Ologies with Alie Ward - Attention-Deficit Neuropsychology (ADHD) Part 1 Encore with Russell Barkley
Episode Date: December 24, 2025Focus. Productivity. Relationships. Distraction. Neurodiversity. How do you know if you have ADHD? How can you get others to understand your ADHD brain? What are your treatment options and how can the...y help? In this encore of our wildly popular Part 1 episode, we talk racing thoughts, brilliant brains and the causes and effects of Attention-Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder with the world’s leading expert, Dr. Russell Barkley who is A BIG DEAL. Psychologist, retired professor of clinical psychiatry, author and speaker, Dr. Barkley has a personal connection to ADHD and has studied it for nearly 40 years. Is it all cute quirks? Nope. It’s serious business. But next week, we’ll hear about tips and tricks and self-love from 3 more experts — Jessica McCabe of How to ADHD, René Brooks of Black Girl Lost Keys and ADHD researcher Dr. Jahla Osborne. I’M TRYING NOT TO USE A BUNCH OF EXCLAMATION POINTS. It’s exciting. Dr. Russell Barkley’s website dedicated to education and research on ADHDDr. Barkley’s book: Taking Charge of Adult ADHDMore books and papers by Dr. BarkleyDonations were made to CHADD and Partners in HealthMore episode sources and linksOther episodes you might enjoy: Somnology (SLEEP), Chronobiology (CIRCADIAN RHYTHMS), Volitional Psychology (PROCRASTINATION), Sports & Performance Psychology (ANXIETY & CONFIDENCE), Personality Psychology (PERSONALITIES), Molecular Neurobiology (BRAIN CHEMICALS)Sponsors of OlogiesTranscripts and bleeped episodesSmologies (short, classroom-safe) episodesBecome a patron of Ologies for as little as a buck a monthOlogiesMerch.com has hats, shirts, masks, totes!Follow Ologies on Instagram and BlueskyFollow Alie Ward on Instagram and TikTokEditing by Mercedes Maitland of Maitland Audio Productions and Jake ChaffeeTranscripts by Aveline MalekWebsite by Kelly R. DwyerTheme song by Nick Thorburn Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Oh, hey, it's me in 2025.
And as we gear up for some new episodes in January, and we take a week or so to travel
and see our families and do some resting.
I wanted to re-air an encore of Ology's most popular episode to date.
I've heard from literally hundreds of you that these episodes and experts have changed,
maybe saved your lives.
It's the 2022 ADHD episodes with the world's foremost researchers and communicators about ADHD.
Also, I reached out to Dr. Barkley asking if there was any research he wanted me to include
as an update and he said nothing earth-shattering to note feel afraid to run the episode again so here we go
listen re-listen and send it around hi it's the nat stuck to your lip gloss alley ward ADHD it's here
it's here take a minute just breathe it's exciting here we go okay who does one get for an ADHD
episode you ask me your internet dad when there are so many doctors and researchers and bloggers
and TikTok coaches out there.
Who do you get?
You start at the top.
The guy.
You get the guy who has written more books than I can count.
I literally was trying to count them and I had to stop and eat a granola bar.
I was fatigued.
But you may know him by the ADHD Bible taking charge of ADHD, which just released
a new, expanded, fresh as hell, updated edition in November.
I have it.
It's great.
He also wrote 12 principles for raising a child with ADHD.
When an adult you love has ADHD, professionally.
advice for parents, partners, and siblings. He is to ADHD what Oprah is to talk shows. The gold
standard. So not only has he been a professor of psychiatry and neurology, a clinical professor
of psychiatry, and is cited in nearly every modern paper on ADHD, but he also takes it to the
streets. And by that, I mean YouTube. His lecture videos are swiftly paced and have views in the
millions. People in the comments are crying in relief. I was so nervous. We reached out. He
obliged. We recorded my palm sweat. I decided this needs to be a two or maybe a three-parter. So next
week, we'll talk to a few more experts, including Jessica McCabe of how to ADHD, Renee Brooks of
Black Girl Lost Keys, and Jela Osborne, who's a researcher at University of Michigan. But we'll dive right in.
But first, quick thanks to everyone who supports this show at patreon.com slash ologies. You can join for
a dollar a month and submit your questions. Thanks to everyone who passes this episode along and who
subscribes and who leaves reviews knowing that I read them all. Like Connor Cook, thank you for
leaving the review. They say they were introduced to ologies via a keynote that I did at the Texas
Science and Engineering Fair a few years back. And their review made me cry. They said they used my
advice to show up like you belong. And they say that stuck with me as I struggle with social anxiety
and doubt myself at every turn. And last week I interviewed proposition in a plant pathology lab.
And I chanted that piece of advice in my head and walked through that building like it was named
after me and I was just told that today I got the job. So congratulations on that, Connor. That's
great. Full circle moment. And yes, I'm very proud of you. So, okay, attention deficit,
neuropsychology. Let's do it. Heads up. This episode gets very real. We talk stats and neuroscience
and personal experiences with ADHD. It also includes a mention about rates of suicide and a very
brief nod to self-harm. Very brief. This episode doesn't sugarcoat it. It doesn't condescend,
but it illuminates the hell out of ADHD.
So next week we'll have more tips and hacks and self-acceptance for you, too.
Okay, so let's focus and let's learn about the brain chemicals that influence focus.
What causes ADHD, symptoms, how much diagnosis is enough diagnosis, the genetics component,
risk factors, accommodations, disorder versus disability, what screens have to do with it,
nutritional factors, tips for being in love and having a great relationship with an ADHD brain,
how exercise comes into play, his personal connection with ADHD, as well as mine,
with researcher, author, retired professor of clinical psychiatry and internationally recognized
authority on ADHD, attention deficit neuropsychologist, Dr. Russell Barkley.
Hello.
Hi, Ali, it's Russ.
How are you?
Hi, how are you, Dr. Berkeley?
Yeah, please, call me Ross.
I'm doing fine.
Thank you.
Much better this month than last month.
Oh, was it a rough one?
Oh, God.
I thought you knew.
No.
I'm sorry, I brought it up.
I was in a severe car accident about eight weeks ago, and I had nine broken ribs, and it's
in a week in the hospital.
And so it's taken me a good eight weeks to recover, but I'm about 90% back.
And so I am thrilled to be alive.
I should not have survived, but I did.
And I'm glad to be out of the hospital, didn't get pneumonia, all of which are lethal at
my elderly age, and doing well.
So, yeah, I mean, it's just a lot.
to be able to talk to you. Oh my gosh. I had no idea. I'm so glad that you survived and are here. Yeah. Well, doing
things like this gets me out of my head, which is what you have to do right now because otherwise you spend a lot of time in there and that's not good. I'm sure. And you are like a national treasure. I will have to say like hugely revered. I'm so glad your life was spared because you has changed other people's.
So much. I'm so excited to talk to you because I've had your book for years. I'm very well aware
of taking charge of ADHD for adults, the guide for parents. And I have one more coming out
in end of the year, which is a clinician's guide. So that'll be, that'll be it, four books during the
pandemic. I'd say that's pretty good. How? How does one publish four books in a pandemic?
Well, it was writing and wine. That's what got me through the pandemic. And then doing drive-by,
cocktails with my son and his family and get to see my grandchildren and like everybody else we
may do you know one thing i've always been curious about is your background because uh i've watched your
youtube videos my husband has ADHD i suspect i might but you come up so often when ADHD experts are
mentioned and how did you come to be such a leader in this field um well uh i don't know if you're
recording now or not. Okay, very good. Thank you. It's a long story, but I'll shorten it real
quick. I had just gotten out of the Air Force. I'd been back from Vietnam where I served with the
Marine Corps, actually, even though I was Air Force. And I finished and went to the University of North
Carolina to complete my undergraduate work. And while I was there, I was studying psychology and
biology and trying to figure out how to blend the two. And I was looking for extra things to do
to get into graduate school because getting good grades is not enough to go to graduate school.
So I wandered around the medical center and volunteered 20 hours a week, free of charge,
if somebody wanted a research assistant.
And everybody kept saying there was a psychologist upstairs that just got a grant,
go talk to him.
So I did.
And he took me on as a research assistant.
Within a month or two, I became his honor student and never looked back.
And he was studying what then was called hyperactive child syndrome,
but we now call ADHD and doing studies on medication, imitation learning, very behavioral
kind of operant stuff.
And I fell in love with it.
I love the kids.
I liked what he was trying to do.
He was a very paternal figure in my life at a time when I really needed guidance.
And just a great.
So it was Don Ruth was his name.
He was also editor of one of our more famous journals.
But Don kind of steered me correctly.
And I never looked back.
I started studying ADHD, did my honors thesis, master's thesis, dissertation, all within the ADHD space,
and then went on to specialize in child neuropsychology with a research focus on ADHD because of clearly it's brain-based problems.
Although back then it was only a suspicion. Now, of course, it's been confirmed.
So long story short, it was the influence of one guy in my life at a very formative time.
who, you know, sort of bent the twig, you know, forced the pathway in that way.
And I've always been grateful to him for it.
Now, it turns out, of course, ADHD is in my family.
Oh.
And it really helped me to understand my I have a fraternal twin brother who died from his ADHD risk-taking
when he was in his 50s, a car crash.
I lost his son, my nephew, to suicide over very impulsive behavior following an argument.
with a girlfriend. I have other extended relatives who have the condition. So it really,
the personal side of it for me is that helped me understand my family members and particularly
my brother who I grew up with who was just incredibly impulsive and risk taking and all of those
things. Quit school at 16, became a rock and roll musician, burned through three marriages,
three kids he had no custody of, you know, in and out of difficulties, gifted musician, just, you know,
Eric Clapton level talent, but, you know, that said, couldn't manage a dollar or his life at all
and eventually cost him his life. So it's personal for me. It's not just professional. They both
intertwine, but I didn't go into it for that reason, but having gotten into it, boy, did it help
me to understand my family. Oh, I bet. I mean, it's hard not to get emotional just hearing that
because I feel like a lot of what we hear about ADHD are the work and the productivity and
the grades and so much of, I know personally my relationship with my husband, before his
diagnosis, most of our struggles were ADHD related that he had no idea, I had no idea.
