The Mel Robbins Podcast - The Truth About Anxiety & ADHD: Life-Changing Tools From a Renowned Psychiatrist
Episode Date: April 10, 2025If you’re anxious, overwhelmed, uncertain, or find yourself wondering “what is wrong with me?” then this episode is for you. Today, world-renowned psychiatrist Dr. Tracey Marks, MD is here to d...eliver the truth about what’s really going on in your brain, body, and most importantly: what you can do about it. If you deal with anxiety, ADHD symptoms, trouble focusing, procrastination, stomach problems, skin picking, and always running late… you need to hear today’s episode. You are not broken. You don’t need fixing. You just need the right tools. And today, you’re going to get them. With over 25 years of clinical experience and more than 2 million followers on YouTube, Dr. Marks is known for making complex mental health topics clear, relatable, and actionable.In this powerful conversation, she breaks down the surprising science behind anxiety and ADHD and gives you the exact tools she shares with her patients to stop spiraling and start feeling more in control. You’ll learn:- Why you fidget, overthink, or shut down under pressure - The hidden links between anxiety, ADHD, stomach issues, skin picking, and always running late - The #1 tool to interrupt anxiety in the moment - Why labeling yourself “an anxious person” might be making things worse for you or your loved ones - Small but powerful habits that rewire your brain for calm, focus, and confidence This episode is your science-backed, therapist-approved toolkit for mental clarity, emotional balance, and real relief. For more resources, click here for the podcast episode. If you liked this episode, and want to know more about ADHD and what you can do today to focus and feel better, listen to this episode next: 6 Surprising Signs of Adult ADHDConnect with Mel: Get Mel’s #1 bestselling book, The Let Them TheoryWatch the episodes on YouTubeFollow Mel on Instagram The Mel Robbins Podcast InstagramMel's TikTok Sign up for Mel’s personal letter Subscribe to SiriusXM Podcasts+ to listen to new episodes ad-freeDisclaimer
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hey, it's your friend Mel and welcome to the Mel Robbins Podcast.
So for most of my life, you know, I just thought I was bad at focusing.
My brain was always racing.
I could never sit still.
And then I had this like overwhelming feeling that I was constantly behind.
It seemed like everybody else had figured out some secret to stay in on top of things.
And I was the only one who was struggling.
And the anxiety? Oh my gosh, I mean, that was just like a part of who I was, or at least that's what I thought. It wasn't until I was diagnosed with ADHD at the age of 47 when everything finally clicked.
The fact that three of my kids have also struggled with ADHD and anxiety makes today's
conversation even more personal for me. Because I honestly had no idea how deeply connected ADHD and
anxiety actually are. And even more surprising, some of the habits that my kids and I have that
I thought were just like these weird little quirks? Turns out, nope, not weird at all.
They were actually textbook anxiety and ADHD symptoms.
Nail biting, skin picking, constantly fidgeting,
procrastinating all the time, overthinking,
feeling paralyzed by your own brain,
frustrated that you want to change,
but you just can't seem to.
If any of this sounds familiar,
you need to hear this conversation today.
And if you're not dealing with anxiety or ADHD,
I guarantee you, someone that you love is.
So today, what I've done is I've pulled some serious strings
to bring in one of the top psychiatrists
with over 25 years of clinical experience specializing in ADHD and anxiety.
She's so busy you'd never be able to even book an appointment with her.
And she also happens to have 2 million YouTube subscribers, making her one of the biggest
mental health and wellness channels online today.
She took a break from her busy schedule
to hop on a plane and fly to our Boston studios today
for one reason, she is here for you.
And let me just tell you,
the things that she is going to teach you today
will not only blow your mind,
they will actually change it for the better.
So let's get into it.
change it for the better. So let's get into it.
Hey, it's your friend Mel and welcome to the Mel Robbins podcast.
I am so excited to be here with you.
It is always such an honor to spend time together, to be together.
But today in particular, I am fired up for this conversation
because it has deeply personal meaning for me.
And so I'm glad to be learning together with you.
And if you're a new listener,
I just wanna take a moment and personally welcome you
to the Mel Robbins Podcast family,
thrilled that you're here.
And because you hit play and found the time
to listen to this particular episode,
here's what I know about you.
You love to learn, you love feeling inspired,
and you also want to understand yourself better.
That's exactly what this amazing conversation is going to help you do today.
If somebody sent this to you,
let me just point out that that's really cool because it means you have people in
your life that deeply care about you and they wanted you to hear
something that could potentially make your life better deeply care about you. And they wanted you to hear something that could potentially make your life better.
And that's awesome.
And today, the conversation,
it's not gonna just blow your mind,
it's gonna change your mind,
because we're gonna dig into the surprising connection
between anxiety, ADHD, and symptoms
that people with these two conditions experience
that you may not be aware of.
I certainly wasn't.
And more importantly, you're gonna get a lot of tools
on exactly what to do if this is how you feel
or if it's impacting somebody that you care about.
So let me introduce you to the amazing Dr. Tracy Marks,
who is an absolute powerhouse.
Dr. Marks graduated from Duke
and then got her medical degree
from the University of Florida College of Medicine.
She did a residency in psychiatry at New York Presbyterian Hospital.
She has been a practicing clinical psychiatrist for over 25 years, specializing in anxiety, ADHD, and mood disorders.
She's also the author of three bestselling books on mental health, including the one I'm holding right now, Why Am I So Anxious?
She also has two million subscribers on YouTube,
making her channel one of the biggest mental health
and wellness channels online today.
Her YouTube videos break down complicated topics
like ADHD and anxiety into simple, relatable strategies
that help people like you and me
who are struggling
with ADHD and anxiety learn how to thrive.
So without further ado, please help me welcome Dr. Tracey Marks to the Mel Robbins podcast.
Dr. Tracey Marks, welcome to the Mel Robbins podcast.
Thanks for having me here.
I am so excited.
I am so excited to sit down and talk with you. Why am I so anxious?
This is a fantastic book,
but more importantly, you know what it is?
It is a resource.
When I was flipping through this,
I cannot believe how many tools,
how much research, how many different just strategies
that you put together for people.
So thank you, thank you, thank you
for writing such a fantastic book
that I'm sure is helping millions of people.
Wonderful, that was the intent,
is to give people a resource.
I mean, it kind of reads like an encyclopedia a little bit.
Well, you're very smart.
So yes, it does.
But it made me smarter about anxiety for sure.
Excellent, goal achieved.
So I would love to start by having you speak directly to the person that is listening,
that's spending time together with us right now,
and just explain what might be different about their life or the life of somebody that they care about
if they take everything that you're about to share with us today to heart and they apply it to their life?
Sure.
I think the biggest thing that someone can take away if they listen and understand what
we're talking about today is the fact that your brain is changeable and regardless of
what condition you may have, you can improve the quality of your life with simple behaviors
and habits.
You have control over this and you have agency over your mental health.
Now, you have been a psychiatrist for 25 years,
and there are a number of topics that I cannot wait to jump in
and just really unpack with you.
And in particular, what I'm excited to talk about is anxiety
and then to get into its connection with ADHD
and other symptoms that people may be feeling
that they don't realize are related.
What are you seeing in your practice
and with the millions of people that follow you online?
What are you seeing in terms of the type of anxiety
that people are struggling with?
And what do you think we should know?
So anxiety, there's been a huge uptick in anxiety.
I mean, anxiety, first of all, it's a very big topic
because there's lots of different types of anxiety.
Probably the most common ones are social anxiety
and generalized anxiety disorder.
But that said, it all started with a pandemic.
So the World Health Organization reported a 25% increase
in anxiety globally, starting with the pandemic.
And sadly, it's still continuing to rise.
It's not like it got better after things settled down.
We're still having increases in incidence of anxiety.
Now why do you think that is?
I think it has to do with our digital world this day where we're always on, 24-hour news
cycles, social media with constant comparisons and access to bad news at any time of day.
And also, our brains can be overloaded with information that then can create anxiety.
So we have information overload, lots of hard working.
I mean, there's just lots of societal factors.
Well, it's interesting because at the very beginning, you said that one of the things
that could change about your life is your brain because your brain is malleable, you are able to reprogram
it, and if I think about what you just shared with us, which is anxieties on the uptick,
which I just want to say to you as you're listening, if you're experiencing an uptick
in anxiety or if people that you care about are experiencing anxiety for the first time,
that I think it's important to hear that this is
actually kind of normal right now,
that Dr. Marks is seeing it.
What's also interesting to me about the list that you just
gave us in terms of social media,
constant comparison, things constantly changing,
the headlines, the news cycle that's so negative,
like all of it, is that those factors have changed your brain
in terms of you feeling anxious, which means if there are outside
factors that can change your brain and make you anxious,
I would imagine, Dr. Marks, there are also factors that you're
going to teach us today that can help you get your anxiety under control.
