between different neural networks,
like an orchestra conductor,
that regulate your thoughts, actions,
and emotions in your brain.
And that's important when it comes to attention,
because attention isn't just focusing on something.
The skill of attention requires your prefrontal cortex
because there are two very different networks
and functions in your brain that you use at the same time
while you're trying to focus and pay attention.
So let's talk about attention, okay?
Because one mistake that people make with ADHD
is they think that ADHD means you can't focus
on something.
That's not what it means.
ADHD is the inability to direct and hold your attention in appropriate ways, inappropriate
settings and situations.
That's what it means.
That's why you'll often see kids with ADHD that can play video games for hours.
That was what our son Oakley did.
I could literally be banging pots and pans behind this kid. And he wouldn't even know it.
He was so focused. But he had an inability to direct that attention in appropriate ways,
in other cases. And let me just use the example that I just gave you. It's not healthy that
he was so focused on video games that he couldn't hear pots and
pans.
And so let's unpack what attention is.
So attention is a really important skill, right?
You've got to be able to pay attention if you want to be successful at work, if you want
to learn new things.
You need to be able to direct your attention and in relationships.
I mean, just think about it.
There are times where somebody is talking and your stomach hurts or you want to get a
bite to eat or you really don't give a shit and you want a yawn or you want to interrupt
them.
Your ability to pay attention and suppress the urge to interrupt them or a yawn or to excuse
yourself, that is the skill of attention.
And it's critical for relationships.
Otherwise, you're going to look like a root asshole. And so attention requires your prefrontal cortex
to be able to switch between two neural networks in your brain.
One of the neural networks is the part of your brain that is aware
and paying attention to everything around you, okay?
All the noise around you and all of your thoughts and your feelings in your body.
So one neural network that your prefrontal cortex needs to control is the ability to shh.
All the noise around you and all the noise within you.
And I'm going to bring in an example that is used throughout the research with ADHD.
And it's the example of an orchestra conductor.
So your prefrontal cortex is an orchestra conductor.
And I want to just bring in the sound of an orchestra warming up.
You hear all the different sounds and that's like an orchestra getting ready and unpacking and warming up, that's you in the world.
And one thing that your prefrontal cortex does when it comes to attention is it lifts
up the little sticks and it points at the horn so who are making too much noise and goes,
shh, this is called a top down function.
It is able to tap into a neural network to suppress,
shh, hey horns, shut the hell up, shh, shh, shh, shh.
And silence the noise outside of you
and silence the noise within you.
You're grumbling stomach.
You're thoughts about what you're doing tonight.
So that, the prefrontal cortex can then
tap into the second neural network,
which is the ability to raise up and focus
on something specific.
Hey, strings, it's time for you.
Let's magnify and amplify you,
because now the horns are quiet. We can now amplify the string section and hear it.
And so that's the network that allows you, if you crack open a book, you focus on the
book itself, but you also focus on the words in your mind and what you're learning and processing as you're reading it.
So your prefrontal cortex when it comes to attention has to do those two things.
The shsh of the distractions outside you and the grumbling stomach in you,
so that it can turn toward what you want to focus on and direct your attention appropriately.
If you can't switch between those two things of the, and the focus, you can't pay attention.
I can give you an example because I'm realizing my prefrontal cortex could not fucking do this.
I went to Dartmouth College and they have this incredible library,
Baker library, and I would always go to the stacks in the library to study. And I would carry my
stack of books and I would carry my notebooks and my pens and my highlighters and I would commit
to being there all day. I'm going to study. I would sit down and as soon as I sit down and crack open a book, you want to know
what happened? I literally would be like, oh my god, I think I'm hungry. I got to go to
the bathroom. Do I feel like studying? I'm not quite sure. And then I hear somebody
walk and be like, who's that? Oh, is that Emily? Hey, Emily, I was incapable of that part of attention that your prefrontal cortex needs you to do.
Shhh. I was incapable of suppressing the sensation in my body, suppressing the monologue in my fucking mind,
and tuning out and suppressing the noises around me. I would sit there for eight hours and distract myself because this core
function of my prefrontal cortex didn't work. Couldn't do it. So of course I had trouble
paying attention because I couldn't suppress my internal noise because if I've got the
book cracked open, I can't be paying attention to what my voice is saying. I've got to turn
on the part of the brain that can now focus on the words on the page, right? My brain did not work that way.
