Recognizing ADHD symptoms as a high-achieving girl can be challenging, leading to misinterpretations and self-blame.
Rebecca's journey showcases the impact of ADHD on task completion and decision-making, highlighting the importance of self-awareness.
Deep dives
Realization of ADHD Through Self-Perception - Rebecca's Journey
Rebecca shares her emotional realization of ADHD through a Twitter thread that resonated with her. The moment when she understood that her struggles with feeling lazy and unproductive were rooted in her neurodivergence brought clarity after years of confusion. This revelation led to seeking a diagnosis during a challenging time of the pandemic, highlighting the impact of self-awareness on mental health and well-being.
Navigating ADHD Traits and Coping Strategies
Rebecca details her coping mechanisms and experiences, illustrating the challenges of procrastination, perfectionism, and struggling with completing tasks common for individuals with ADHD. She discusses the complexities of managing ADHD symptoms, such as the difficulty in starting tasks and the pressure of high achievement, shedding light on the internal conflicts faced by those with ADHD.
ADHD Diagnosis, Coping Tools, and Parenting Perspective
The podcast delves into Rebecca's journey of receiving an ADHD diagnosis while balancing motherhood. She narrates her decision-making process regarding medication during breastfeeding, emphasizing the importance of self-care and informed choices. Rebecca's proactive approach to explaining ADHD to her children reflects her resilience and determination to create an enabling environment based on self-understanding and acceptance.
Rebecca Phillips Epstein has ADHD. But as with many high-achieving girls, her symptoms were missed early on. Then, during the pandemic, it finally clicked: She discovered a Twitter thread about people who beat themselves up for being lazy when clearly they’re not.
Rebecca has always been aware of her challenges — procrastination, being late, and having a million great ideas that never get finished. As a screenplay writer and essayist, she’d overcompensate so no one would be the wiser. Hear how an ADHD diagnosis helped her rethink what she used to call “personality failures” or “laziness.” Also in this episode: How depression treatment before her ADHD diagnosis helped her tread water but never “surf.” Rebecca also talks about her decision to stop breastfeeding her second child in order to stay on her ADHD medication.
You can also check out Rebecca'sWashington Post article on ADHD medication and breastfeeding.
Understood is a nonprofit organization dedicated to empowering people with learning and thinking differences, like ADHD and dyslexia. If you want to help us continue this work, donate at understood.org/give
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