It really impacts people so much.
So is ADHD just cute and scatterbrained like an adorable manic pixie dream character in an early
aughts rom-com. Do you need bangs and cardigans if you have ADHD? Is it just a quirk acquired as an
excuse for why you're late to brunch again? Well, it can be cute, and I say that as someone
whose partner has a lightning-fast ADHD brain that runs on curiosity, but it's also
serious. In Dr. Barclay's 2018 Journal of Attention Disorders paper, Hyperactive Child
Syndrome and Estimated Life Expectancy at Young Adult Follow-up, alongside co-author Dr. Mary Ellen Fisher,
the persistence of ADHD to adulthood was linked to an almost 13-year reduction in estimated
life expectancy.
13 years.
There's a really gutting mountain of research on this, papers with titles like Attention
Deficit, Hyperactivity Disorder, and Mortality Risk in Taiwan, which found that patients
with ADHD had significantly elevated early mortality risk for suicide, homicide, and
unintentional injuries compared with a non-ADHD group. And there was a nationwide cohort study out
of Denmark that found the mortality rate ratios were more than double for those with ADHD,
with higher risks for people who weren't diagnosed until they were adults. So it's even more
dangerous if you're not diagnosed early. And the paper reported that the higher mortality was
mainly driven from deaths from unnatural causes, mainly accidents. And interestingly,
along the studies defined gender binary, they found
a higher mortality rate ratio in girls and women with ADHD and in males. And we'll dive into
gender and hormones and ADHD later in the episode, of course. So people who have been told
to snap out of ADHD or that you just need to work harder or you don't have it because you're
not a fifth grade boy doing a fortnight dance on their desk. To you, I hear your frustrated whales
and I join you in that chorus of vindication and concern. I'm wondering when did we start
to recognize it from just a behavioral problem in quotes of kids to what it is recognized as today.
Yeah, well, I mean, we can go back nearly 250 years. People don't realize it, but I'm sitting here with
an actual copy of the book dated 1770 in Germany, in which this is the first medical textbook
ever written in German. It has a chapter called Disorders of Attention, if you can believe that.
And in it, the author, Milkier Weikert, describes what today we would think of as classic adult ADHD.
And back then, they didn't know what caused it.
They had a number of recommendations for curing it, one of which was horseback riding, sour milk on top of some quinine.
And if that didn't work, lock you in a room.
Oh, my gosh.
So none of which works, but very interesting stuff nonetheless.
But follow that forward.
Okay, nothing's written about 15 years later, his student, Alexander Crichton, right?
the textbook. He also has a disorder of attention chapter, which he describes two attention
disorders, one of which is ADHD. And then things kind of get buried for a while until the late
1800s. Fast forward up to 1900, George Still publishes three papers of his lectures in which he
describes these children. Then we have the 1918 flu epidemic in which we have a lot of kids
developing ADHD who survived the flu. But we didn't really get into what I consider the modern
age of science until the 1970s. And I just happened to be coming into the field at the moment
where the match was lit. I mean, the fuse was lit and things began to take off. We started
seeing, you know, research papers, objective evaluation of these children using all kinds of
measures, longitudinal studies were started. That to me is the modern age of research.
So yes, first described perhaps in the late 1790s by Weikert in a chapter titled Sickness of the Spirit
as a disorder of attention, but treatment took a turn for the more informed in the 1960s and 70s.
And then by 1990, we had all the neuroimaging stuff was beginning to start by the year 2000.
The molecular genetics was kicking off, and everything just exploded after that.
So we go from a couple hundred papers in 1960 to 400,000 as of a few years ago.
I mean, it's just startling to go to Google Scholar.
enter ADHD in its precursor terms and do the math.
I mean, it's just enormous.
I know I read all research every week on Fridays, published in the world,
and it's 35 to 40 articles a week.
So do the math on that.
It's 1,500 to 2,000 papers a year are now coming out on this disorder.
So this is no myth.
It's very, very well researched.
It's got a tremendous amount of evidence for its,
validity and neurobiology and genetics and life course and risks. So it's an incredibly well-understood
disorder. But we didn't really get into it, I would say, until the late 1960s, early 1970s,
when people started to take it seriously. And you mentioned something about the flu pandemic
and survivors of. Was there some reason why there was a correlation made there?
Well, yeah, we had children who, if they survived, this was the Vanekhanimo's encephalitis that swept through following the First World War and it took over Europe and then spread here.
It left people with a lot of secondary injuries to their brain if they survived because the virus attacked the brain.
And it left children with altered personalities, altered abilities, altered abilities, reduced mental capacity.
But one of the hallmark symptoms was hyperactive behavior, incorrigibility, lack of self-control.
So you had children's personalities literally changing overnight, which the disorder actually back then was called post-encephalytic behavior disorder.
Then they eventually realized you could get it from other brain injuries, and it became brain-injured child syndrome.
And then people said, well, wait, there are other children with these behavioral problems, but we don't have evidence of brain injury.
They then called it minimal brain damage.
And then it became minimal brain dysfunction, MBD.
And only in the 1960s did people say, wait, wait, wait, stop talking about causation
because we really can't peer into the brain to see if there's damage there for most of these kids.
Let's just focus on their behavior.
And that's when it became hyperactive child syndrome.
So it was really in the 60s when the shift moved away from etiology,
like it's got to be a brain injury, which we still.
thought but couldn't prove to, let's just focus on behavior. So hyperactive, inattentive,
impulsive behavior became the, you know, the holy trinity of ADHD. And we stopped speculating
about etiology for a while because we didn't really have a lot of hard evidence other than by
inference. You know, brain injuries cause this syndrome. Therefore, people who show the syndrome,
ergo must have a brain injury of some kind. But it was just that kind of logic. But it took, you know,
neuroimaging to come around in the 1990s, followed by molecular genetics and all the studies on
inheritance. And now we link the two. We study the effects of genes on brain networks now.
And it's all just really come full circle. But that's when the behavior became the focus
rather than the brain injury. Now, of course, we blend them all together.
And first off, I'm so sorry about the way it's affected your family and having
last year brother. You mentioned he was a fraternal twin. Yes. Can you talk it all about what
causes it from a neurobiology from a genetic level? What we found? Yeah. Yeah. I'll try to oversimplify
because let me tell you, it is so complicated that I have trouble keeping up with it. I mean,
you really have to specialize in each of these areas, whether it's brain microstructure or white matter
or, you know, neuroimaging or functional connectivity,
they're becoming almost specialties in themselves.
But let me give you the grand picture, you know, from 30,000 feet.
Just to fun, Zino, I was editing this part at 30,000 feet in a plane.
I was like, oh, weird.
Anyway, causes of ADHD.
Let's get into it.
You really have two essential domains of causation here.
One is genetics, and the other is neurological,
injury producing maldevelopment. And so I'll just very quickly, I'm going to oversimplify,
about two-thirds to three-quarters of all ADHD cases fall on the realm of genetics. They're either
inherited or they come about through what we call new or de novo mutations. I'll come back
and explain that in a moment because that's fascinating. But the second is that about 25% of the
cases, particularly in boys, more than girls, are acquired. And most of the acquired injuries are
occurring during pregnancy. So if we break down that 25 to 35 percent, at least two-thirds
to three-quarters of them have had this problem due to something happening during pregnancy
to the developing brain and the executive networks of the brain that leave the individual
with this disorder. Now, what could that be? Multiple infections that the mother has. Premature delivery
that leads to being in a neonatal intensive care unit leads to brain hemorrhaging in these brain
areas. We also have maternal obesity and type 2 diabetes that the mother may have. That's kind of
questionable, but that's there. Maternal consumption of alcohol, very well proven. You know,
if you're consuming alcohol a high rate, you're poisoning your child's frontal lobe. And, you know,
we could go on it. We thought smoking might be in there, but it turned out that smoking was just an
index that the mother had adult ADHD. And when you controlled for the mother's ADHD, smoking went
away. So that was kind of a marker, not a cause. So, you know, you've got all of these, just about
anything that can happen during a pregnancy that might impact that brain, and particularly
the frontal area, which is one of the most sensitive areas to injury in humans, because it's so
new in evolution, can cause that. So you've got all these acquired cases, about 10% of whom
acquire it afterbirth, through what? Had trauma? Lead, poor.
poisoning, other exposure to toxins, heavy exposure to pesticides, probably. But the biggest
ones are the toxins such as lead, but especially close-ed trauma. And that can lead to this as
well. So, you know, you've got the acquired cases, and then you've got the other two-thirds
to three-quarters that came by it, honestly, so to speak, genetics. Most of those people inherit
this behavior pattern in their families. It's there, as it was in my family, and it gets
passed along. However, we have now learned that about 10% of all cases of ADHD are due to new
mutations occurring in the parent's sperm and eggs that are not present in the parent's blood.