People with ADHD are missing a conductor
that's working properly.
And that's what the experts mean when they say
that you have a neurobiological disorder
that affects the brain structurally and chemically,
as well as ways in which various parts of the brain communicate with one another.
It takes a lot of mental fuel to quiet that network in your mind.
It takes more mental fuel to activate a different network that helps you focus.
And so what also happens for everybody with ADHD is you're not only
spin in your wheels, you're also draining the energy tank. Dr. Amin, who's been on this
podcast, one of the world's leading experts in the brain, he's done over 60,000 scans of brains.
And when you look at anybody's brain scan who has a ADHD brain, what they find is there's not sufficient blood flow.
The conductor can't work properly because it's not getting the blood flow that it needs.
And he calls this a sleepy brain.
That your brain is not getting the blood flow, the dopamine, the norra, eparephrine,
or whatever the hell it's called because we all know I can't say it. And that's why so many people with ADHD chase dopamine dumps like shopping or alcohol or
any other addictive kind of behavior.
So what we're going to do next is I'm going to cover the six lesser known and surprising
signs of adult ADHD.
And more importantly, we're going to cover what you can do about it.
If you think this is you or someone you love, don't go anywhere.
We'll be right back.
I'm Mel Robbins and today I'm talking about my diagnosis of ADHD, how is diagnosed at
the age of 47, late in life, and what I have learned in the last six years of digging
into this topic, researching it, and learning as much as I can,
not only to help myself and our two daughters who also have ADHD, but so that I could
share this information because I want as many people to understand this as possible.
So these are the six lesser known signs of adult ADHD.
Number one is hyperfocus.
And this was a surprise to me because I'm ever seeing this in our son.
I'm like, I'm sorry, this kid does not have ADHD.
He just hates homework.
I mean, he can sit and laser focus in on his video games.
So clearly, he can laser focus in on homework.
That's not true.
A surprising sign of ADHD is the ability
to hyper, hyper,focus in certain settings,
but not be able to pay attention at all in other settings.
And this has to do with what's going on in your brain
and your prefrontal cortex in particular,
when you have ADHD, which we will get to in a moment.
But hyper-focus is present for me.
I can hyper-focus and get lost in my work.
I can hyper-focus when I have to give a speech.
I literally have those blinders on that horses wear,
the big Clydesdales.
I have tunnel vision when I have to do something like that.
It's like the rest of the world does not exist.
Now, when I'm done doing something like that,
I have a complete collapse.
I'm exhausted.
My brain, the gas tank, is empty.
But I can hyperfocus, which would make you think,
well, then you know that ADHD.
Well, here's the rub on it.
ADHD is not the inability to focus.
That's not what it is.
ADHD is a disorder in your brain
that impacts your prefrontal cortex
and the two jobs that the prefrontal cortex must do around
attention itself.
And we will get into this because attention is both being able to tune out or suppress
external and internal noise.
And it is also the ability to ramp up parts of your brain so that you can focus on something effectively.
And so it's way more than just paying attention to something.
It requires a bunch of switching in your brain in terms of which network your brain is using.
And we're going to dig into that, don't worry. Second
sign that is a lesser-known sign of adult ADHD, difficulty controlling your
emotions. Say that again, difficulty controlling your emotions. When you struggle
with ADHD, you're using up so much mental energy, trying to pay attention, that there's no gas in the tank
to be able to tolerate the emotions of being frustrated or tired.
Guys are like, fuck this homework and they get physical and they go do something else.
Women aim at it themselves.
It's why I would snap at my kids all the time.
It's why I would get this tone of voice when I'm frustrated with something
and I just can't deal anymore.
It's why I would get really emotional with myself
and erupt at myself.
Why the fuck did you forget her birthday again?
What is wrong with you?
She's your best fucking friend.
Why haven't you bought Christmas presents yet?
Why do you leave everything to the last minute?
You missed that deadline again.
So being eruptive at myself as well.