That's absolutely right. So just as our brains can change in a negative way,
our brains can change in a positive way
and we have the ability to make those changes ourselves.
So if you're like super anxious,
cause I struggled with anxiety for decades
and one of my biggest fears, Dr. Marks,
is I'd never actually get rid of it.
That I would always feel like that.
And so for somebody that's listening right now or they have a loved one, a child or a
family member or a friend who's just like in the grip of it, what is possible?
Sure.
So I always kind of give when I'm talking to people or talking to patients the caveat
that anxiety is one of those things that waxes and wanes over time, it's like a wave.
So you can have periods of your life
where it's more manageable,
and then periods of your life where it becomes unmanageable
because of stressors.
And so it is important to realize
that this isn't something that where the end point should be,
I want to be cured and be anxiety free.
Because I don't wanna hear that.
I don't wanna hear that Dr. Mark, get rid of it.
It's just not realistic number one,
and some amount of anxiety is advantageous.
If you get anxious about some kind of upcoming presentation
that you need to make, it may make you plan more.
So some amount of anxiety drives us to be better.
But nonetheless, when it gets overwhelming for you,
that's when problems set in
and it can impair your functioning.
And that's the level at which we wanna look at
making changes.
Okay, so before we jump into specifics,
what actually is anxiety?
All right.
Are you feeling anxious?
I am feeling anxious.
Why are you? What does that mean?
For me, because it's probably a performance anxiety and I have to check myself because
my natural tendency is to just kind of want to unload all this information and not keep
it. I have to work to make information accessible to people and not go down
rabbit holes and things like that or I get I overthink making sure I don't say
the wrong thing and all of that. So that's where I am. That is so relatable
Dr. Marks. So to have you be a world-renowned expert with millions of
followers and in real time, tell me and the person that is making time to learn from you that you're
actually experiencing a little bit of performance anxiety, which is just wanting to do well,
wanting to meet the moment. And I think that that is so helpful.
What do you experience in your body when you are in a moment
where you feel anxious about wanting to do well?
And, you know, we've all been there,
whether it's on a date or an interview.
This is a very normal thing,
and it's a sign that you're actually functioning
the way that you should,
because you care about how you're going to do, right?
That's right.
So it kind of, this ties into your question
about what really is anxiety.
And it's a full body experience.
It's not just in your head
and it's not just in your body, it's both.
So for me, going back to your question,
my mouth gets dry, which then my lips could stick
if I'm like trying to smile and I'm
like, am I looking ridiculous?
And then I get in my head about how do I look, how do I sound and all of that.
So that's kind of how I experience anxiety.
Worrying about what the other person's thinking.
So going back to the usual experience of anxiety, which I shouldn't even say usual,
it's an individual experience.
So you can have the head symptoms would be like worrying in your head, fear, over concern
about what people are thinking, like I was just talking about. In your body, we get a sympathetic response,
which historically or biologically was designed
to give us the ability to fight or flee some perceived threats.
But that response turns on even for threats that are real or imagined.
So if I'm imagining that I'm gonna look ridiculous
because of something I say,
then I can start having my heart racing.
I can start feeling other gastrointestinal things.
Some people can feel like they're gonna have the runs
and uh-oh, what's that gonna mean?
You can have the sense of just tension in your body
and not even realize that you're tensing your shoulders and things
and then get to the end of the day and you're exhausted.
And you're like, all I did was sit all day.
Why am I tired?
Because you can get a lot of muscle tension.
So those are some of the physical signs.
You know, Dr. Marks, it's so interesting
that you bring that up because I just have these days
where at the end of the day, I feel exactly that,
like completely exhausted and tense. And, I feel exactly that, like completely
exhausted and tense.
And then I reflect and like, well, you basically just sat all day at your desk.
Why is that a symptom of anxiety?
So if you're anxious, you one sign of that or one symptom of that is tensing muscles.
And a lot of times we can tense our muscles without even being aware. So you sit at a desk, your neck muscles are tight, your shoulder muscles are tight.
Yes.
I literally just sat up.
I'm like, oh my God, I'm slouched over like the hobbit right now.
And like that's probably like not bad posture, but anxiety?
Yes, because if you're stressed out, then your muscles tense, okay?
And then you can carry that posture for hours and your muscles are working.
When they tense, they're working.
So at the end of the day, your muscles have been working harder than you're aware that
they're working because you were just sitting all day.
Wow.
Plus, if you're at work and you're kind of bracing, like if you're having a stressful
day, that's also another form of you tensing up
your muscles. Correct. The beauty of this is that if you are aware and understand that this is one
of your responses, then you can offset it with things. So for example, so I had a morning where
I woke up and I could barely lift my head off the bed and I thought, oh my goodness, am I paralyzed?
The downside of being a doctor, thinking about all kinds of things.
But anyway, and all it was, was that I had kind of a stressful week and I had been sitting
at my computer hunched over using my mouse and the shoulder up and I didn't realize that
that was what I was doing, that I used my mouse with my shoulder up like this.
And so my neck was almost like I could just, again, barely lift my head off the bed.
So what do I do to offset that now?
I do what's called progressive muscle relaxation.
Well, first of all, I try not.
I try to be aware of how I'm sitting in my chair, but even I can't, that's not perfect. So progressive muscle relaxation is one of those body tools where you start from either the head
or the foot and you take muscle groups and you contract them and then relax them. And what that
does is it makes you aware of what muscles were actually tense. So you could be, you know, you could contract your shoulders and then relax them and realize,
wow, okay, I didn't realize I was kind of sitting like this all day long.
But that helps create a relaxation state in your body.
It helps kind of release that muscle tension.
And I would suggest, you know,
trying that during lunch, a lunch break.
It could just take five minutes to kind of,
from head to toe, contract, relax,
and then that will help reset your muscles
so that at the end of the day,
you didn't spend eight hours all contracted.
I think the majority of us spend eight hours,
tense at work, and we don't even realize it.
Don't even realize it.
That is unbelievable.
I'm gonna try it.
Try it.
And it's helpful to hear the physical symptoms
because when you watch somebody that you care about
who's struggling with it, it's very hard to understand
because it doesn't seem to make sense.
And I would love to play a video for you
because I was so excited when you're coming on,
and you have a son who's around the same age as our son.
So my son's name is Oakley.
This morning, when I knew you were coming in,
I'm like, he has struggled with anxiety his whole life.
So I'm going to ask him because I don't know what to do.
I know a lot about anxiety,
but the way that his manifests is very challenging.
And I figured, why not wake him up in his college dorm room
and tell him that you're gonna be here
and ask him if he would like to ask you a question about
the issue that he's struggling with. And so we made a video and I would love to play it
for you. Okay. Okay. Here's Oakley.
I don't know if it's morning for you, but it's sure morning for me. Nine o'clock for
a college student. I just got out of bed like literally 30 seconds ago.
I hope you're well. My name is Oakley by the way I shouldn't forget saying that I'm
my mom's son Mel Robbins' son. I'm not just like some random kid that they're getting a video from.
I am gonna I have two questions for you and I'm gonna keep them super short because you're busy
and I don't want to waste your time but we're already at 30 seconds so let me
let me get this gallon and they're both anxiety okay my first question basically
what happens normally when I get anxious is before I'm even anxious in the first
place in my head I'll start to get this like spinning sensation where it's
basically a feeling of nausea like I start to get a feeling spinning sensation where it's basically a feeling of nausea.
Like I start to get a feeling of nausea and then from the nausea I become anxious and
then I'm just like in this state of anxiety and it doesn't go away until I'm not nauseous
anymore but the anxiety I feel like makes it worse because I'm like oh I'm anxious,
I'm anxious because I'm nauseous and then it like gets worse and And so I was curious what you might think about that.
Thank you.
That is, that's perfect example, which is pretty typical that people with anxiety can
be very sensitive to body sensations and those body sensations then trip off anxiety in their head. So
sometimes, especially if they don't associate it with anxiety, so for example,
someone who let's say has panic attacks and they know that their panic attacks
are classically their heart beating and or heart racing and trouble breathing
maybe and then they maybe they can then do things to slow their breaths.
But sometimes it's not always obvious
what the anxiety or the physical sign is.
So he's describing this sensation in his head
that he's calling nausea and maybe it feels like
maybe it's some kind of nausea thing,
but it could just be this kind of dissociative experience
of just kind of losing track with
his environment and things that can happen with people and freak them out.
Really?
Okay, so explain that because he's actually had things like that happen and so have I.
And as you see in the video, he kind of loses his train of thought and looks off to the
left and then re-centers himself.
And so what he's calling nausea or just this sort of lapse in feeling present, spirals into
something bigger.
And so that's kind of common?
That's pretty common.
Really?
Yes.