So if I did a blood sample, I would not see these mutations. But if I sample your sperm or if I look
at your child, I will find the mutations in that baby and you and your spouse don't have them.
unless I look at eggs and sperm. Now, how is that happening? Because the longer you wait to have
children, the more your gametes, as they're called, your eggs and sperm, are likely to suffer
mutations from just surviving, from radiation, from chemicals, from external trauma to male testes
and things like that, you are racking up mutations. And if you wait a decade to have children from
age 20 to age 30, then you now have eight times more mutations in your eggs and sperm, but
particularly in your sperm, males are more likely to have this. And those get passed along your
child. Now, you say, well, so what? Well, it turns out that the genes most likely to mutate
under these circumstances are the genes for self-regulation, language, and sociability. So guess what
goes up? Autism and ADHD. The longer men and women,
women wait to have children, those disorders begin to rise in frequency. So some of the rise we've
seen in both of those conditions over the last 20 years has been the shift in delayed parenthood
as a result of people wanting to have it all, have the job, have the career, have the house,
and then we'll have our kids in our 30s. Just a side note, this isn't just a factor of wanting it
all either, of course. This has been heavily influenced by the 1965 Supreme Court victory of
Griswold v. Connecticut. And that eliminated local and state laws that barred access to contraceptive
pills. Plus, there was the 1973 Roe v. Wade case. And this sociologist, Dr. Constance Sheehan,
writes a lot on this. And also explained in a paper that the Civil Rights Act of 1968 included
Title IX, which was the Fair Housing Act. And that prohibited discrimination selling homes to people
of any race, color, religion, national origin. In 1974, they were like, oh, I guess we should
add gender to, huh? And then this acquisition of equal rights was then blamed for housing prices
going up in everyone having to be dual income in order to purchase a home, making it nearly
impossible to afford a place to live and to afford children until you're like 50. But that is a
whole separate episode. Anyway. So, you know, I understand that's complicated. I could really get into the
weeds. Believe me, this really is the 30,000 overview. But that's what's going on here. So notice,
multiple causes all converging on a single network in the brain that is the brain's executive
system that gives us self-regulation. And for various reasons, it goes wrong. Can you go through
perhaps a few of the most noteworthy impairments or symptoms? Because I know probably a lot of us feel like,
or my focus is fractured or I can't put down my phone.
It's difficult to parse out.
Well, you know, I'm glad you asked that,
because there's a lot more going on here
than the surface features of inattention, distractibility,
impulsiveness, and maybe some hyperactivity,
though that's really an early childhood symptom
more than it is an adult symptom.
But that said, to me, that's the superficial nature of ADHD
that everybody sees.
Now, let's look under the hood.
what's going wrong under the hood in the mind that is leading to you to behave that way.
And that's where we get into the executive functions.
And there are seven major executive functions that come from largely your frontal lobe,
but also interactions elsewhere in the brain.
And they give us our capacity for self-regulation.
They take about 30 years to mature, and they're delayed in people with ADHD by several years
or what I estimate to probably around 25, 30%.
But, you know, the number doesn't matter.
The fact is these abilities that everybody else is getting, you're not getting.
What are they?
Let's have it.
Number one, innovation, self-restraint.
Number two, self-awareness, the ability to monitor and attend to your own behavior.
Both of these start very early in life.
Each takes at least 10 years to mature, if not more.
And then when those start to kick off, you get the next two, which has to do with working memory.
And the first one is nonverbal working memory, but you know it as visual.
imagery, which is a capacity to imagine things. You recall images in your mind from your
past, call it hindsight, and you use those to anticipate what could happen next.
The fourth thing you're going to get is the mind's voice. You're going to start to develop
language to yourself. It's all out loud. Little children talk out loud to themselves. But by the
time you're 8 to 10, that should be in your head. You should be able to talk to yourself without
people hearing you and without you moving your lips in your face. And so now,
Now you've got four executive abilities.
You can self-restrain, you can monitor yourself, you can visualize to yourself, and you
can talk to yourself.
And that's a little Swiss Army knife of mind tools that allows you to control yourself.
Then you get the next three.
You use those four to manage your emotions.
So emotional self-regulation comes next.
And with that, right along with it is self-motivation.
And then finally you get the biggie, the last one, which is plan.
and problem solving. The ability to manipulate stuff in your head to come up with solutions to get
around obstacles and help you get to your goals and solve your problems. And Dr. Barclay cites the work
of Dr. Joel Nigg, who argues that ADHD is more of a spectrum disorder with wide ranges
in impairment. And an incredibly oversimplified 60,000 foot view is that the brain has two
kinds of signaling. Bottom up, where what we sense influences our attention and our emotion,
we react to it, and then top down, where we respond to that bottom up signaling and toss a
command back from our prefrontal cortex to the interior and the back of the brain to say,
hey, it's cool, we're good, we're good. Don't worry about it. So in an article in Attitude Magazine,
Dr. Nigg writes that in a neurotypical brain, there's a good balance of top down and bottom up
signals. But in the ADHD brain, the top-down signals are relatively weak and possibly overpowered
by the screaming bottom-up signals that are reacting to stimuli. So what is the result? Things like
inattention, impulsivity, and emotional dysregulation leading to a spectrum of those seven
deficits. You know the ones we mentioned a couple minutes ago. So pop quiz, what were they?
Come on. Were you not listening? Can you not name this?
seven? Okay. Just kidding. Probably no one can. What were they? They were self-awareness, inhibition,
non-verbal working memory, aka mental imagery, verbal working memory, or your inner monologue,
emotional self-regulation, self-motivation, and then planning and problem-solving was number seven.
There will be no pock quizzes in this episode. That would be mean and not fun.
Those are the seven deficits that people with ADHD have to varying degrees. How would you recognize that?
see that because, number one, they're very impulsive and show very poor self-control and
self-regulation. Two, they're not as aware of their difficulties as are the people around them
because they're not self-monitoring to the extent that you do. Three, they are horrible at time
management because the working memory system in part gives you your sense of time and timing
and allows you to think about the future to deliberate what is coming next. And then to use that
to inform your own behavior.
So time management, it becomes a major deficit that just gets worse and worse with age
because life becomes more time sensitive with age.
Three-year-olds don't have to manage time.
30-year-olds are incredibly time-sensitive.
Most of your day is filled with deadlines, schedules, promises, commitments, bills.
Everything has a time tag on it.
And so that's when I came up with the word, as you saw in my book, Time Blind.
adults with ADHD. Kids are too, but especially adults, struggle with this concept of time
and how you cope with this and manage yourself relative to it. And then, of course, you're going
to see the emotional self-regulation problems, impulsive emotion, difficulties getting control
over your emotions, where other people can do, you're going to have a lot of trouble with
self-motivation, you're going to procrastinate. Anything that doesn't have an immediate payoff
is very hard for you to stay with, and you'll keep being distracted by anything.
that offers you a promise of immediate gratification.
And then when you're faced with problems,
instead of sticking it out and trying to problem solve,
people with ADHD tend to quit.
They tend to simply shift over and go do something else.
And so they have a life that's filled with half-completed projects
and goals they could never reach
and accomplishments everybody else is able to do
and they can't do or they struggle to do.
And so it really gets very demoralizing
by the time you're a teenager or an adult
because all these problems are piling on year after year as other people get each of those
executive abilities, you get another deficit.
So by adulthood, you have at least seven or more problems with self-regulation that other
people don't have.
And it leads to a whole swath of downstream problems in major life activities that people just
don't realize.
ADHD is one of the most impairing disorders.
we treat in an adult outpatient basis.
And people think it's just some trivial little problem that a cup of Starbucks is going to solve.
Have you seen the way clinicians classify it?
I understand it's a deficit, it's a disorder.
Is it looked at as a disability more so accommodations can be made?
Or how is that language changing?
Well, the clinicians call it a disorder because that's our term for anything that creates
excessive, persistent, and severe symptoms that lead to harm to the individual. So there are two
criteria. First, you have to have serious and persistent symptoms that go well beyond your age
and your sex, your gender. So second is it must be producing impairment, harm. You must be
suffering. The environment must be kicking back so that you're experiencing hardships. And when those two
criteria met, you have a disorder. So that's the clinical term. Now, the government, however,
invented the concept of disability. So the government comes in and says, how disordered are you?
Are you disordered enough that we would consider you to be disabled in various major life
activities, like school or work, or self-support? Or, you know, by self-support, I mean that you can
dress yourself and bathe yourself and support yourself and so on. So, you know, you know,
know, the term disability is really a government term for whether or not your disorder rises
to the level that you deserve accommodations, support, Social Security disability, ADA
accommodations, IDEA, school accommodations, and all these other things. So that's really the
difference. Clinicians use disorder, governments use disabilities, and the two of them blend
together. Just a quick follow up on that. I asked the Ologies Twitter how neuro atypical people
self-identify. And I found the sentiments essentially echoed at Anna underscore George said that, quote,
my experience is that disability trumps disorder in terms of academic accommodations and that it seems
like you need to have a, quote, disability in order to seek accommodations as well. And I have a friend
David Radcliffe, a TV writer who is the chair of the Disabled Writers Committee at the WGA West,
which is a big deal. And he chimed in and said, yes, this is part of the push to destigmatize the word
disabled because recognizing someone is disabled, not special needs or differently abled,
offers them legal protections, et cetera, under the Americans with Disabilities Act.
And I thought this was interesting.
Ologite, Quinn's Quirks, noted that they think it depends on the person and what that
community thinks.
And some communities prefer the term condition in place of disorder, they say.
The autistic community, they write, has been talking about reframing autism spectrum disorder
to autism spectrum condition.
But in general, accommodations and support are a good, equitable thing. Please, more of them.
And when you are neurodivergent, framing your own experience in a way that is comfortable to you is important.
And Jarrett refers to his ADHD as his good bad brain and we're constantly celebrating his brain for what it is and what it does,
while also acknowledging that having ADHD is not always a fucking picnic.
And now let's talk about, as my husband calls it, his friend Dopey,
Dopamine is constantly wrangling with dopey.
What is the role of dopamine in ADHD?
Well, we used to think it explained everything,
and now we know that things are a lot more complicated.
But back in the day, when I came in in the 70s and 80s,
the guessing was that ADHD had to be due to dopamine deficiency
because the drugs we've discovered to manage it
all produced increases in dopamine availability in the brain.
And they did it through various mechanisms.
They don't all do it the same.
But at the end of the day, the net result is that there's more dopamine in the brain
to do the job that it's not doing in people with ADHD.
And it turned out that while that is true, we also began to discover that norepinephrine,
which is related to dopamine, also is implicated in the disorder.
Hence, you have Eli Lilly coming out with Stratera, which is an norophenephrin drug that increases noraphenephyr in the brain.
Then you have the new Calabry that came out just this past April, and that's a new drug.
That's a norapinephrine drug.