The third really surprising sign of adult ADHD and boydo, I have this one on spades, impulsive
shopping and overspending. It's like you're blind to it. And you get this huge rush for
buying something. And then all of a sudden, you realize that was stupid and you didn't
need it. And this has to do with what Dr. Eman, who's one of the world's leading experts on the brain,
says, is your attempt to stimulate your brain with a dopamine rush.
Shopping isn't the only addictive behavior.
Lot of adults that have ADHD and it's not properly being managed to have a problem
with drinking, drugs, other addictions, impulsive behaviors, all tied to the structural issue with the
prefrontal cortex. The fourth surprising sign is time blindness. Time blindness. You're terrible
with time management. I am terrible with time management. I'm constantly late. I keep myself on track with reminders on my
phone. I am the last person to get in the car for our family. I am always a
minute late to the call. As hard as I try to be on time, it feels impossible to
me. Another surprising sign is that many people with ADHD are actually very high functioning.
On the outside you look like a workaholic.
You look very successful.
Or if you're not working, you're just one of those people that's super duper, duper,
duper busy.
But here's the thing.
Your busyness and your workaholism is scattered all over the place.
And that desire to keep your mind busy
is also due to the fact that you have problems
in your prefrontal cortex suppressing
the noise that is going on outside
and also the noise going on with your critical voice.
And finally, this leads me to the big one.
And finally, this leads me to the big one. Adults with ADHD tend to be highly, highly, highly self-critical.
You constantly beat yourself up for not being able to do simple things.
You're worried that you're disappointing everybody. You're wondering why it looks else but you and this is the default mode of what your own inner dialogue sounds like.
Ding, ding, ding, ding. Mel Robbins, I got all six. Let me just explain some of the ways
it's played out in my life because I think this will give you an insight into what you may be dealing with if this is in fact you. So in relationships, I was plagued.
For 50 years, with feeling like, I'm not a good enough friend, I'm not a good enough
girlfriend, I'm not a good enough sister, I'm not a good enough mom or wife that I should have
sent more care packages. Why can't I remember birthdays? Why am I always missing the sign update
for school conferences for this, for that?
Why am I always arriving late for pickup?
You know, if I were better at this or a better person,
like this, plagued me, it plagued me.
And here's the thing, now that I'm diagnosed with it,
I still do this shit.
If I don't put the systems in place, and what does that mean for me? Well, when it
comes to birthdays, I feel like an asshole when I miss somebody's birthday. And so I
spent an entire day cross-checking Facebook, which is where most people's birthdays are,
and putting them on repeat in my Google Calendar. That worked sort of, but I realized when the thing goes off
on the day of somebody's birthday,
it just makes me remember to call them or text them.
But there are people in my life
I'd like to send a present to.
So by failing again for a year,
I realized I need to go a step further
and put a week before notification that goes off.
So I have time to actually get a present
or a card in the mail.
And so you start to set up systems
because you realize this is just not the way your brain works.
It's just not wired to remember this shit.
And that's okay.
That's okay, but I didn't know that.
I didn't know that.
I just thought I was a shitty friend.
I just thought everybody else figured this out, but me.
Another thing, work.
When I look back at my work history,
holy moly.
I am a horrendous employee
unless I am in an environment where I can move all over the place.
I cannot work in an office. Why?
Well, because I can't shh.
I have this like problem where if my kids are two rooms away from me and they're listening
to TikTok videos, it's as if they're blaring them in my ears.
I can't suppress that noise around me.
And so any job that I had in an office, I wanted to die because I could hear everybody
at all times, I could hear the door, I could hear the elevator ding, I did not know that
this was ADHD. I just thought I had like super ears or something. I thought everybody the elevator ding. I did not know that this was ADHD.
I just thought I had like super ears or something.
I thought everybody heard like this.
And so when I think about the jobs
where I was really successful,
I was moving around, waitressing,
loved waitressing, bartending.
Ah, I loved bartending.
Working at legal aid.
When I was a criminal defense attorney for legal aid
in 1994 as a young lawyer, I loved that job.
Because I would start the day
in my office. I'd walk across the street to the court at a hundred canal street. I'd be in
court, bopping around all day. I'd be out to rikers. I'd be back to the office. It was always changing.