So dissociative experiences, you can lose touch with your environment or lose touch
with even or an alteration in your experience even with
yourself.
So someone can say, look in the mirror and just be like, I don't look like myself.
And then they can just think, what is wrong with me?
And not recognize that as say a symptom of anxiety, just let's say.
So yeah, he's calling it nausea. And maybe he might feel some nausea, but it's
probably more of a, you know, a depersonalization or derealization experience that he's having,
which can accompany anxiety or be an anxiety symptom.
Wow. So the thing that the reason why I wanted him to ask that is because I've been trying to
help him as his mother. I'm clearly not a that is because I've been trying to help him as his mother.
I'm clearly not a psychiatrist, but I've been trying to help him as his mother to untangle
the physical sensation from what then happens, where he then is like, oh, I'm anxious.
And then he gets caught in telling him he's anxious.
And I know for me, when I used to experience a lot of anxiety,
I was so scared of the feeling of being, like, anxious
or being lost in my head or feeling like I was about to get in trouble
or that something bad was going to happen
or could have been being afraid of getting on a plane
or afraid that something would happen to my parents.
Like, I could so easily get lost in my thoughts.
And then once I felt anxious,
I got then worse because I was afraid of the anxiety. I'll give you a situational one.
So yesterday, I got an email from a business partner of mine. And it was one of those emails
that just makes you go, you know, you just clench because you know that they're pissed
at you. And even though I don't feel like I did anything wrong,
they're really mad at me.
And so there's that bracing sensation.
And bracing when you get an email
where somebody's mad at you is a mentally healthy response.
But the challenge for me is I have a hard time letting go of the worst case scenario in my
head. What if this happens? What if they think that? What if I did something really wrong? What if I
did do blah-bitty-blah-bitty-blah even though I don't think I did do that? And the getting caught
in my head thinking about it then becomes the torture and is probably a hundred times worse
than what they're actually miffed about.
Do you know what I mean?
I know exactly what you mean, yeah.
So can you help us understand,
however you'd like to use those two examples,
what anxiety actually is
and what you can do to release yourself
from the grip it has on you?
Because I think the response happens,
and that's okay, but it's the grip that it holds on you that becomes problematic. Is
that a good way to think about it?
Yeah, that is a great way to think about it.
Because you cannot stop the initial response. What you can stop is the propagation of the response that then turns into freezing or lots of rumination in your head
and worst case scenarios and all of that.
That's where it just continues
from the original thing that started it.
So there's this intervention called interoceptive exposure.
I talk about it in my book.
Actually, I'm turning right to the page right now.
You're the one that, this is the first time
I've ever heard of this in my entire life.
It is genius.
It's on page 248 of your book,
Why Am I So Anxious?
So why don't you walk us through that?
Right, so interoceptive exposure really is,
what it is at a high level,
is trying to get you to disconnect the physical sensations
from it being anxiety provoking.
Because people can get to just where you are of fearing the anxiety because let's say they
feel a little churn in their stomach and uh oh, I'm going to like, this is going to turn into a mess
for the next hour or so.
Or I might have a panic attack or something.
So you fear the reaction to the physical sensation.
So with interoceptive exposure, you want to identify what are some of those sensations
that trigger these responses. And then you want to intentionally, in a calm situation,
expose yourself to those situations.
So let's just say, if you notice that your heart,
when your heart races or if you feel your heart beat,
that that's gonna make you worry that,
oh, you're getting ready to have a panic attack.
You could do something to intentionally
increase your heart rate.
Oh my God, but wouldn't that make you have a panic attack?
You'd be surprised. When you don't have a panic attack, because you probably won't because of the situation.
So do a couple of jumping jacks. Your heart's beating faster now.
But you're in a safe situation and you can get the reinforcement that just because my heart races or gets faster
doesn't mean I'm going to have full-blown panic
or that it's going to explode into uncontrollable anxiety.
So you're exposing yourself to these physical sensations in a safe environment
and you're intentionally doing it
and then you're getting the reinforcement that,
okay, I can handle this.
So in the case that Oakley just talked about where he gets this sensation in his head,
what I read in your book when you talk about this, again, I want to just give everybody
the page number because this is so cool.
There's actually a chart for this.
I'd never seen this before.
It's on page 250 where you say, nausea, spin in a swivel chair for a minute.
What does that do?
So spinning in the chair activates your vestibular system
or your balance in your ears.
And it can trigger that same sensation
of feeling the weirdness in your head or like you're dizzy.
Because dizziness, sometimes people,
if they feel lightheaded,
will be like, what's wrong with me?
And they become fearful of being lightheaded
because, and then that makes them anxious.
So intentionally make yourself lightheaded
or have a spinning sensation to, again,
reinforce the idea that it's not dangerous.
You can handle this, you can manage it.
What about anxiety that feels like a pit in your stomach?
Because I think that's sort of the classic thing
that people feel.
And I love that we're talking about physical sensations
because for most of my anxiety and most of the anxiety
that I've experienced with all three of our children,
it always does seem to start with something physical in their body, this sense. So let's talk about the
pit in the stomach. What can you do if you have a pit in the stomach every time you walk
into work in the morning? A lot of people have that.
That's right. So when you get anxious, you get slowed digestion. So you get less movement of your gut.
And so yeah, that's how you can get stomach ache from eating when you're anxious or even
completely lose your appetite to eat when you're anxious.
But anyway, the pit in the stomach, yeah, is related to gastrointestinal slowing and
changes because of the increased cortisol and stress hormones.
So what can you do about that?
Well, the first step is, what you've already said, is recognizing that that's part of how
you are manifesting anxiety and then address the anxiety with the tools that work for you.
Not everything works for everyone.
An example of something could be breath work. Changing your breathing pattern just to do a reset.
To then relieve some of the anxieties.
Because that's what we're trying to do here.
We're saying, I got this pit in my stomach.
I'm probably anxious or tense about walking in.
Because you might not always be conscious that, or consciously aware that,
I'm anxious walking into work.
It's more like, I'm doing this thing, oh, here's the pit.
Okay, I hate my life, dah, dah, dah,
you just kind of keep working.
But if you can separate out, okay, I've got this pit
in my stomach, it's anxiety, I am going to do something
to calm myself.
Like if we talk about, because I think it would be super
helpful for the person listening to have you describe anxiety
in terms of when you're in a calm resting,
you're okay space.
You're not in the what if loop going,
what if this happens, what if that happens,
and then the pit in the stomach,
and then all of a sudden you think you're gonna throw up,
and then you can't sleep,
and then you're staring at the ceiling.
Yes, I've experienced all of this.
Something just happened in your body
when that switch flipped.
So could you just describe for us what's happening
either in your nervous system or digestive tract
and why that's happening?
So we have two competing systems.
We have the amygdala, which is a structure in your brain
that is responsible for threat detection.
So it detects threats and it prepares your body to be able to either fight or flee.
So by increasing the sympathetic response in your body so that you get increases in epinephrine
and things to stimulate you to be able to defend yourself.
Once that threat is passed,
then the parasympathetic system kicks in to calm things down.
So it's like pressing on the brakes.
So the sympathetic system turns up the gas
and the parasympathetic turns on the brakes
to slow things back down to just kind of a normal resting state.
Got it. So that makes perfect sense.
And I think we can all imagine you're in a scenario
and whether it's just your mother-in-law
who you can't stand and they walk in the room
and you're like,
that's what you're talking about.
That your body and nervous system and senses sense a threat,
all of a sudden your body steps on the gas.
You just mentioned a bunch of chemicals that flood your body.
Your heart starts racing. Why?
Because you know that this person that you're now related to
is about to say something nasty to you about your parenting style.
So you're like on edge, you hit the gas, you're ready to go, you're bracing.
That is the alarm system designed to protect you.
But you also then said you have the ability
to tap the brakes because when she leaves
and you turn to your husband and say,
why didn't you defend me?
Like, okay, well, I'm making a joke about it,
but you can take a deep breath because it's over
and you go back into the present.
And so it's helpful for me to
understand that you have the ability to do these two things.
And you said earlier that anxiety can be a really good thing because if
the alarm goes on and you step on the gas because you want to do well in
an interview or you need to protect yourself, then it's working.
But the problem becomes, at least this is kind of what I'm hearing, on an interview or you need to protect yourself, then it's working.
But the problem becomes, at least this is kind of
what I'm hearing, that in the situation that Oakley
described, that the second that his brain feels slightly
dizzy, he mistakenly steps on the gas and turns the alarm
system on.
Is that a fair kind of way to describe it?
That's very fair.
Okay. Yes, and you can can always, the person can always control the
stepping on the gas. So you can step on the gas and accelerate, but then you
can come back once you recognize that that's what's happening. So the key here
is understanding how your brain works so Yep. So that then you can make your own interventions on that.
I just had a huge breakthrough in listening to you.