But then we also began to realize, now, wait a second, there's other things going on on the brain here.
We're discovering that these alpha-2 ports, as they're called, in the frontal lobe, which are little, I'll call them sphincters.
A sphincter says what?
But port holes on neurons in the frontal lobe that open and close to determine how much noise is in the nerve cell,
that these alpha-2 ports, which are responsive to alpha-2 drugs, also are beneficial for ADHD
because they fine-tune the nerve signals in the executive brain.
So we can get at ADHD now through at least three and probably more neurotransmitters,
Dopamine being one, and that's what the stimulants are doing,
noropenephrine being the other, and that's what the non-stimulants are doing,
and then managing the alpha-2 ports and the noise in the frontal lobe,
and that's what the anti-hypertensive drugs are doing,
clonidine and guanphosine.
So we've got six different medications out there,
and we've got many, many new delivery systems for those medications.
But those are the three classes of medicines that we're using.
So you can see that there's more than just dopamine.
And now we realize that it goes beyond neurochemistry because the genes we're discovering
for ADHD, of which we've already found 12, we're guessing there's at least 45 to 50.
There's actually a recent paper from last week that shows that it's probably closer to 500.
But there are multiple genetic sites in the human genome that build and operate your brain.
And ADHD results from having different pairs of these genes than other people have.
So you and I both might have the dopamine gene DAT1, but your version is different than my version.
You might have seven, eight or nine copies of the dat one gene, whereas the average person has four or five.
And those extra versions are wreaking havoc in building the brain.
They're creating a very different brain than other people get.
And we see this very early in the development of the brain where nerve cells,
that are under the control of these genes are not migrating properly, they're not growing
properly, they're not reaching the endpoints in the brain where they should be connecting
properly, and it leads to problems with connectivity in different brain centers. There was literally
a paper yesterday published on 32,000 people with ADHD demonstrating, beyond a shadow of a doubt,
these functional connection difficulties in children developing,
ADHD. So it was just staggering to see the number of different regions that are not connecting as well as they should. And even when they connect, the connections are quite variable in how well they function, creating a lot of variability and behavior. So, you know, just to say that we're linking behavior with brain, brain with genes, genes with functional connectedness in the brain. And you just have to sit back and go, wow, I had no idea at the level of complexity. So it's being.
beyond dopey. Yes. I will definitely tell him. And you know, when it comes to creating the architecture
of a treatment plan, whether it's medication or rather deciding medication, how does someone go
about figuring out which of those three types of medication from stimulant to non-stimulant to
maybe even hypertension drugs? Do you recommend trial and error? So at this point, besides clinical
trial and error as well as clinician preference. Let's understand some clinicians prefer. They're more
comfortable with working with certain drugs and other drugs. We know in research that we can create
literally a checklist of different issues that one might want to contemplate in choosing a medication.
You know, one would be urgency. How fast do I got to get control over your problem because you
are experiencing a lot of suffering? Well, the stimulants would be the choice because they work
much, much faster than the non-stimulants do. Okay, but on the other hand, you have an anxiety disorder.
Well, hold on a second. We know that in a subset of people, stimulants can make anxiety worse.
That's arguable. It doesn't happen in everybody, but it happens enough that clinicians get a little
concerned about that, and that's where we might want to go with a non-stimulate, like a strata or
Calgary because that actually treats anxiety in the context of ADHD as well. Well, then we might also
have somebody who's showing very high levels of hyperactive aggressive and just sort of over-aroused
behavior. Well, you know, I might prefer to use an anti-hypertensive drug or would recommend
my colleague because I don't prescribe being a psychologist. But that's where we would look and say,
well, that drug actually does very well at managing hyperactive impulsive aggressive behavior
maybe we'll go there.
I could go through all 15, I won't.
But, you know, sophisticated clinicians will think that through and say,
you know, given your portrait of your disorder as well as your other disorders,
let's remember that 80% of people with ADHD or more have a second disorder.
50% have two more disorders.
So we're really dealing with disorder combinations here,
and very rarely are we dealing with ADHD alone.
It's about one out of every seven cases is a pure ADHD case.
So to me, the real clinical work here is in how many disorders do you have?
How do they affect my treatment planning?
What drug should I be using, given your constellation of issues and urgency?
Are you a college student living away from home?
Well, one in four of those kids diverts the medication.
Maybe I'm not going to send Adderall or Vivance into that environment just yet
until we see how responsible you are with a schedule.
too stimulant, you know, it's just thinking it through and knowing where your prescriptions
going and who's using it and who's around you and how responsible you can be, et cetera, et cetera.
So there's a lot of complexity to walk through, but many clinicians simply go trial and error.
I'll start with this one.
If that doesn't work, I'll go to the next one, then the next one.
And eventually about 93% of the time, we find a drug that works for you, but not always.
Angers crossed.
What are some of the reactions you've heard from people who have been either recently diagnosed
or recently medicated in terms of how that changes the way that they live their life?
Oh, my God.
I mean, let's understand.
About 8 to 10%, the drugs don't help them at all, or they have adverse reactions that we have to stop.
But for the remaining 90%, what we find is that, now get this, 55% are completely normalized on the medication.
Wow.
Normalized.
I mean, they're no different from anything.
anybody else. And those are the people who say, you saved my life. I can finish my college. I
save my marriage. I can manage my children. I literally can have an intelligent conversation
without going all over the map and, you know, mind wandering and not being able to even remember
what we were talking about. By the way, just as an aside, if you have not Google Danny Donovan,
Google her, she's an illustrator who's created some hysterical cartoons and illustrations.
about what it's like to have adult ADHD.
Danny Donovan's website is ADHDDD.com, and that will be linked on my site.
And for more great ADHD comics, also see ADHD underscore Alien on Twitter,
and that's by Pina Vernel.
And so, you know, have a look at Danny.
And you can also go over to the website, How to ADHD.
Jessica's got a great website over there as well.
And stay tuned for Jessica McCabe of How to ADHD in a special part two next week,
along with Renee Brooks of Black Girl Lost Keys, who also runs an online support group
for black people of marginalized genders, and that's called the Unicorn Squad.
So we'll be chatting with both of them, and also Jala Osborne of Black and Nuro,
who is an ADHD researcher.
So I'm telling you, this is why this episode took so long.
It was too exciting.
I kept adding more and more things.
So these are just resources that get it.
And when you see them, you say, oh, my God, that is me in spades.
you know, like Danny has an illustration where she said it's either now or not now.
And she's got a light switch.
That's it.
You know, that's her concept of time is now or not now.
And if it's not now, I don't care.
And if it's now, I'm all over it.
So I can hyper focus on it.
So she has a diagram of what it's like to have a conversation with her.
And the diagram for the typical person is I started A and I want to explain this and I get to
be.
And it's a straight line.
Hers looks like a maze of all over the place, getting distracted, talking about irrelevant things,
can't remember what we were describing, have to ask you what we were talking about, you know,
and so she's just everywhere.
And that is so typical of ADHD.
So all of that is to say that people who get diagnosed, first of all, the diagnosis alone is therapeutic
because it takes you out of the realm of moral judgment.
and puts it in the realm of neuroscience.
You know, up until then, you thought you were a bad person.
You were at layabout near-do-well.
You were lazy, unmotivated.
Your mother was right.
You know, you just failed to launch.
You know, we just can't get you out of here.
And, you know, so, and you buy that.
You become so demoralized about yourself because everybody else is succeeding,
and here you are stuck, you know, in quicksand,
and you can't seem to get from A to B.
and so you start blaming yourself and you literally buy into the societal stigma that there's something wrong with you
in terms of your personality and your morality and your self-discipline you just have no willpower
when you get the diagnosis it's now in the realm of neuroscience and you get it you are experiencing a neurodevelopmental disorder or disability
and that alone to me that mindset becomes very therapeutic because you didn't cause this you're not choosing to be this
way. You can't get up and smell the coffee tomorrow and become a different person. You are struggling
as are people with autism spectrum or bipolar disorder with something you didn't ask for,
but that you've been blessed because of your genes or other factors that you now have to cope with.
So on the one hand, I'm taking you off the hook. You didn't cause this and neither did your parents
in terms of how they raised you. On the other hand, I'm going to put you back on the hook
because you're the person that has to do something about this.
And there's nothing wrong with that.
That's the neurodiversity movement in spades.
You're just a neurodiverse person.
But you've got to stop denying and blaming and shifting the source of the problem
to your spouse or partner or boss or mother or friend because you're the common denominator here.
It took my twin brother 37 years to wake up and realize that his life was the result of his decision.
making and not all the other people he wanted to blame for that. And I see that all the time.
So I really love that idea about, you know, you got to own it before I can help you.
So Dr. Berkeley notes that Maroon Five singer Adam Levine, I think he's also on the show where
you push the button with the chair. He is a person with ADHD and he participated in this
pharma campaign a few years back called Own Your ADHD to destigmatize neurodivergence but also
empower people with adult ADHD to be active.
stewards of their treatment. And given that approximately 10 million adults in the United States
are estimated to have ADHD, that's an important thing. But who's not feeling overwhelmed and
distracted and forgetful sometimes and maybe a little emotional, particularly these days? So how do you
know if you actually have ADHD? What if you relate to every TikTok, but you feel like everyone relates
to every TikTok? Can I just pee on something and wait for a line to materialize yes or no? Like the
of executive function passed.
And you know, you mentioned that process toward diagnosis.
I've heard it from everything as if I give you Ritalin and it works, you have ADHD.
If it doesn't work, you don't have ADHD.
I've heard that, which is not true.
Not true.
And to my cousin who in her 30s finally realized that she had ADHD through a long diagnostic
process that involved interviewing her loved ones to ask about her background.
And it was a huge relief.
So when it comes to diagnosis, I feel like that in itself.
I think if you have ADHD, there's a lot.
It can already about life be really intimidating and overwhelming.
Yeah, there can.
