Women with ADHD typically spend their lives masking to fit in. In social situations, we cringe with embarrassment and self-recrimination when we arrive late, interrupt, or say something that seems inappropriate.
At work, we frantically try to meet deadlines as the last minute, struggling to stay on track and talking too much to co-workers.
Underneath it all is the assumption that we do things “wrong,” and we must strive to conform to neurotypical standards.None of us is granted a life custom-designed for our interests and skills.
But what if women with ADHD approached their own lives with the same support and creative problem solving they offer their children with ADHD?