That was beautiful for my brain. What I do now, beautiful for my brain. No day is the same. I excel in what we do now, because I am working in a place
that works for this kind of brain.
School, I've already explained to you, disaster.
Absolute disaster.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, I know I got into Dartmouth,
so I scored really well in the SATs
and I came from a tiny town in Michigan.
In fact, nobody had ever applied there.
But I was the queen of all-nighters, the queen of procrastination.
I can look back now and realize why I almost failed this big engineering class at Dartmouth.
It's because there were 400 kids in the class.
I couldn't pay attention.
I couldn't organize myself.
I was time blind.
I missed out on so much because I was so busy thinking that I was a failure.
And why couldn't I get this?
And why couldn't I organize it?
Why couldn't I read on time?
I don't even know how I got through law school.
Daily life, clutter, everywhere.
Literally, papers, everywhere.
Clean X's, blow my nose, put them on a counter.
Overspending.
Is this sound familiar?
You kind of overspend a compensate for other things.
You feel bad about yourself.
You buy a new outfit or you forgot to take something
to the dry cleaner and now you don't have a dress to wear.
So you got a quickly order address, but then you don't like the dress.
This is my life.
And then the credit card bill comes.
I should be the poster child for the container store
because until we did the episode that we recently did
about decluttering versus organizing,
I just thought if I just bought more baskets and I made everything look pretty, because until we did the episode that we recently did about decluttering versus organizing,
I just thought if I just bought more baskets
and I made everything look pretty,
then I would be organized.
I mean, it just goes on and on and on,
but I think the biggest thing for me
and why I wanted to talk to you about this
is because of the heightened impact of the negative self-talk.
See, that's the thing that I was never able because of the heightened impact of the negative self-talk.
See, that's the thing that I was never able to suppress. Sh.
Until recently, the critical, relentless voice
harping in my ear, constantly criticizing what I wasn't doing.
I had no clue this was related to ADHD.
The most important aspect of dealing with ADHD for myself
is not to make myself wrong for it
and not to hate the ADHD.
Think about it this way.
If you got diagnosed with diabetes,
does it help you to hate diabetes?
No.
The benefits now that I can address it effectively and in a healthy
way, far outweigh having a normal brain, an un-ADHD brain, and I wouldn't trade it for anything.
But I sure as hell wish I would have known about this sooner. It would have helped me make
the sooner. It would have helped me make way healthier and more empowering choices, particularly when I was struggling profoundly during college and law school. I'll just leave it at that.
If you understand it and you know what it is, you can empower yourself to live with it and
take proactive steps to embrace it and to cope in a positive
way.
The good news is there's so much you can do to support yourself.
There are so many interventions and modalities that help whether you're going to explore medications
which I've done which have been life changing.
I mean, when I got diagnosed with ADHD and I dug into it and started researching it,
I immediately started tapering off anxiety medication because I'm like, this explains everything.
And I went on long-acting atrial.
It changed my fricking life.
And I don't need it in every environment.
I don't take it on the weekends because I don't really care if the orchestra is playing.
And in certain environments,
like whenever I have to give a keynote address,
and I'm standing backstage,
I would never, ever take Adderall on that day.
And here's why.
The adrenaline that I feel, it's the neuroadrenaline.
That's another way you can say that word.
I can't say neuroeporephrine or whatever.
The adrenaline that hits your brain, the go, go, go,
of that, it makes the conductor work.
I literally have blinders on.
And so the adrenaline in that situation makes the switching of the conductor in my brain
shh, everything around me.
I don't even hear the event happening.
I literally am so focused on what I'm about to go do, that the environment provides the chemical release,
that stimulates my brain to do what I needed to do. So stimulants have been wildly effective for
me and effective for one of our kids, not all of our kids. And you know, it begs a question,
why is it that a stimulant is effective for somebody that has something in their brain
that makes them fidgety or makes them distracted?
Well, it has to do with the blood flow and the neurotransmitters in your brain, which
I'm not going to explain to you right now.
We'll bring on a full expert, like Dr. Ned Hollowell, who is the world's leading expert
on ADHD.