I know that my husband, just the struggle to get his Adderall refilled every month involves
like going to six pharmacies and getting paperwork mailed.
And he's like, this is the one thing I'm already bad at.
Yeah, I know.
And it's a Schedule 2 drug, unfortunately.
The other drugs are not, but the stimulants are scheduled to, which means they have the potential
to be abused.
and that's why they clamp down on them and all the paperwork.
And then you're going to run into the occasional pharmacist who, you know,
believes in Tom Cruise and Scientology and may lecture you about the evils and the wickedness
of the prescription you're trying to fill.
Let me tell you.
I've had families call us and saying, you're not going to believe it.
This pharmacist is telling people, you know, and it's like, well, then switch pharmacies.
You know, we're not going to deal with, you know, Tom and his disciples here.
So, you know, there are the people who think this is just a myth,
and you're using this as a crutch and it really doesn't exist.
And all of which is so naive, it goes without saying.
I mean, every time I hear somebody say, you know, this is a myth or it's just so trivial,
it reflects to me a stunning ignorance of the real science, of the hundreds of thousands of
research papers.
And it really tells me more about you than about the disorder.
So that said.
So can I walk through just what I think are the five things you really got to do to deal
with this disorder and I'll make them I'll make them very quick because I know we have other things
to to chat about but number one is get a proper diagnosis and identify the various disorders
that may be there because there's often more than one and we have to treat them all so I call it
you know evaluation that's step one oh okay great step two education read read widely
David Lindsay the novelist had a great phrase in one of his novels truth is an assembled thing
You don't get it from one guru, one website, one book.
I want you to read widely, but read credible sources, the foundations, the charities,
the NIH, the Chad organization, and Canada, the CADRA organization, the ADD.org here,
the World Federation for ADHD, there are at least 10 websites with lots of information,
including my website, which has a lot of free fact sheets on it.
Just read widely, read the books, go to YouTube, look at my videos,
acquire the information because you're going to assemble you know out of that the truth keeps
popping its head up and the nonsense will fall by the wayside because it won't be replicated across
these websites and you'll begin to get a really core understanding of yourself and your disorder
number three medication of all the treatment components that's the most effective we have and
it doesn't matter whether you like that whether you agree with it medication's not a religious
that you believe in, the facts are the facts. It's three times better than anything else out there.
And while it doesn't help everybody, it helps most people to an incredible degree. And as I've said,
it can actually normalize over half of the people who take it once we find the right medicine.
Just a note on the word normalization, that's a clinical term that means the use of medication
to bring mental functioning or performance in line with a prevailing cultural norm, as opposed to
trying to achieve performance enhancement. So the norm is the typical. Normalization could be
easily called typicalization. So medication. And, you know, I look at ADHD as the diabetes of
psychiatry. You would never turn away insulin if I told you you were a diabetic. And yet you have as
much a biological problem as the diabetic has. Why are you turning this down? It's because you think the
medicines are covering something up, that they're a band-aid and they're not. The medicines are
exactly like insulin. They literally are correcting the neurogenetic basis in the brain that is giving
rise to your symptoms. So part of owning it is realizing if this is neurobiological, there is nothing
wrong with a biological agent being part of the treatment package. It's not the sole thing
we do, but it's an effective component, one of the most. I'll link all that and the other sources
he mentioned on my website at alleyward.com slash ologies slash ADHD, which is
linked in the show notes. Also, once a pharmacist told me that I didn't need the antidepressant,
I was prescribed to deal with moot swings from my ovarian failure, I just needed Jesus. And this
was a pharmacist in L.A. So Russell's not kidding. Anyway. Okay, so we've got evaluation,
education, medication. Next, modification. What can I do to modify my behavior in order to
cope better with the demands of this disorder. That's where cognitive behavior therapy for
executive function deficits come in. That's where adult ADHD coaching comes in. That's where
learning mindfulness meditative approaches, like in John Mitchell and Lydia Zylaska's new book that
just came out on mindfulness-based practices for adult ADHD. These are the things we want you to
participate in. And if you're on medication, you're more likely to benefit from them than if
you're off your medication because of just what the medication does to help you with organizing
yourself and persisting and motivating yourself. So number four is modification to the extent
that you can, remembering it's neurobiological. But there's some latitude there that, you know,
some give and take and how you deal with yourself. Number five, accommodations. Accommodation refers to
how can I physically change my environment so that while my disorder is still there, I'm not impaired
buy it. And that means looking at your workspace, looking at your computer and saying,
okay, all games go on the computer over in my den, and only the computer in my office has
work apps on it. Even then, I'm going to download apps that deal with time management and
self-regulation that block out distracting websites, but no gaming on this computer. That's an
accommodation. It's like a ramp coming into a building for somebody physically disabled.
You didn't get rid of the physical disability, but you allow them to participate.
effectively in the things that the rest of us can do.
So, you know, things like time management and using a day planner and a week at a glance calendar
and outlook and making yourself accountable to your colleague, your boss, your supervisor,
your spouse for the things that you commit and checking in with your adult ADHD coach
several times a week on your goals and your strategies and what you are trying to do.
These are all ways of rearranging your environment so that you get to do the things your disorder
otherwise would preclude you from doing.
But you're still ADHD.
You still have to own it.
But, oh, my God, there's hundreds of things in my book that we talk about of ways of
altering environments to lessen the impact of the disorder.
A few tips.
Bluetooth noise-cancelling headphones, maybe prayers to the universe that your employer
doesn't think a bunch of open tables all in one giant room fosters corporate community
because it doesn't study show that people get about a third of the
work done and have higher rates of anxiety, illness, and turnover in a bullpen type of office
environment. So cubicles with opaque walls or an office with a door, if possible, getting those
things from an employer might require advocacy on your own behalf, but it can be worth it.
But you won't do those if you don't own that disorder. So again, to reiterate, evaluation,
education, medication, modification, accommodation. Do all five.
of those and you will be doing a great job. What about that evaluation? Any tips on how in-depth
that evaluation needs to be? I don't think the diagnosis can be accurately or reliably made in less
than two to three hours. Now, that may mean that I'm going to see you three times for 45 minutes to an
hour because of the way physicians and psychiatrists schedule their time. Psychologists, on the other hand,
are used to blocking out three to five hours to do their evaluations all at once.
So just to understand it may not be done all at once, but it usually takes that long because
I've got to go back through your history. I've got to survey all of these symptoms. I have to
look across all these disorders. I have to have you complete these rating scales and score
them up and then I have to interpret those. I may need to do some psychological testing with regard
to your intelligence and your achievement because two of the ruleouts for having problems
in work and education are, do you have adequate intelligence for the environment that you're in?
And do you have any learning disabilities? Because 50% of people with ADHD also have a learning
disability that's not their ADHD. And if I don't realize that, then I've missed part of
the explanation for why you're struggling in school or college or in the workplace.
There are other tests like the QB test or Tova, which may track an infrared ball
attached to your forehead as you undergo some computer quizzes, but Dr. Barclay says, nah. Well, he actually
says nonsense. That's nonsense. Nonsense. First of all, those things are not sufficiently accurate
to diagnose ADHD, even though their test developers will tell you they are, they're not. And
secondly, they're misleading because half of adults with ADHD can pass those tests and still be
legitimately ADHD. So I just tell people, you know, forget the test scores, because
a lot of the time they're wrong and the history tells the story. Plus, as you pointed out,
we need to interview people who know you well. That's part of our diagnostic criteria.
We need to corroborate what you're telling us through other sources. Hopefully that's going to be
your parents or siblings or good friends or a spouse or a partner. But in some cases, all I have
are the archival records, your school report cards, your driving record, your work record,
your criminal record. All of those are things I may need to take a look at in order to look forever.
that this has been a longstanding problem for you. So yeah, it takes time. But as I said, no less than
two to three hours. And you have a whole section in the book, which I think is great about
finding a clinician too, which is so helpful. Do you ever have to recommend to people who either
have a diagnosis or don't, like if they're going to digest literature on this, is there a preferred
way to do it? Like, as you take notes, audio, like, what's the best way? Well, I tell you what we
heard from people when I was writing the book. And we actually field tested that book. If you look at
that book compared to all my other books, it's organized vastly differently than my other books.
And the reason is we field tested the manuscript on adults with ADHD. And that's why you see
that it's all broken up. There's little sidebars and there's glitzy little microscopes and
there's callouts and bold emphasis. And it's enough to drive a typical person crazy when they look
this thing. How do you pay attention to this? Because they're used to reading like
continuous prose and narrative. And this is so far from that, as you know. So that was
field test. And we found that at least if you're going to read, that captured your attention
better than typical narrative does. Well done. The second thing that we do, of course, is a lot of
adults tell me that the e-book is better for them than that. I also get, you know, five to ten
emails a day of people saying, I discovered you through your YouTube lectures. And that's the first
time I was actually able to sit through and listen to this stuff. So maybe now I'll go and get the
e-book or look at some of your podcasts that you've done with other people like you and start to pick
it up that way. And then eventually they wind up back at the book. But we understand that reading
is very hard for adults with ADHD because of their working memory problems. They can't retain what
they read the way other people can. And they find themselves mind wandering while they're reading
and then they've got to go back to the top of the page seven times.
So, you know, I understand, I get it, that text isn't always the best way for adults with ADHD to learn stuff.
I was looking through the e-book and I was so excited to see like, oh, there's a post-a-note and a sidebar.
And it really does kind of engage it.
And I've even heard you say, like, you know, leave post-a-notes for yourself, have them be different colors.
Something that engages you and as novel will help.
And obviously we got a lot of questions from listeners ahead of time, literally the most questions ever.
So to avoid overloading you with names of patrons, I'm just going to read the names of first-time question askers for some of these.
But before we do, let's support some causes that are supporting people with ADHD.