I love that.
Yeah. So let me just unpack this because I think that this is really important because
I have always hated it when psychiatrists or psychologists or medical experts have said,
well, you're never going to make your anxiety go away.
Because I'm like, I want it to go away, Dr. Marx.
I don't want to live like this.
I don't want to feel like this.
But in what you just said,
you can't actually change
the things that are going to be happening around you.
Whether it's your mother-in-law walking in or your boss's bad mood.
And you can't necessarily change the fact
that your body is wired to go from that thing
to suddenly stepping on the gas.
That anxiety response is potentially
always going to turn on.
But what you can control is you can catch it
when you feel your body go like that
and you step on the gas,
you can take your foot off and not accelerate it.
That's exactly right.
And the reason why that's actually important to me
is because I've always focused on never stepping on the gas. And so allowing
yourself to think about it like, okay, I'm just the kind of person that when I
sense a threat or I got to do something, boom, my body steps right on the gas, but
I don't have to accelerate this. In fact, I can use the tools that Dr. Marks is gonna teach us today to decelerate
and then tap the brake.
That's exciting.
Yes.
I've been looking at the wrong thing, Dr. Marks,
for 56 years.
Where the heck have you been for crying out loud?
And that's transformative.
You gotta change the focus from trying to prevent
the reaction to controlling the reaction to controlling the reaction
and modifying the reaction so that it's not as damaging
or it doesn't cause problems for you.
That's what we're focusing on.
I love that because I think the fear of being anxious
and the frustration with it makes you just want it
to disappear.
What you're basically saying is forget about that.
Let's just learn how to decelerate.
Absolutely.
And that takes the pressure off you to feel like you've got to do the right
thing to get yourself not to be anxious.
Okay, great.
So for somebody listening who has somebody in their life who is struggling
with anxiety, even just the reframe of thinking about this,
you don't have to get rid of their anxiety.
You're gonna be a support system
for helping them decelerate their response to it.
Absolutely.
That's so cool.
Dr. Marks, I am learning so much from you today.
I'm so grateful that you're here.
I know the person that is listening right now
is grateful that you're here.
And I wanna take a quick pause
so we can hear a word from our sponsors,
but also so that I can give you a chance
as you're listening to share this with people in your life.
I'm going to tell you who I'm sending this to.
Sawyer, Kendall, Oakley, this incoming immediately.
I'm even going to send this to my husband
because this is going to help him understand
the four of us even better.
But don't go anywhere because Dr. Marks
is just getting started.
She has so much more to share with you,
to teach you, tools to give you,
and the people that you care about.
And we'll be waiting for you after a short break.
So stay with us.
Dr. Marks
Dr. Marks
Dr. Marks
Dr. Marks
Welcome back.
It's your buddy Mel Robbins.
And today you and I are learning about the
connection between anxiety and ADHD and surprising symptoms from the remarkable Dr. Tracy Marks.
She's leveraging 25 years of clinical experience as a psychiatrist. And you know, Dr. Marks,
I've been thinking a lot about what you've already shared. And I have another video for
you. You were very popular when
everybody heard you were coming in. Okay. So here's another video for you. Hi, Mel. Hi, Dr. Marks.
My name is Alyssa and I am a production assistant here on the Mel Robbins podcast.
And I would love for Dr. Marks to touch on emetophobia, which is the fear of vomit.
to touch on emetophobia, which is the fear of vomit. I've been struggling with this pretty much my entire life.
I'm 23 now, and I can't really remember a time
where I wasn't afraid of vomit.
It has definitely impacted a lot of my life.
When I was younger, I struggled to go to school
because I was so afraid of vomiting in public.
There was a time where I was doing virtual school because I just was so afraid of kids
vomiting around me, of me vomiting in the classroom.
And as I got older, it's still kind of prevalent in my life where I really don't like air travel.
I still don't really drink alcohol that much because I just don't want to throw up. And I definitely feel like this fear has been holding me back in a lot of avenues of life. So,
Dr. Marks, if you have any advice to ease these symptoms, I would love to hear it. And I know that
our listeners who might struggle with emetophobia, the fear of vomit might as well. Thank you. Thank you, Alyssa, for that question.
Actually, emetophobia is not that uncommon.
Whether it be emetophobia, the fear of vomiting,
a fear of embarrassing yourself in public,
any kind of phobia is typically made worse by avoidance.
So the avoidance behaviors become the bigger problem than the thing that you fear.
So for me, I hate roaches.
And so, I could get to the point where if I try and do everything, I lived in New York
during my residency, and I considered staying up there because it was five years of very
few roaches.
So, you know, I'm going to craft my whole life around trying to avoid roaches.
I can't do that.
And now I live in the South and I definitely have to deal with them.
But the point is, is that you can start with something that you either fear, phobias can
also be generated from disgust.
So it's not always fearing.
It can be just, it's so gross, you know,
that it's an unpleasant sensation to even face it.
But if you let yourself move the world
to keep from having to deal and face that,
it's gonna make the fear even worse
and then the avoidance behavior becomes the bigger problem
than the original thing.
I think that's a super important thing to highlight
because when you say that the avoidance of it
becomes a way bigger problem
than the thing that you're actually afraid of,
that's when it seems like anxiety spirals into something
that makes your life debilitating.
And one thing that I worry about, you mentioned that there's been a big rise in
social anxiety.
I worry when you look at hybrid work and how people
don't see their friends and the rise of loneliness,
that if you're also somebody that feels a little discomfort around
putting yourself out there,
that then when you start to avoid it
and you start to stay in and then you're not reaching out
and then you're not going to the things you are invited to,
that the avoiding of putting yourself out there
becomes actually the bigger problem
than being worried about what it's gonna feel like
when you put yourself out there.
Absolutely.
The pandemic reinforced a lot of social anxiety for people.
People were like, oh cool, I didn't want to go anywhere anyway.
Well then now they have a reason not to.
And then now trying to like move past that once the pandemic was over,
it was even harder for many people like that.
And as we know, social isolation also makes anxiety worse.
So it's a problem that just can compound on itself.
What's the difference between being shy and introverted and having social anxiety, Dr. Marks?
Great question. So, introversion is often misunderstood.
It's not as though you don't want to be around people. I'm introverted and I get my energy from having some downtime, quiet time, time to myself
in my head.
That's where I gain my energy.
So I can get depleted if I'm out all day long and talking to people versus the extrovert
gains their energy from the interaction with
people and they can get depleted if they have too much alone time.
So knowing that, being introverted doesn't mean that you've got a problem or that being
around people makes you anxious.
You just have to balance some time to have to yourself to be able
to just think in quiet and peace. Social anxiety is an anxiety disorder where you become preoccupied
with being judged and what other people think to the extent that it changes your own behavior
and makes you avoid situations
where you fear you're gonna be judged.
Oh, really?
They're like kind of mixed together?
They're mixed together.
So it's not just that you fear
or become anxious being around people,
you can become anxious on the performance aspect
with performance being speaking.
Doesn't have to be playing a piano on stage.
So if I've got, say, you know, I have patients who have trouble with these like meetings.
And so they'll get really anxious about just having to even like deliver or talk to a team about what they were doing.
That would be an example of performance anxiety. So with that, there's a lot of fear and thoughts in your head about what people are thinking.
You're appraising your own performance and just assuming that you're going to mess up
and have all this criticism.
So that's a lot of the genesis or the thoughts behind what drives social anxiety is what other people are thinking.
So can you put us at the scene of what it feels like when you are struggling with social anxiety and again, where you're putting yourself in a situation,
let's just say that you're a bunch of friends are meeting out at a bar.
They're like, come on out, meet us after work.
The thought of that moment where you walk through the door,
and the music is loud,
and it's a crowded place,
and you're looking around,
and you see the group over there,
and then you immediately are like,
ah, you know, I shouldn't have come,
or my friend isn't here yet, I shouldn't go.
What is happening for somebody that feels social anxiety
in that kind of situation,
or when they walk into a networking meeting
and you immediately just feel like the spotlight is on you?
So there's an overemphasis on other people's appraisal of you
or other people's judgment of you.
You assume that you're the focus of attention,
which you're not.
Everyone's not directing their attention to the door,
but that's what it feels like.
But you know that moment though,
when you do walk in and everyone turns and they're like...
And then they look back, you know, and for, if you're listening,
I literally just turned around and then turned and gave Dr. Marks
that kind of like blank look that's not very warm.
And then you feel like they look you up and down
and then they turn back and you go,
like, so how, like, that's a very real experience that we've all had.
It is, and it's based on your assumptions.
So the non-socially anxious person could have that happen
and just think, oh, they looked and they saw that
I wasn't the person they were looking for,
and they turned back around.
The socially anxious person could say,
they don't like what I'm wearing.
Or they hate that I'm here.
Or they're like, why was she invited?