He's the goat. He wrote
driven to distraction. We can bring on Dr. Aiman who has scanned all the brains and can tell you why
so many people with ADHD seek a dopamine dump rush from overspending or drinking or some of the
other kind of not so great behaviors. But we'll have an expert explain that. But one of the things that I think is really interesting is that it's important if you think that this is something going on with
either a son or a daughter, that you get this looked at by a professional. Because studies,
Because studies, after study in the last five years, have said and concluded that children with ADHD in particular have far, far, far better outcomes later in life if they are treated
for ADHD when they're kids.
And they think that this is due to the fact that the stimulants and the adrenaline
and the dopamine accelerates neuroplasticity. And so there's some theories out there that not only
does it have better mental health outcomes, particularly for girls, because when you treat this
properly, whether you're doing it, you know, I think behavioral therapy,
combination of medication, if that's the right thing, which can be tricky or other
more natural supplements, if that's what you care about, caffeine is something that a lot of parents give their kids instead of some of the other stimulants.
That's a deeply personal choice, but I think it's important to know that
kids not treated with drugs and behavioral therapy when they
have ADHD, have a higher tendency toward addiction and not create outcomes versus the kids
with ADHD who are treated with drugs and with natural stimulants and behavioral therapy.
This is research in the last five years.
I think it's important to say that. I'm not telling you what to do.
But in order to save your daughter
from the profoundly negative impacts of ADHD
on psychology and on anxiety and depression
and eating disorders,
this is something I want you to take seriously
and dig into and learn about
and get educated about.
And the best place to start is your pediatrician.
If you're an adult going, oh my God, oh my God,
oh my God, oh my God, this is me, this is me,
this is my sister, this is my daughter, this is my boss,
this is my colleague, this is my friend.
Great, send them this episode.
Attach to this episode, like all episodes,
is a plethora of resources.
And one of the resources that we are going to link to is a self-assessment.
This is not how you get diagnosed with ADHD, but this is how you can learn more about ADHD
and sort of the surprising symptoms and impacts so that you are more empowered to go seek
something and I would start with your general practitioner and ask them where to
go. That's the best place to start or with a therapist. You can also start with a lot
of the online talk therapy platforms. And if you are between the ages of 20 and 75, you
may be in this generation of women who developed anxiety or depression or
needing disorder and you've always wondered what the hell is wrong with you.
I'm encouraging you. If any of this was resonant, please go talk to your
primary care doctor. I feel like the gas tank in my brain is it empty? So I am
going to get up and go for a walk outside. I cannot wait to hear your reaction to this episode.
I know that you're going to share your stories.
And I would love to do a ton more episodes about this.
I want to talk about the medications out there and what they do and why
and how they impact your prefrontal cortex.
I would love to dig more into non-stimulant interventions.
Okay, I love you. I don't want to forget to say that.
Case nobody else tells you today. The bloopers on this episode are going to be
fucking amazing and they're coming next. All right, I'll talk to you in a few days.
Oh my god. Welcome to my marriage.
My husband decided right about now would be a great time to get in the tractor and move rocks.
Oh my god.
Okay, hold on.
Let me just call him and be like, could you possibly do this two hours from now?
You know, he sees us.
Oh my god.
Oh my god.
Welcome to my marriage.
My husband decided right about now would be a great time to get in the tractor and move
rocks.
Oh my god.
Okay, hold on.
Let me just call him and be like, could you possibly do this two hours from now?
You know, he sees us recording.
He was just in here.
So I think I'll just go outside the podcast window and move some rocks.
And you know, here's why I feel like I'm asked.
He's moving those rocks for my planting beds.
My husband never has his phone on him.
Let me go ask him if it's possible to do this later. Gopamine and the neuro are the,
the, the, the,
effro, the, I can't say the damn word, like neuro,
the effro, an effro, an effro adrenaline or whatever the hell it's called.
I can't even say it.
Oh, and one more thing.
And no, this is not a blooper.
This is the legal language.
You know what the lawyer's right and what I need to read to you.
This podcast is presented solely for educational and entertainment purposes.
I'm just your friend.
I am not a licensed therapist and this podcast is not intended as a substitute for the advice
of a physician, professional coach, psychotherapist, or other qualified professional.
Got it?
Good.
I'll see you in the next episode.
Stitcher.
Thank you.