So donations for this and next week's episodes are going to a few places, namely for this episode,
Chad, children and adults with attention deficit hyperactivity disorder, which has local support groups in every state in the United States
and offers assistance for parents, children, young adults, and adults via advocacy and support
and networking and information. More information about them is available at chad.org, 2Ds and
Chad. We're going to be donating to a few more places next week as well. All of that was made
possible by sponsors of the show, who you may hear about now. Okay, without further delay or
distraction, your questions. So as a person with anxiety, I found it soothing that so many of you
asked about anxiety and ADHD or other comorbidities. So I'm looking at you, first-time question
askers, Becky Niesel, Aurelia, Heather E. Stewart, Alison Bardsley, Zena Home, E.J. Warner, Britt Klein,
Annabelle Marks, Dan R. Wynne, Keelan Jackman, Sarah Albrecht, Maya Rupnerine, Erin Simino-Aozoski,
and Adelae Mezzanove, not Mesaueva, like I said last time. They all had a common question.
One thing that I thought was really interesting, we got a lot of, was like Becky Nessel says,
I'd like to know some differences between general anxiety disorder and having ADHD.
They have a lot of the same symptoms.
Skelah, Stephanie, a bunch of people asked about this.
How do you parse that out during diagnosis?
Right.
Well, I think superficially people would assume that because there are attention problems that go with
anxiety and depression.
and so people automatically think that all attention deficits are ADHD,
and that is way oversimplifying.
We now know that there are at least two, and eventually there will be five,
but at least there are two kinds of inattentiveness.
The one that goes with ADHD is being externally distracted,
so I'm skipping from one thing to another,
and all of the irrelevant events going on around me are pulling me in various directions.
So I am overly coupled to my environment and not coupled
enough to my mental information about my goals, my plans, my do list, the things I said I was
going to do today. I'm not governed by mental information the way other people are. I'm overly
governed by context and the now. And so that's ADHD. Now let's look at anxiety and depression.
What we see with them is the opposite. They are overly coupled to mental information,
rumination, obsession, fear, anticipation, worry.
Sounds like fun.
So they're inattentive, but they're going to be inattentive in a staring, daydreaming, mind-wandering kind of way.
Like an absent-minded professor, they're not hyperactive.
They're not distracted.
They're just in their head way too much, and ADHD people are not in their head that much.
And if they are, it's because their ideas are skipping all over the place.
So the two disorders are not that hard.
ADHD does not lead to fear, worry, anxiety initially.
Now, after about 10 to 20 years of not being treated, anxiety disorders begin to become a
coexisting disorder with ADHD, such that by the time you're in your 30s, 35 to 50% of adults
with ADHD have developed an anxiety disorder.
But that's because of the chronic failure that ADHD is leading to.
So, you know, you don't have to fail in social situations or at work too many times before you get really anxious in those environments.
But that's a different kind of anxiety that comes from overexposure to negative consequences and even traumatic consequences that other people don't experience.
On the other hand, if you have a legitimate anxiety disorder, yours is much more forward-looking.
You are over-anticipating punishment, negative consequences, what people think about.
you, you know, that you're going to die when you get in the car, that your parents aren't coming
home when they leave the house. Those are anticipatory anxieties, and that's not what we see in
adult ADHD. Adult ADHD, it's more learned anxiety. So, you know, one is driven by the
past, that is, I frequently fail in this situation, or it's driven by the working memory
deficit. There was a photographer in Atlanta who put it beautifully. He said, I'm out on a photo
shoot and I can't remember whether I agreed to pick up our five-year-old at daycare
today or my wife and it's four o'clock so the kid's been out of school an hour if he's
sitting at a curb with his teacher because I'm not there and he freaks out okay so you see
what I mean he he's questioning his memory his forgetfulness because it's happened before
you know these are the people who get out of the car and leave the you know car seat on
top of the car and walk into work and it's like wait
a second, right? Your kids on top of the car, right? Because they're just so distracted by everything
going on around them that, you know, as I say, the now pulls them along by the nose. And so
that's a lot different than somebody with a legitimate anxiety disorder. But understand that by the time
you're in midlife, the two disorders go together more than we like to think. Now, who out there
questioned the role of gender and assigned sex at birth in diagnoses?
or hormonal influences.
So many.
First-time question askers,
Brittany Twenter,
who said,
I would love to hear more
about how women and girls
often go undiagnosed.
Alyssa Williams-Pierceau,
Bryn, Roman,
Dakota P, Alley, Bessels,
Rosalind Hezby, Rebecca Hatherly,
Kira, Elizabeth, Traylor,
Garenne Robinson,
Caitlin, Heidi Wismeth,
Laila Green, Touche,
and Tara Allen,
who wrote,
It would have been awesome
to know sooner.
Oh, Ann, Eva, Hayozova,
who just,
who wrote,
OMG, OMG,
this is exciting.
Do you ever see that there is a gender bias in terms of diagnosis where maybe girls would be
diagnosed with anxiety or boys ADHD?
Yes, it's getting better.
But I have to tell you that girls were the silent majority for many years.
Back in the day when I came in, it was six to seven boys referred for every girl.
That's now fallen down to about three to one, which is about the legitimate sex ratio.
The disorder is more common in little boys than little girls.
But having said that, right, girls were not getting.
getting referred, even when they had legitimate disorder. There are various sociological reasons
for that that we don't need to go into because, you know, people might find them, although
they're factual, they're offensive. People worry more about their sons and their daughters
because the bottom line is you can always mirror your daughter off, but your son has got to
become independent. Now, life has changed. I'm speaking back in the 60s and 70s when that was
clearly the case. Just a heads up. This is a little fun fact. So until the equal
Credit Opportunity Act, a bank could refuse a credit card to an unmarried woman. But if she was
married, it was okay. Her husband just had to give permission and co-sign. This was in 1974,
years after we launched human people and rockets to the moon. Ladies could finally get their own
bank accounts. Feel free to break something. But don't actually, because of emotional dysregulation.
But you know what I'm saying? So there were various reasons why girls just didn't get referred.
The other thing is that girls are less hyperactive and aggressive.
And nothing will get you referred faster to a mental health clinic than being a pain in the ass.
And the boys are just a pain in the butt.
And so they got referred, whereas the girls are simply chatty-cathies.
They're these social butterflies, not doing any work, flitting around, you know, drama queens.
But none of that gets you referred because you're not punching anybody.
You know, you're not talking back to your teacher.
You're not so defiant.
So the girls kind of got overlooked because they tend to have less.
of the hyperactivity, a little bit more of the inattention than the boys do. But that is changing.
We now get it. I mean, virtually every week I'm seeing three to four articles in my news feed
on girls and women with ADHD. So hurrah, you know, the information's getting out there.
Another reason for the girls being overlooked is, as I said, the disorder occurs three times more
often in boys and girls. And so it's hard to spot it in a girl. And a girl has to be more
severe to get referred and treated. But there was another reason for that. We now know that
girls have kind of a two-phase onset. There are some girls whose onset is in childhood like
the boys, right? And they tend to be pretty bad cases. But there's a second wave of onset at the
onset of puberty and menstruation. And we're now realizing that female hormones and their balance
play a role in exacerbating ADHD symptoms in women. And so we have a second wave of onset
that of girls who were kind of marginally ADHD in childhood who hit their men's and now are
full-fledged women with ADHD. And each month, as their cycle comes back around, are going to have
three to five days of exacerbated symptoms that clinicians have to deal with, particularly with
regard to emotional dysregulation and their forgetfulness. But the emotional ones, you know,
tend to be really exacerbated by these changes. And now let's fast forward. You're 55.
now you're going through perimenopause.
And we now have women coming in who are marginally ADHD,
who are just fallen apart in their mid to late career
because of perimenopause and the changes.
So there are some great articles coming out now
on the impact of the imbalance of estrogen and progesterone
on women with ADHD.
So like I said, we're catching up.
More girls are being referred.
More girls are being treated.
more girls are being put on medication than ever before.
And that's all good news to me.
But it's also to say, you know, we still got a ways to go.
There are some differences.
The disorder is the same between men and women.
But the comorbidities are not.
Girls tend to have more anxiety, depression.
Boys tend to have more conduct problems,
antisocial behavior defiance, risk-taking, and drug use.
And although the girls can show those things too,
for the girls, it tends to be more the anxiety, depression,
And of course, we know there are many genders, gender can be on a spectrum too, but this is speaking
broadly about people assigned female at birth. And those with ADHD who are raised as girls
also tend to show higher rates of self-harm, including disordered eating, which can be completely
missed. Now, speaking of things we have to do every day, the take foresight and planning and task
initiation, food. What should you be eating? How do you eat if you have ADHD?
So in Dr. Barclay's book, Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder, a handbook for
diagnosis and treatment, he wrote essential fatty acid supplementation may make a difference
in ADHD symptoms, but more research is needed. And he also notes that two pilot studies
suggest that low iron levels can exacerbate ADHD and supplementation can help. So if you
listened to the microbiology episode, you might be wondering, how do my simmering waste-filled
guts feel about all this? Or rather, how do they make me feel? Well, patron Gwen Kelly inquired,
is there any research connecting microbiome in ADHD? And in fact, I dug in, I got in the muck,
and I found a study published just last month in the journal Nutrients. And it was titled
Current Evidence on the Role of the Gut Microbiome and ADHD Pathophysiology and Therapeutic
implications. But it warned, evidence of the role played by the microbiome,
gut brain access in ADHD is still scanty and heterogeneous. So it's all the fuck over the place.