Like, that's the assumption
that the socially anxious person makes.
Got it.
So in that scenario,
how do you use the tools to stop yourself
from accelerating the situation
and separating yourself from the sensation you feel
versus running yourself over with an anxiety response?
Right, so there's kind of two branches to this.
Okay.
One takes a lot of self-discipline
and some work behind the scenes
before you get to that situation.
Okay.
Of changing your mindset
about what other people are thinking,
recognizing that you're making assumptions,
you've got a lot of negative self-talk,
working on your negative self-talk
to be able to accept that, like for example,
accept that people, it's not about you, things like that.
And then the second part is addressing
the physical sensations that you have in that scenario.
So again, this is all like homework to do to be able to build these tools for yourself
for what works for you, because what works for one person may not work for the other.
So it could be, I love the vagal maneuvers.
Okay, what's that?
That sounds complicated.
A vagal maneuver.
Vagal maneuver.
Is that when you raise your hand and go, Bartender, right over here.
So your vagus nerve is what's responsible for the step on the brakes response of calming you down,
the parasympathetic nervous system.
And there's things that you can do to trigger it, to trigger a calming response.
So things like cold exposure, splashing cold
water on your face or chest. Now you may not be able to do that if you're walking into a
networking meeting. Humming, you still may not be able to do that when walking into a networking
meeting. But that activation of your vocal cords is something that then because of the proximity
or the closeness of your vocal cords to your
vagus nerve stimulates it.
And that could, and that's why you see people meditating and making that humming, that ummm
sound.
It's to stimulate their vocal cords.
Breathing is something you can do if you're walking into a networking meeting because
it's something you can do privately. And so it's not just, oh, just breathe. There's certain types of breathing
patterns that you can employ that are calming. Two classic ones are the box breathing, where
you inhale for four seconds or a count of four. You hold it for four, then you exhale for four, and then you hold that for four.
Now, some people don't like that, aren't able to do it as well. I know sometimes it could trigger
hyperventilation for me because I can feel like I'm not breathing. So there's other types of
breathing. I'll give you two more. One is a four, seven, eight breathing pattern. So you inhale for four, hold for seven
seconds, and then exhale for eight. And that longer exhale really is stimulating for your vagus nerve.
Well, what I love about this is, is you're starting to really cement this theme that there are always
going to be things in your life that trigger the
pit in the stomach or make your heart race or that make you jump up into your head and
start going, what if this, what if that, what if they're saying that?
That is something that is just what we all need to learn to live with.
But whether or not you hit the accelerator and you run yourself over and allow anxiety to just flood you is within your control.
Yeah. And if you're not into the counting, just breathing in deeply, slowly and exhaling slowly.
Even that is helpful, because again, when you're tense, you're breathing fast and shallow.
Because again, when you're tense, you're breathing fast and shallow.
You know, Dr. Marks,
Alyssa's question about the fear of throwing up
and just the idea of it making somebody anxious,
we get flooded in the inbox with questions about this.
Based on your 25 years of clinical experience
as a psychiatrist,
what are mind tools, body tools, and behavior tools
that you can use to help yourself manage anxiety?
Okay, so I'm going to talk about the tools,
and then there's lifestyle stuff.
Oh, okay.
Okay. So the tools are things that are kind of like
based on cognitive behavior therapy that
could help you manage your anxiety.
Mind tools, that's just kind of how I broke these things up.
But the mind tools are things like grounding exercises.
A simple one is, you know, counting or looking in a room and picking out a color and naming all
of the things in the room with that color.
What does that do?
That takes you out of the moment of what about this and what about that and brings you into
the present moment of experiencing the colors in the room.
Excellent.
What's a behavioral tool that you could use?
A behavioral tool would be something like coloring.
Now, that's not something that you would do at the networking meeting.
Yeah. It depends how boring it is.
Yeah, exactly.
But that would be something that you would do on your own
to help bring down the level of tension and anxiety in general.
Got it.
So another behavioral tool would be like the interoceptive exposure to help bring down the level of tension and anxiety in general. Got it.
So another behavioral tool would be like the interoceptive exposure that I talked about
or any kind of exposure.
So let's say that if you know that you have got to attend networking meetings, but they
make you want to throw up every time you get ready to walk in the door, you can create a list of little steps that can get you to
being able to go into a networking meeting and feel comfortable. So it starts with showing up
at the place. Then it could be being able to walk into a room and you don't have to say anything,
just be able to walk into the room and manage that level of anxiety. Then the next step could be actually being able
to walk into the room and go talk to one person,
so on and so forth.
You kind of build out this gradual exposure
to the thing that makes you anxious,
which ultimately would be walking around
from person to person and talking about stuff spontaneously.
So get good at the first steps of just being able
to walk into the room and you just gradually build
your confidence and you desensitize yourself
to these threatening things that then they become
less threatening for you.
So you're basically saying, if you're somebody
that has a fear of throwing up, you can have that fear and still get on the plane.
You can have that fear and learn how to go to the networking meeting.
You can have that fear and do a sleepover or go to work because the fear may never go
away, but you can learn how not to accelerate in those situations where you notice you're
a little worried about it. Is that a fair way to say it?
That's a fair way to say it.
You know, I recently started thinking about anxiety as a moment where there's something
that you fear or you're uncertain, and then you doubt your capacity to handle it. And
I'd love to hear you reflect on that.
So this is where the exposure really reinforces
that you do have the capacity to handle it.
And when you take that away,
that reinforcement away by avoiding it,
then you can't remember that you can actually do this.
And so again, going back to exposing yourself,
you're not just trying to jump right in and say,
okay, I'm going to go to this place
and let's say you fear throwing up in a public place,
I'm just going to just jump in and hope for the best.
Instead, you take little steps toward getting to that ultimate place.
I mentioned the lifestyle stuff as well.
Because one of the biggest ways we can change how we manage anxiety
or how it manages us is our lifestyle choices.
Those things really do matter. And probably the biggest ones, sleep, diet, and exercise.
And every time I talk about these things,
I always kind of feel like I have to brace myself for the person saying,
yeah, yeah, yeah, I know that.
But really, it really does matter.
Why?
Because all these little habits rewire our brain in either a negative way or a positive
way.
So just taking diet, diet with high sugar content, which I'm guilty of, heavily processed
foods creates inflammation in your body.
It changes the constitution of your gut bacteria
and inflammation in things send negative signals to the brain that then make it harder to manage
anxiety.
So eating too much sugar and ultra processed foods actually increases your anxiety?
Yes.
Wow.
And you know how?
No.
It increases anxiety because those behaviors send signals to the brain.
They actually change the way your genes express themselves.
It's called epigenetics.
It's kind of a new topic.
And so it can make anxiety worse if it affects like the genes that express cortisol production
by making it overactive or underactive.
So I think that, you know, for years we've known that these things are helpful, but didn't
really understand how they're helpful.
And these behaviors really do make a difference.
Sleep, if you go without sleep, sleep deprivation makes anxiety worse at baseline.
So it's more than just...
Why does it make it worse if you don't get enough sleep?
There's a lot that goes on during sleep.
And so just like we have to plug in our phones in order for it to work, our brains and body
need a rest because when we're sleeping, there's lots of generative functions and things that
happen and when we don't have enough time for our body
to kind of take what we learned during the day,
file it away, then you end up with just too much,
you'd end up with the information overload
and having trouble processing it.
Got it.
It's almost like, as I'm listening to you,
I'm thinking about how much sense that makes,
because if you don't get the rest you need
and you wake up weary, everything
around you is going to feel like a threat.
That's right.
And what was the third one?
Exercise.
Okay.
So how does not exercising make you more anxious?
Exercise, it's probably better to think of it as how exercise reduces anxiety.
Okay.
So exercise increases brain-derived neurotrophic factor, BDNF, which is a protein that
is responsible for regenerating nerves, repairing bad nerve connections. It's the very thing we want
to be thriving and it's like fertilizer for the brain. So exercise increases the amount of BDNF we have
to then be able to rewire, to allow the good habits that we develop to make a difference in
our brains. If you don't have that, then you're just kind of left with your baseline of what you're stuck with. So it's more about enhancement than it is about fixing.
Got it.
This makes so much sense.
It all makes sense.
If you just understand,
if you just understand how your brain works,
then you can build a system around yourself
to overcome these challenges and turn them into strengths.
Wow.
You know, this feels like a good moment
to hit the pause button because there's someone in my life
that I actually want to share what you just said with.
And so I want to give you, as you've been listening
to Dr. Marks, a chance to share this information
and this conversation with people that you care about.
I also want to give our sponsors a chance
to share a few words.
Don't go anywhere.
Dr. Marks and I will be waiting for you after a short break.
Stay with us.
Welcome back.
It's your buddy Mel Robbins.
Today, you and I are learning from Dr. Tracy Marks.
We're learning about the connection between anxiety and ADHD.
Thank you for being here and listening to this.
Thank you for sharing this with people that you care about.
Now, Dr. Marks, you know, one thing that I'd love to talk to you about
is the connection between ADHD and anxiety seem to be this thing that goes hand in hand.
And I remember when our son,ley was in the fourth grade, he
came home from school and he had these like bruises on his hands. And I was so upset because
I thought he had gotten into a fight at school. And I asked him, Oak, like what happened?
What happened? And he couldn't remember. Well, long story short,
it turns out that he had undiagnosed dyslexia,
dysgraphia, and ADHD,
and it was now the fourth grade,
and so everything was crashing around him,
and he was apparently sitting in class,
wringing his hands to the point
where he had bruised his own hands.
And when we took him in to see a doctor,
they were saying, oh, it's anxiety.
And that's what got diagnosed first.
And then when we went and got all kinds of evaluations done,
it turned out there were lots of other things going on.
And if I look at my own history,
I was diagnosed with anxiety in
my high school years and the underlying issue, I believe, was undiagnosed ADHD. I
was treated for anxiety for decades and it wasn't until I was diagnosed with
ADHD at the age of 47, like the majority of women are when their kids are going through the
diagnosis, and you start to go, well, that seems very familiar, that seeing the issue of ADHD for
the first time was absolutely life-changing and helped me personally separate those two things.
But when I think about anybody that I know that has ADHD,
they always talk about anxiety and vice versa.
What is the connection between these two things?
Yeah, they're very interconnected,
kind of a bi-directional relationship,
meaning one can affect the other.
Absolutely, ADHD can cause what we would consider like
a secondary anxiety.
So it kind of derives from ADHD.
And if you think about it, just the sheer disorganization of thought can make you feel
out of control and therefore then create anxiety about your ability to just even like hold
it together, to be able to perform, be productive, all of these things.
It's sort of like its own type of performance anxiety.
It is.
You know what I, I used to beat myself up chronically
because I constantly forgot people's birthdays.
But I resonate with that
because when you have trouble directing your attention
and staying on top of details,
you do feel like you're not on top of things.
You do feel like you're screwing up.
And it does create this sense
that there's something wrong with you.
Yeah, the really, the lack of control
over your own thoughts and behaviors.
So another thing that's kind of key with ADHD though is so
you've got the standard inattention hyperactivity and impulsivity.
That's kind of classically defines ADHD. But then you've got the executive
dysfunction. Executive functions are things like time management, organization, working memory,
the ability to keep things top of mind
for easy retrieval later.
Did my husband call you before this
and ask you to have an intervention with me, Dr. Marks?
Mm-hmm.
I'm not telling.
So those activities or those abilities
are controlled by the prefrontal cortex, front part of the brain.
With people with ADHD who have low levels of dopamine in that area, they have less ability
to control those functions.
So emotion regulation is an executive function. It is? It is. Well
that explains a lot. It explains a lot. So are people that have ADHD tend to be
more emotional? Emotional, yeah. So if you've got something that would
ordinarily cause some level of anxiety, it can escalate in the person with ADHD because they have less
ability to rein it in.
That makes so much sense.
So what are the key differences between ADHD versus anxiety?
Because I've heard ADHD described as, you mentioned the prefrontal cortex and executive
functioning, it's like the conductor in the brain that is basically going tap tap tap, string session like
you guys shh shh shh and then lifting up this group over here, the percussion, you can
come on now the ability to kind of direct your attention, that switching
feature doesn't really work that well.
Yeah, so one more thing about the relationship with ADHD,
because the prefrontal cortex,
yes, being the brain's CEO and the conductor,
it will manage the amygdala, which is our fear center.
If it is compromised, like with ADHD,
it won't be able to manage the amygdala as well.
So the amygdala can hijack its control
and then turn everything into something to be afraid of
and convince you that you have got to worry
about the worst case scenario.
I can't believe we're talking about this
because I learned for the first time last week,
talking to my therapist, who's changed my life, and shout out and Davin, where she was basically
saying there's a huge connection between ADHD and actual rumination and spiraling thoughts,
because you can't pull your attention off of the worst case scenario.
You know, I mentioned earlier getting this email
from somebody who's miffed at me about something,
and I bet I probably wasted three hours
because I could not direct my attention to something else.
I would try to, and I'd be like,
no, let's think about that over here.
And so that makes so much sense
why these are so related to one another.
Dr. Marks, do you have any thoughts
on what seems like a huge surge
of people getting diagnosed later in life with ADHD,
which was the case for me and a lot of my female friends?
I just wanna say, I do think
that there's a misconception though,
that more people have ADHD this day and time,
and that everybody's got it, or that it's overdiagnosed.
I think what's happening is that there's more education
about it and more appreciation for it,
and therefore a greater detection of it.
Even when I was in residency 25 years ago, adult ADHD was just kind of
quasi appreciated. In fact, it was kind of seen as something that's not real. It's a
disorder in children. So over time, we've come to recognize adult ADHD as its own entity
that is real. It's not just adult-seeking performance enhancement.
That said, I think there are societal factors
that affect people being diagnosed with it.
You know, it's just hyperactivity could be bad behavior,
resistance to even seeing something mental
as something that needs attention.
But I'm just saying all that to say,
I think we've evolved when it comes to seeing
mental health as a real thing to pay attention to
and prioritize, but it's been a long haul that way.
And there's still a lot of remnant bias against it.
It's easy to just kind of write it off as,
well, you know, these are just quirks
or something about you.
Right, right.
Or everybody's distracted. You don't have ADHD. That's what I hear a lot. Like, can you know, these are just quirks or something about you. Right, right. Or everybody's distracted.
You don't have ADHD.
That's what I hear a lot.
Like, can you explain, and I think it would be helpful
to really just put the nail in the coffin on this one
because there is sort of that eye roll,
oh, you have ADHD too?
Everybody's distracted.
There's a big difference between just being distracted because of the world that we live
in versus what it actually feels like day to day to be somebody that does have ADHD
as a diagnosed condition that you're dealing with or an undiagnosed condition that you
don't know that you're dealing with.
So can you walk us through what a day might look like
for somebody who is going through their day
and they may not realize they have ADHD?
So I will say it really is on a spectrum
because again, I'll use myself as an example.
Have you been diagnosed with it?
I was treated as a child, more for hyperactivity though,
but yeah, I was treated as a child for ADHD. Andactivity though, but yeah, I was treated as a child for ADHD.
And as an adult, I still have trouble owning it
because I feel like of all the people I've treated,
and I look at my son and my husband,
I'm like, I'm not like them, so I can't really have this.
What?
You're sitting here as a psychiatrist telling me
that you don't like the diagnosis that you have been given
because you look at your husband and your son and are like, I'm not like those losers.
I knew I loved you. Oh my God, Dr. Marks. But even though you've been diagnosed with
you're like, I can't possibly have that. I still have trouble accepting that. Well,
I don't, I just think I'm one of those adults who's grown out of it. But I know that I haven't. And the reason is because... I still, I reckon, what it is, is I recognize what my weaknesses are.
So I'm a slow reader. So I could not have a job where I had to like put down a book every week,
that I just wouldn't work in that kind of situation. So, and I have trouble set shifting.
What's that?
So, it's going from one task where you're into it,
and then you got to stop and go do something else.
Oh my God, I say this to my team all the time.
I'm like, if we are going to do a production day,
I will tape for nine hours straight.
But the second you put me in a meeting,
and I have to look at copy,
or if I have to change something on my phone,
you call this set switching, Yes. and I go into look at copy, or if I have to change something on my phone, you call this set switching,
and I go into a different mode,
I can't go back to taping.
That's right.
So someone who doesn't have trouble with that
can like work and then, ooh, there's a meeting.
Okay, I'll stop, pick up, go to this meeting.
Okay, that meeting's over.
Okay, go back and jump right back in.
No.
So I will have like, I don't see patients on Fridays
and that's days that I kind of do business related things.
Do you actually get anything done? Like I get something done for like the first hour
and then I'm realizing I have a zoom call and I get nothing else done.
That's what exactly what happens. So if I've got to take my mom to a doctor's appointment
in the middle of the day, I know that that day is going to be completely wasted for me.
And other people will say, well, you had two hours before the appointment and two hours after. So what's
the problem? That interruption will just ruin my whole day.
And is that have to do with the dopamine and the prefrontal cortex being able to direct
different parts here? Is that what that is?
That's what that is.
No way.
And so someone with ADHD, one misconception is you can't focus at all.
And it's not only about focusing because people with ADHD can hyper focus on things that they're
interested in.
It's a stimulation issue.
What does that mean?
That means that the ADHD brain needs stimulation to stay engaged in something.
So it has to be something that commands your attention
and keeps your attention.