And it went on to say in children and adolescents with ADHD, that microbiome gut brain access is
involved in the pathophysiological mechanisms of neuroinflammation. Thus, the gut microbiome could
represent a potential therapeutic target in children and adolescents with ADHD. But sadly, very
womp womp trombone, it noted that inconsistencies were found among the three supplementation
clinical trials on children with ADHD. So they haven't quite cracked the code yet. There's this diet
though called the Fine Gold Program that just kind of wipes your plate of any artificial colors and
flavors, sweeteners, or preservatives. But not all research on it can be replicated. Many experts are
like on the fence. But research has shown that about five to
to 8% of folks with ADHD may have sensitivities to those things, but it can be a heavy burden
to have a diet so strict. Patron Adam Weaver asked, why does red dye number 40 really set
things off for my ADHD? How about additives? We got questions about red dye. Does that
have an impact on writing chemistry? Scientifically, there's a minuscule amount of evidence to show that
among preschool children, about three to five percent of them are exacerbated if they're exposed to
a food coloring. It's not additives. It's not preservatives. It's not flavorings. It turned out to
be food coloring. So, you know, I don't want to just throw the baby out with the bath here. There's
a little bit of information out there that does show a reliable exacerbation, but primarily in
preschoolers. So there's a little bit there. But that doesn't mean you should go around
consuming this stuff, but we have found nothing in the diet that is causal of ADHD that can
turn a typical person into an ADHD person through sugar or additives or plastics or any of
those kinds of things. So Dr. Sandy Newman is one ADHD practitioner who advocates for balancing
your diet and recommends sussing out food sensitivities to see if it has any effect on your
noggin. And he's written a bunch of articles and in one writes, quote, try this technique I use with my
patients. Eliminate a whole set of foods, dairy, wheat, corn, soy, eggs, or common culprits for three
weeks. And if improvement is detected, start adding the foods back one by one for a couple of days.
I usually recommend starting with gluten first, he writes, and give it three to four days and
see if there are any developing behaviors associated with each food. The process should take six
weeks in all. You can do it. Now, if no improvement is detected, then food sensitivities are likely not an
issue. So if you've been meaning to do like a whole 30 or something, maybe this is your cue,
I say to myself pointing at my own face, ask me if I watched people making paleo pad tie at a
spaghetti squash on TikTok at 2 a.m. last night. I did. Now, speaking of that, a bunch of patrons
asked about screens grabbing our attention, and I'm looking right at you, Bailey Ricketts,
Heather Wills, Daphne McKee, and Coral Taylor. Does Dr. Barkley have any thoughts?
Of course.
And it's not screen time, by the way.
The idea that the more time you spend with screens and computers, the worst that makes
this, you know, people think there's an acquired ADHD because of technology.
There is no evidence underlying that particular mythology.
It's the other way around.
People with ADHD gravitate toward engaging technology and are more engaged by it
because of its highly reinforcing property.
So they're on social media, their Internet gaming, they show,
internet addiction that other people are able to pull away from and lead a more healthier,
better regulated life. So, you know, the chicken and egg has been pretty much sorted out. And,
you know, ADHD leads to abuse of screens and technology, not the other way around.
So if you do have a problem with too much screen time, maybe you could do it safely on a
treadmill, like the old indoor scroll and stroll. Laura Stacey wants to know they were diagnosed
later in life and have found certain things especially helpful. A big one being movement and
exercise. Is there any research on the effects of exercise on age of. Yes, there is. Over the last
decade, it started out to be a sort of a clinical observation. You know, a lot of us began to
realize that our kids were better on the days they played sports. They're better after recess.
And so people started exploring this. And then we realized that both what I call macro movement,
which is like, you know, you go for a run, you know, go out and, you know, climb three flights of
stairs before you go into a business meeting, you play sports, that's great. That research shows
that that is very helpful for managing and containing your disorder. It doesn't buy you cure,
but it can reduce your symptoms for 45 minutes to an hour and a half by engaging in vigorous
activity. Now what we're realizing is even micro-movement is helpful. So for instance, if I go
into a business meeting or I have to listen to somebody who I have an educational video, for
instance, as an example, you are better off squeezing a tennis ball with one of your hands or taking
notes or standing and pacing while you do that. So stay in motion while learning and you will be
able to pay attention longer than if you have to sit like a cadaver with your hands in your lap and your
head forward and now you're a dead person. I'm dead. So, and we now have a number of schools that
are adopting this where kids are allowed to sit on balance balls and they've got little swings
under their desk they can put their feet on and they're allowed to have a stress.
on their left hand, and they can stand and sit on their knees and walk around their desk while
they're working, and all of which leads to better productivity by these people. So the answer to
that question is, yes, exercise helps. And we're learning that increasingly now. And your pod mom,
Jared, says exercise definitely helps him. The kinds that work the best for him also engage
his brain like martial arts or weightlifting with actual good technique as opposed to how I weightlift,
which is just poorly looking like someone scrambling up a hill with luggage.
But do you have pet peeves with exercise?
Jared says, team sports like being stationed in the outfield, having to stand there with a
mitt and just wait for something to fly your head while a collection of screaming people are like,
we're relying on you.
Don't mess it up.
Those are his least favorites.
There's also running and listening to podcasts.
Hey.
What about the sport of hitting the sack?
So patrons, nanonaturalist, lung ox, Janelle Shaw, Carter Hildebrand, and first-time
askers, Fudrich and Stacey Simmons all had sleepy bedtime questions as well as.
Celia LeBond wanted to know they were diagnosed at 26, but they want to hear about sleep
procrastinating in the intersection of sleep and ADHD and how ADHD can fuck up sleep patterns.
But just procrastination in general.
Well, I'll view those as separate because sleep procrastination is also insomnia.
So let me deal with the sleep issue first.
40% of kids and adults with ADHD have serious sleep disruption.
So that goes with the genetics of this disorder.
And it can be difficulties with falling asleep.
It can be frequent night waking.
It can be restless like syndrome or just restless sleep.
It can be early rising.
All of which leads to at the end of the.
the night, very inefficient sleep, leaving you tired the next day, which feeds back to worsen
your already terrible attention span because now you've got sleep interacting with ADHD inattention
leading to problems. On top of that, research, particularly in Holland by Sandra Cooey and
others, has shown that people with ADHD get a different version of the clock gene, which is the
gene that determines your sort of mental tempo and your peak hours of alertness and arousal.
So adults with ADHD tend to have a peak time of arousal three to four hours later than typical
people. Typical people, it's mid to late morning. Adults with ADHD, it's mid to late afternoon.
And so sometimes what we teach you to do is to play around with that. Can you get a flexible
work schedule? Are you better off going into, say, self-employment where you can alter your
schedule or, you know, working from home and having a flex schedule with your boss? But, you know,
understand that the disorder has created in you a delayed diurnal rhythm so that your peak times of
concentration are not the same as other people. And trying to manage that with caffeine is not good
because it doesn't help all that well. And trying to cope with it by simply saying, well,
I just need to learn better ways to fall asleep. Well, I'm sorry, biologically, you're not programmed to
fall asleep when other people do. For more on this, you can see the double somnology episodes on
sleep or the chronobiology episode on circadian rhythms and why you should make sleep your
number one priority always in forever sleep your number one crush oh my god the best sleep is king
or queen or full even twin or couch sleep is couch whatever is good is good for you so that's all
by way of saying that you know a lot of times we have to address that sleep problem through other means
whether it's through another medication, whether it's through switching you away from a stimulant
because stimulants cause insomnia, whereas the non-stimulants don't.
Maybe we have to send you to a sleep lab for a 24-hour, you know, polysomnia where we look at
your rhythm day and night, but particularly during sleep to see if it's inefficient.
We know that about, you know, 10% of the people with sleep problems, it's due to obstructed
airways, so tonsillectomies are indicated and result in significant improvement in,
children and possibly adults, but it's more of the researches on kids. So if you're snoring a lot,
if you have sleep apnea, then we want to look at how do we expand that airway surgically or
otherwise. And you can find that that improves sleep and then the kids are better the next day.
So there's a lot going on around the sleep thing that I don't want to oversimplify. And it isn't
just procrastination. There really is a diurnal rhythm problem here with alertness. Now, that said,
procrastination is probably the number one problem.
that adults with ADHD report as part of their attention deficits.
So, okay, side-know.
We did touch on this in the Volitional Psychology episode, and Dr. Joseph Ferreri, leading expert
in the world on procrastination, said this.
I hesitate to say this because sometimes people get very annoyed with my comment, but there's
only been one study that looked at procrastination in ADHD, and I did it, and I found practically
no relationship.
Really?
And it's true that the procrastination
or volitional psychology community hasn't done a ton of studies on this.
And the one that Dr. Ferrari mentioned was the paper procrastination rates among adults
with and without ADHD, a pilot study.
And it was published in counseling and clinical psychology in 2006, but the study involved
29 people, most of whom were married with children, well-educated, white-collar
professionals living around the same Midwestern urban area, all white, too.
Median age, 49 years old, and all active in a support group for adults with ADHD, which I personally
have been meaning to attend for years and haven't gotten around to it. But even then, this small,
really limited study found that adults diagnosed with ADHD reported significantly higher
decisional procrastination and avoiding procrastination. So this was his study. I don't know. I count that
is a relationship. And thankfully, more people want answers because a 2021 Frontiers and Psychology
article acknowledged that few other studies exist, but found that, yes, chronic procrastination
occurred more frequently in ADHD patients than those without ADHD, regardless of gender.
And I found an article by another procrastination expert, Dr. Timothy Pitchell, who noted that
fear of mistakes and fear of boredom can contribute to procrastination in folks with ADHD.
And that a good reminder, when it comes to a task, you're avoiding and you just do not have the
motivation to start that it doesn't have to be perfect.
Leaving yourself time to come back later and revise can really take the stakes down.
And next week, we have some really, really great tips about that.
But what does Dr. Barclay say works for procrastination?
A lot of life and a lot of work we're asked to do is scut work that isn't very reinforcing to
engage in.
But if you don't get it done, there's going to be hell to pay.
So the consequences for not doing it are longer term, whereas the thrill of doing it is absent.
And hence, as I said, the adult with ADHD is pulled along by things that are immediately gratifying more than things that involve delay of gratification.
And that's why work is very hard for them and why they procrastinate so much, is that there are plenty of things around us that offer engagement, excitement, reinforcement, interest, stimulation.
and yet a lot of what we have to do in life is to turn away from those seductions
and pursue that longer-term goal, even though it's not very fun to do.
And so how do we do with that?
Well, one is medication.
Medications correct that.
What the stimulants do is they enhance the reward value of this information, so that now you
engage it where you didn't previously.
The second thing is, as I've said, to make sure that you've managed your workspace
and reorganized it.
So a lot of the more compelling distractions are not there.
They're not available to you.
The third thing is we know making ourselves socially accountable to somebody else
what we agree to do heightens the likelihood we're going to do it.
That's true of typical people.
It's true of ADHD people.
So if I tell somebody I'm going to get this done in the next half hour,
just making that commitment to another person enhances the consequences for me,
makes it, you know, more likely that I'm going to get it done.
Dr. Ferrari's advice was post your goal on Facebook or Twitter or tell a friend
because just that a whiff of potential future public shame can really get the job done.
Go on your crushest Facebook and just be like, hi, I'm going to vacuum my car today.
I bet you'll get it done.
You're now accountable to someone else for what you agreed to do, whether it's your coach,
whether it's a spouse, partner, colleague.
That's why public accountability is a great strategy for adults with ADHD
because it ramps up the consequences for not getting it done.
Whereas if you just promise yourself, you're going to do it, you're going to cheat yourself.
We all do it, you know.
If nobody knows I'm cheating, then I'm going to cheat, right?
And I'm not going to do it.
So it really is learning to know thyself and where the demons are and get them behind you, you know,
so to speak, get them out of the way and use other people to manage yourself and you'll be doing
and then go on medication. There's a lot of strategies in my book that we could go through, but
that can help. Oh, and hey, some patrons like McKenzie Foss and Michelle Krebs, Kelly Semen,
Heather Moore, T. Morris, and first time askers, Aaron Spencer and Dave, don't worry. I did not
reject her questions. They were good ones and they were super important to me, as well as to
Post Officer 69. Can I ask you one more question from a listener? Post Officer 69, first-time
question asker, says, could you have Dr. Barkley discuss rejection sensitivity in relation to ADHD?
I'm trying to learn as much as I can to better support my fiancé. That's great. Number one,
there is no such disorder in clinical practice that is officially recognized. So this was invented
by a particular clinician to explain the heightened emotion that people experience in their
social relationships with others, particularly when those social relationships can be
frustrating. And so you get this, what he calls rejection sensitivity. But just know this.
There's no disorder. No clinician will diagnose you with that because there's no DSM disorder there.
So sensitivity to rejection and criticism is a thing very, very, very much exists and full
with ADHD may be much more vulnerable or reactive in that regard. So is RSD rejection, sensitivity,
dysphoria, a specific disorder that you have? No, just because it's not recognized by the greater
psychological and neuroscience community in a book. So there's not a consensus on it yet. There's
not a label that actually exists. Who knows what might change, though? But the feelings are real.
and this is just my opinion, your internet dad, who with unbrushed hair and a lot of been there
feelings, if rejection sensitivity helps you to put your own emotions in perspective or calms you
when you need some objectivity or helps explain to a partner why you are so clinically but
hurt, use it. Knowing how to soothe each other and see vulnerability and hurt is probably one of the
greatest tools a relationship can ever acquire and maintain. I call it a win. And Dr. Barclay concedes
that, yes, those feelings are valid. On the other hand, do people with ADHD show a heightened
emotional reaction in these situations? The answer is yes. But we know where that comes from.
One of the executive functions is emotional self-regulation. And we know that ADHD individuals
can't do that as well as other people. And therefore, when they are faced with environmental
situations that are frustrating, impatient, non-rewarding, or even aggressive toward them, or where
they sense rejection from another person, they're going to react emotionally, much more than
other people do.
But it's not just to social relationships.
It is across the board.
They're going to be more emotional even when they're alone and encounter frustration.
I mean, I had a weightlifter tell me that he tore the door off of his car because when
he parked it, went into the parking lot, he left the keys in.
and he locked the door.
Now this is back old school days
where these days are very hard to do that
because cars are programmed to do that.
But this guy literally spent 30 minutes
by the side of the road in a parking lot
tearing the door off a car.
That's how angry he got.
Road rage is characteristic of 40 to 55% of adults with ADHD.
All it takes is another driver to cut you off aggressively
and you engage.
And so the emotionality of ADHD permeates almost everything.
It explains why there's a lot more
intimate partner aggressiveness and frustration in intimate partner relationships because they can be
some of the most challenging and frustrating and emotional situations that we have.
Does your partner have ADHD? Or do you? The book, The ADHD Effect on Marriage by
Melissa Orlov, is a book you may want to get yesterday. Even if you're not married, Jared and I
wouldn't be married if we hadn't both listened to that book in 2017, I think. It changed our
relationship. So fundamentally, we would not still be together if we hadn't both listened to it
at our own pace on audiobook. We listened to it about over the course of a week or so. It helped us
a bunch. So the ADHD effect on marriage, I'll link it to my website. So it goes beyond just
rejection by another to incorporate any emotionally provocative situation, including relationships,
but beyond relationships. So we can account for this rejection sensitivity.
without adding in and inventing whole cloth a new disorder for which there is very little evidence.
So Dr. Barclay is a world-renowned expert on this, and his work and lectures have changed and saved lives.
And next week, we'll give the bright sides and the tips and the perspective on ADHD.
This episode, we learned to take it seriously.
What sucks about his job?
Worst thing about my job right now is I'm 72 and I see the end of my career ahead of me.
And, you know, it's been a great ride.
I just can't tell you how rewarding it has been to work in this field.
It's why I wrote the four books during the pandemic.
The one for Parents, the Twelve Principles book, I basically sat down and said,
if you could reduce over a half million research studies, papers, conferences to crucial ideas that
we've learned that everybody needs to know, it would be those 12. And the adult taking charge
has the same information. I just didn't phrase it that way. So, you know, the bad thing for me is
I can see this coming and I'm stepping back and I'm moving into semi-retirement and enjoying my
grandchildren. But I'm going to miss the ride. It's been extremely rewarding to be this helpful
to so many people through the act of scientific discovery. And more importantly, as Carl Sagan,
and others have shown is to disseminate it.
Leave the lab.
I keep teaching this to students and young faculty.
You do nothing when you publish a paper.
You do a great deal for humanity when you go out and meet with the people who have this problem
and share the science, disseminate it.
And you change lives that way.
And yet my colleagues don't value that.
They value the publication, you know, the scholarship.
Whereas if you write a trade book, if you give a, you know, a lecture, like my lecture on YouTube, is over a half million people.
You know, so disseminate the science.
The upside for me has been just the excitement of the discoveries.
Every time I think I'm getting bored, a paper appears like the one yesterday on, you know, the delay in functional connectivity in the brain and the areas of the brain and what that means for their symptoms.
and explaining the disorder and what it might mean for new treatments for us.
You know, to me, that's just, it's so incredibly exciting to an inquisitive person like myself
to keep seeing these discoveries coming along.
Thank you so much for the way that you do disseminate it.
Your books are incredible.
They are the Bible when it comes to ADHD.
Well, I got to thank Chris Benton, my co-author.
Chris, you know, she's my writer.
She makes it sing.
you know, I just, I bring the science. She brings the way to deliver it.
So ask experts some amateur questions because as you heard, they want to share it.
And besides, we're all going to die one day. You might as well just ask questions.
I hope this episode is a springboard into greater understanding for you.
So next week, more experts, more folks with ADHD and people who study ADHD.
Just you wait. You do have to wait, though, about one week. Okay. Now, if you need more info,
now, though, you can get yourself to a bookstore and obtain taking charge of adult ADHD second
edition. So that's by Dr. Russell Barkley just came out with a brand new updated edition.
There's so many links to his books and studies we mentioned and other resources, including
his videos. And you can find those at alleyward.com slash ologies slash ADHD or at the link in
the show notes. Russell's website is russellbarkley.org. We are at ologies on blue sky and
Instagram. Smologies are shorter, kid-friendly and classroom-safe episodes of Ologies
that you can find in their own feed, S-M-O-L-O-G-I-E-S, wherever you get your podcasts.
Aaron Talbert, Adminseology's podcast, Facebook group, Emily White and Aveline Malik make our
professional transcripts. Kelly Dwyer does the website. Keeping our brains on time is
scheduling producer Noel Dilworth. The astoundingly responsible Susan Hale, managing directs
the whole show. Editors for this episode were Stephen Ray Morris and the beautiful
glittering brain of Mind Jam Media's Jared Sleeper, who also hosted a podcast called My Good, Bad Brain
about ADHD and mental health. And we'll link that on our website as well. He's been talking
about starting up My Good Bad Brain again. So let Jarrett Sleeper know if you want more. You can find
him on social media. Editors nowadays are Jake Chafee and Mercedes-Maitland of Maitland Audio.
And I just want to say most of the folks working on ologies are neurodivergent, as are, let's be
honest, a lot of you listeners. And I cannot stress enough how beautiful our individual brains are for
everyone. And also how much the struggle to fit everyone's brains into the modern world is felt by
others. You're not alone. So thanks for joining us. Okay, back into our 2022 vault. If you stick
around to the end of the episode, I tell you a secret. And that secret is there's been this streetlight
outside my window for maybe a year. And it was gradually turning bluish. And then,
a deep, beautiful violet. It was such a weird color. And I was like, what's going on with a street
light? And I looked it up. And I guess streetlights all over the country are just doing that
randomly because of a coating over it that shifts the color temperature warmer, but that
coating has been degrading, turning these lights super, super blue. But number one, a bunch of people
think it's actually a black light conspiracy that's, I think, spying on you. But number two, I mentioned
it to my friend McKenzie, this purple street light. And we both confided that we love the messy purple
ones. And this week I went to water the wildflowers in the garden we just planted. And I looked up
and I noticed that they fixed the purple light. But I missed the purple light. I thought it was so cool.
Okay. Next week, productivity hacks, relationships and neurodiversity, life, work balance and boundaries
on your energy and accepting yourself. I can't wait. Okay. Bye-bye.
Dopamine now.