And as soon as there's boredom involved, then you're gone.
Okay, so I wanna see if I can unpack this.
So your brain needs stimulation to pay attention
if you're somebody that truly struggles
with this issue of ADHD. And so I'm
thinking about the example that absolutely all of us can relate to, where you have somebody in your
life who is can literally rot away in front of a video game for two days. And you walk into the room
You walk into the room and they don't even break their stare.
They're so hyper-focused. But then getting them to put their dirty clothes
in the laundry basket or remember to do the homework
or shut the refrigerator door or put their shoes
somewhere other than the middle of the hallway,
it's just, you don't even understand why they're like this
because you've seen them focus on something.
So that must mean they're just a world-class jerk
in every other area of their life
because you're not seeing that level of attention to detail
in other areas.
And so we presume that the person doesn't care
or that they're rude or that they're aloof.
And what you're saying is, no, no, no, no, no,
the ADHD brain really requires some form of stimulation.
Is that where the dopamine comes in?
That's where the dopamine comes in
and the whole reward circuit.
So because of the lower levels of dopamine,
then you can struggle on staying engaged
and paying attention to
things that don't interest you.
Well, you know what's interesting is that this makes sense because, you know, if I think
about what I've heard a lot of people say and what I've struggled with is like, if you
literally wake up in the morning, if you have ADHD, and you grab your phone, and then you
look at social media, you've just flushed your dopamine
that you needed for the attention during the day
right down the toilet.
And now you're gonna struggle to gain it back
because you wasted it on something really stupid.
And understanding that you need that dopamine to focus,
that's a really important thing to understand.
Absolutely, and you know, the thing you were talking about with leaving stuff in the middle
of the floor and making it look like they're just a jerk, they don't care, is why people with ADHD
can have relationship problems, a lot of relationship problems, because the non-ADHD person
can feel like the person doesn't care. It's like, you don't see this tennis shoe in the middle of
the floor. You just stepped over it.
How did you miss?
How are you missing that?
Do you not care about our house looking good?
But it's not that they don't care.
It's just not on their radar.
And also, because if they've also blasted through their dopamine by being on social
media first thing or playing video games or whatever, they don't have the stimulation
that they need in order to focus on these
things that are not that interesting.
That is so helpful to understand this.
When I think about some of the just nutso things that I do because of my ADHD, I have
lists everywhere.
I leave cabinet doors and faucets running all the time, cabinet doors open.
I also do this thing on social media where I have extensive folders of things that I've saved
thinking that at some point in the future
I will go back and organize them all.
I haven't looked at them once.
I mean, and I just obsessively do this.
I'm constantly running late
because I have this weird time expansion thing
that happens to me where I feel like I can get 25 things done in
exactly three minutes. It just makes me crazy because I know that I can focus in other areas,
so it seems so weird that I can't just freaking make myself do it. Talk to me, Dr. Murph.
Well, the thing is, it would be great if you could control what gets your attention enough
to be able to stay engaged, but you can't always do that. Now, you could exploit that if you knew,
if you're self-aware enough to know that these are the things that I know I can lock into,
and these are the things that are not. So I'm going to try and minimize how much of those things that I have to do or get help with those or whatever.
Got it.
It's so fascinating.
You know, you have unbelievable content
on your YouTube channel that are all about the overlooked
signs and symptoms that people don't realize
are symptoms of ADHD and anxiety.
And I would love to have you talk about body picking.
What is body picking and why do people do it?
Yes. So body picking, the technical term is body-focused repetitive behaviors.
And it really is its own disorder that mainly is skin picking and hair pulling.
And those things can become really problematic for people.
So is hair pulling like when you see somebody
constantly like twirling their hair and splitting the ends
and doing stuff like this, is that what you mean?
Well, so for the compulsive disorder
of the body focus repetitive disorders,
people can actually like pull it out from the root.
And part of the pleasure of it is actually that pulling it out from the roots.
Oh my gosh.
It's not really splitting.
Okay.
But for people, so there's that.
Right.
That's compulsive disorder.
But kind of a lower level of that is general body behaviors that can also include nail-biting and cuticle cuticle biting, biting the inside of your cheek.
Wait, so nail biting and biting or picking at your cuticles or around your fingers is a form of anxiety?
Is it like a symptom of anxiety?
It can be.
Really?
So people with anxiety can do it to relieve tension and be self-soothing.
People with ADHD can do it for stimulation.
Why is nail biting and skin picking something that people with ADHD do?
Because the ADHD brain needs stimulation and this provides sensory input for the brain. So you could
have someone who's say studying or watching television and they may kind of
enjoy what they're watching maybe maybe not but they can kind of get into this
trance state of just kind of pulling picking or whatever that's stimulating
their brain and keeping it active. So if you're somebody that struggles with nail biting,
Dr. Marks, what do you recommend somebody do?
So first of all, there's just even recognizing the habit,
because some people can do it and not even really being aware that they're doing it.
Okay.
Then when you add on the time blindness or time expansion that you mentioned.
Oh, with ADHD.
With ADHD, you can think you're just doing it for a minute, and it was really 45 minutes
that you were doing that thing, and now you've got sores or you've got bald spots.
So first, there's just the awareness of it, of what it is you're doing, end in being aware
of any triggers that make you do it or that make it worse.
It can be anxiety can make it worse, boredom can make it worse.
Then putting other things in place, we call it habit reversal.
Putting other habits in place to replace these more destructive habits.
Someone who picks their nails or bites their cuticles could either put on gloves.
Like, let's say you notice that you do this while you're watching television a lot.
You could put on gloves while you're watching television.
You don't need to walk around for your whole life with gloves, but just during these times.
And if you were to wear the gloves for a couple months, does that train you to stop doing
it?
Is that what's happening? that train you to stop doing it? Is that what's happening?
It trains you to stop. It breaks the cycle. Because if you go back to the idea of this being
like a semi-automatic thing that you engage in, it helps break that semi-automatic thing so that
you have more intentional behaviors. So while I'm watching television instead of me biting my cuticles or picking my nails,
I'm doing this other thing.
That makes sense because I would imagine people do it almost as like a soothing technique.
You know, I have another question from my son.
Okay.
That I would love to play for you.
And then I have one more question for you.
And then this one, this one's a good one
Whenever I get anxious I like I normally like uncontrollably shake my hand like this or like I go like this like I do a little Snap
Isn't that cool?
But it's a lot of like shaking and it's something that I do completely unconsciously at this point and I was curious what you
Might think about that too
Let me know. Thank you so much. You're amazing. The work you do is incredible. You help so many people and we are so lucky
to have you. Thank you.
All right. So, so yes, he spoke to exactly what we were just talking about. The unconscious
nature, not unconscious in the sense that you're not awake,
you're not aware.
So it's beyond your awareness
that you're doing this soothing thing.
So there's nothing inherently wrong
with doing things that are self-soothing.
It becomes an issue when it either causes problems for you
for some reason, like you're pulling out your hair
or destroying your upper lip or bottom lip because you're biting.
Or it's socially unacceptable. So yeah, he can't go places doing this when he starts
to get anxious. So it's about finding other self-soothing things. Either, so twofold.
One is reducing the finding things that reduce his anxiety. And that could be, you know, the breathing or something vagal.
Oh, so for example, if he catches himself shaking
and he gets to a point where he's like,
this is something that I'd like to stop doing,
that I'm not aware that I'm doing,
that in moments where he catches himself doing it,
so going back to this kind of metaphor
of the response happens, that's not what we're focused on.
We're focused on not stepping on the accelerator.
He might then go, okay, clearly something's making me
feel a little unsettled, let me do a breath.
And so he's now catching that he's shaking
and he's teaching himself to take his foot off the gas
and to step on the brake.
That's right.
Oh, wow.
And then just like some of the other examples
of you're putting gloves on while you watch TV
so you don't destroy your finger beds
or bite your nails down until they're bleeding,
that you are now teaching yourself to stop doing
that thing subconsciously in situations where you might feel bored or lonely or nervous about
something. Absolutely. Because the biggest step here is the awareness part. Yes. Because, yeah,
a lot of times these things just happen automatically. You're not even aware that
you're doing it or you're even aware that you're doing it,
or you're not aware that you're doing it for as long as you're doing it.
Dr. Marks, what would you say to somebody who is struggling with body picking
and it's really challenging and impacting their life?
Yes, so if it's really severe, I think they should seek professional help
from like a therapist to help them develop some kind of like habit reversal therapy to get them to be able to not be able to do this.
Sometimes medication is what someone needs to reduce their anxiety, especially if they're engaging in a way that's really destructive. Since we're on the topic of repetitive behavior,
what is the relationship between ADHD and tics?
And what is a tic?
Yeah, so a tic is an involuntary,
usually sudden rapid behavior
that can either be motor or vocal.
Okay.
It can be its own thing.
So something like Tourette's syndrome involves tics,
but not all tics are Tourette's syndrome.
Motor tics would be things like grimacing
or blinking your eyes,
or my son used to do this thing
where he'd open up his mouth real wide
when he'd get really anxious.
Vocal tics would be things like sniffing
or coughing, clearing your throat a lot
or even saying things.
That's kind of the television version of it
is people yelling out obscenities.
So as I mentioned, tics, anyone can have tics and they can come and go.
Are they self-soothing?
Is it another form of what we've been talking about or is it a different thing?
It's a different thing. It's not self-soothing.
It's usually just a response to anxiety.
They're usually made worse by anxiety.
So you get anxious and then you start doing this thing.
For the Tourette syndrome on the other hand,
that's a whole different entity and that's,
it can be made worse by anxiety,
but it is kind of its own thing,
self-generated from that neurological disorder.
But in the example of someone with anxiety,
having tics, or even there's just a greater prevalence
of people with ADHD also having tics.
How come?
I think it's related to just the biological mechanisms
in the brain, the kind of sharing real estate
in areas of the brain that affect both ADHD.
Tics are also dopamine sensitive, if you will,
behaviors or the condition is related to dopamine
as well.
So meaning when you don't have a lot of dopamine, the tick can be worse?
I guess the best way to say it without getting too complicated is it is a setup like low
dopamine levels are also associated with ticks as well.
Gotcha. So how do you know the difference between kind of a self-soothing behavior,
like what Oakley was talking about with the handshaking,
and the nail biting that we've discussed,
and what you would classify as a tick?
So with ticks, they aren't self-soothing. In fact, people can have a buildup of tension
that they feel if they try and suppress it.
So it's usually involuntary, they can't help it.
And if they recognize that they're doing it,
like heavy blinking, say, they can try and not do it
because people are around, but at some point,
they're just going to have to let it rip.
And so what do you do if you are,
or somebody that you love is struggling with a tick?
One other thing I wanna mention about ticks and ADHD
is unfortunately, medications, stimulant medications
can also make it worse.
Oh.
So if you notice that, that would be something
to address with your doctor to see if changing
the medication regimen could help
because that's not something you just kind of make go away
if it's being driven by the medication.
Ticks tend to also wax and wane.
They can go away or they can come back
if say you get really anxious.
So do the factors that you've written about in your book
and that we've talked about,
diet, sleep, and exercise also have an impact on ticks
and also like in a positive and negative way?
So they can have, yes, in a positive and negative way
in the sense of, you could think of these lifestyle factors
as things to kind of reduce the downstream problem.
Okay.
So these are things that you want to do that work in the background to reduce these issues.
And then the other tools we were talking about is what do you do when the issue arises right now?
But the lifestyle things are to get the issues from
happening.
Why do people who have ADHD and anxiety struggle with procrastination and perfectionism?
So with procrastination, motivation is one of those executive functions that's part of
the prefrontal cortex functions. And so you have lower motivation.
That then makes it harder for you to get started. But also, another thing that can make people
either with anxiety or ADHD procrastinate is having a huge accumulation of failures,
accumulation of failures, criticisms, and therefore creating performance anxiety of like, well, I don't know if I can do this because I always screw this up.
So I'm just not even going to get started.
Or it's just, the problem is just too big.
I just can't do it.
That makes so much sense.
I mean, it's basically explains my college and law school careers and leaving everything to
the last night because I would also add on to that is I'm feeling very validated by what you just said,
being so disorganized and this kind of overwhelming feeling that there's so much to do
that you don't even know where to start and then you just kind of collapse until everything's on fire and you have no choice.
And then it becomes the emergency all-nighter
because you have put yourself in this corner
and then you want, I'm never doing that again.
And then of course you do it again.
So I could see how it would become a chronic problem
as it was for me.
Dr. Marks, what do you recommend for somebody
who is really struggling with procrastination
and wants to change that behavior?
So one thing someone could do is what I call
the five minute rule, where you give yourself
five minutes to do this thing,
and you give yourself permission to stop
if you don't like it or stop if it's not clicking
and it's okay.
But just that inaction of making yourself, of forcing yourself to get started, you may
find that then you're starting to roll with it.
And this isn't that bad, okay, I'll do a little bit more.
If not, it's okay.
You still achieved something because you got started and you broke past
the procrastination.
So even that's still reinforcing.
Terrific.
Dr. Marks, if the person listening today does just one thing based on the unbelievable amount
of stuff that you've taught us today. What would be the most important thing
for that person to do after this conversation?
Only one.
You can pick two or three.
I'll give you that, okay?
So I think number one would be shifting your mindset
from looking at a condition that you have
as needing to be fixed and instead understanding it, understanding how it affects you,
and putting things in place to help you manage it
to improve the quality of your life.
That would be the first thing.
Then I would say, I think kind of the number one lifestyle choice would be sleep.
I think that is the most important with diet being a close second.
Because again, we can talk about, you know, what do you do if in this situation, what's
the tool that you can use?
And there's bunches of tools.
I have over 20 of them in my book.
It's about finding what works for you when it comes to the tools, because not everything
works for everyone.
But then really addressing the things like sleep and diet and exercise and coming up
with an inventory of how well are you sleeping?
What's your diet like?
How often are you exercising?
What's missing from this?
Because you can go online, you can go anywhere and find out what's the ideal, seven to nine
hours of sleep, all that stuff.
Come up with a list of the things that you need to change to improve the quality of your
life and then just chunk them out little bit by little bit.
Maybe this month I'm going to work on setting a bedtime. Maybe next month, I'm going to work on reducing
the number of potato chips that I eat.
The next month, I'm going to go on a walk in my neighborhood
once a week.
So make it bite-sized things so that you can have small wins.
And those small wins will pull you through to ultimately getting
to a point where
you've made big changes in your life that then ultimately affect your brain and change the way
that these conditions affect you. Amazing. Dr. Marks, what are your parting words? My parting words are be patient with yourself and your own personal operating system.
All of our brains are unique.
And if you have struggles, you're not defective, you're just different.
And that's okay.
And if you can understand your differences,
you can take control over how these differences manifest for you.
Dr. Marks, thank you for getting on a plane.
Thank you for everything that you do to help all of us around the world
and the people that we care about.
I want you to know from the bottom of my heart
that I appreciate you,
and you absolutely destroyed this today.
And the reason why I wanted to say that to you
is because you are living proof
that everything that you spoke about today is achievable.
Because you showed up here
worried about how you were going to do
and you didn't accelerate the anxiety.
You actually slammed on the brakes and you met this moment.
And I know that because there are going to be millions of people that listen to
this who are going to feel better and do better because of the tools that you
shared. And then they are going to share that with the people that they care
about. And the ripple effect is going to be extraordinary.
So thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you for giving me this opportunity.
You're welcome.
Thank you for saying yes.
And I also want to thank you for taking the time to listen to something
that could truly make your life better.
And I also want to thank you for sharing this with everybody that you care about,
because the tools that you learned today and the research that she unpacked will absolutely empower
you to do that for yourself and for the people that you care about. And in case no one else tells
you, I wanted to be sure to tell you today that I love you and I believe in you. And I believe in
your ability to do what Dr. Marks has taught us to do, which is to be more accepting, to use the tools,
and to change your brain and your life for the better.
Alrighty, I'll see you in a few days.
I'll be waiting for you in the very next episode.
The moment you hit play, I'll welcome you in.
I didn't do it. I didn't clean my fucking glasses.
These literally look like I lifted them.
Oh, eww!
When you learn about the connection
between anxiety and ADHD it's gonna blow your mind. You want to know what else is gonna
blow your mind? Hit subscribe because you... sorry. The connection between anxiety and
ADHD is just gonna blow your mind. I want to be cured and be anxiety free because...
I don't want to hear that. I don't want to hear that Dr. Mark.
Get rid of it.
Hold on.
I'm taking off my shoes.
Take it off woman.
I know that I basically had to change my underwear after being on Oprah Winfrey's podcast because
I had such unbelievable performance anxiety.
No, you're killing it.
Just be you.
You're doing dynamite.
Seriously.
Or shallow.
Shallow. I can't say it. Me either. You you're doing dynamite. Seriously. Or shallow, shallow, I can't say it.
Me either, you're gonna have to.
Shallow, anyway, we breathe very shallow.
Yep, I'm gonna do the four in, the seven hold,
the eight long breath out as I walk up to these bitches
that didn't want me here, no, I'm just kidding.
Dr. Merckx, I am learning so much for you.
Oh my God, for you? What am I doing?
Boom, that's how we do it.
It's like you have a YouTube channel or something.
I don't know.
Oh, and one more thing.
And no, this is not a blooper.
This is the legal language.
You know what the lawyers write
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.
Sticher.