The Diary Of A CEO with Steven Bartlett - Most Replayed Moment: Is Modern Parenting Causing ADHD? Your Decisions Shape Your Child’s Mind!
Episode Date: December 27, 2025Erica Komisar is a psychoanalyst renowned for her work on parenting, early childhood development, and the root causes of behavioural issues. In today’s moment, Erica discusses the rise in ADHD diagn...oses and reveals which modern parenting practices may be significantly contributing to this trend, and to stress in early childhood. Listen to the full episode here! Spotify: https://g2ul0.app.link/e/OoL7GFnplZb Apple: https://g2ul0.app.link/TBgRlfrplZb Watch the Episodes On YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/c/%20TheDiaryOfACEO/videos Erica Komisar: https://www.ericakomisar.com/
Transcript
Discussion (0)
I've just got back from a few weeks away on my speaking tour in Asia with my team,
and it was absolutely incredible.
Thank you to everybody that came.
We travelled to new cities.
We did live shows and places I'd never been to before.
During our downtime, talking about what's coming for each of us.
And now that we're back, my team has started planning their time off over the holiday period.
Some are heading home, some are going travelling,
and one or two of them have decided to host their places through our sponsor, Airbnb, while they're away.
I hadn't really considered this until Will, in my team, mentioned that his entire flat,
all of his roommates were doing this too. And it got me thinking about how smart this is
for many of you that are looking for some extra money. Because so many of you spend this time
of the year traveling or visiting family away from your homes and your homes just sit there
empty. So why not let your house work for you while you're off somewhere else? Your home might be
worth more than you think. Find out how much at Airbnb.com.ca.com slash host. That's
Airbnb.ca slash host.
ADHD.
Yeah, okay.
I don't feel like I don't even have to ask a question here, but just to set the stage,
the reason why I'm so compelled by this is just this, I have to say it, the shocking rise in diagnosis and prescriptions over the last 10 years.
Between 2020, 2018, ADHD diagnosis is in the UK rose approximately.
20-fold.
Yes.
Among boys aged 10 to 16
diagnosis increased from 1%
roughly to about 3.5% in 2018.
And in men aged 18 to 29,
there was a nearly 50-fold
increase in ADHD prescriptions
during the same period.
And the same applies to the United States
where an estimated 15.5 million adults
in the US have been diagnosed with ADHD.
Approximately one in nine US children
have been diagnosed with ADHD at some point
with 10.5%
and having a current diagnosis, I don't know where ADHD was, but the conversation around it,
the prescriptions, the diagnosis seemed to have really surged into culture in a really, really big
way. What's going on? So ADHD was one of the factors that drove me to right being there
because I was seeing this huge uptick in ADHD diagnosis and children being medicated so,
so early. Do you know what the fight or flight reaction is? That's when the sympathetic nervous system
starts to kick into action and...
Yes, so well, it's basically our evolutionary response
to predatory threat.
So if a sable tooth tiger was chasing you,
you either stood and fought, fight,
or you ran for your life, flight.
So when our children are under stress,
they go into fight or flight.
So one of the first signs that a child is under stress that they cannot manage is when they become aggressive in school, they hit, they bite, they throw chairs, they have trouble, you know, socially in daycare or preschool or even in school, or they become distracted, which is the flight part of fight or flight.
So what's happening is their nervous systems, the stress-regulating part of their brain, is getting turned on.
So we say that the stress-regulating part of their brain has to do with a little almond-shaped part of the brain called the amygdala.
It's a very primitive part of the brain, very old part of the brain.
And it regulates stress throughout our lives.
It helps us to manage it.
What we know is that part of the brain is supposed to remain offline for the first year to three years.
which is why mothers wear babies on their bodies.
It's why babies stay close to their mothers in the first three years.
To keep the amygdala quiet and only incrementally,
incrementally exposed children to stress and frustration that they can manage.
So imagine taking small bites of it so you can digest it, right?
And your mother's there to help you digest the stress.
What we're doing now by separating mothers and babies,
by putting babies into daycare with strangers,
is by sleep training babies,
all these weird things that we're doing to babies
is we're turning the amygdala on.
We're making it active precociously too early.
What happens when the amygdala is activated too early
is it becomes very active and very large, very quickly.
The problem is then it shrivels up and burns out also.
because it cannot manage that kind of stress so early.
When it ceases to be functional, it ceases to be functional for a lifetime.
And so it's very important to protect, you know, what's the expression, the family jewels.
It's very, these are the family jewels in the brain of a baby.
This is the jewel, the amygdala.
You want to keep the stress to an absolute minimum in the first year,
which is why sleep training is dangerous.
it's why letting babies cry it out, it's why putting babies into daycare, it's why leaving
babies for hours on end when they're so, so very fragile, is so bad for their brains because
it gets the cortisol flowing, which is the stress hormone, but it makes this part of the brain
very active, so it grows, grows, grows, and then and ceases to be functional in the future,
like a PTSD response. So what we know is that these children are,
are in hyper-vigilant states of stress.
ADHD children.
Hyper-vigilant states of stress.
If you stay in a hyper-vigilant state of stress long enough,
you go into a hypo-vigilant state of stress,
which then causes depression.
So what we have now are not disorders.
So there was a whole movement to take the D off of ADHD,
because it's not a disorder.
it is a stress response. And instead of asking the right questions, which are, okay, what's causing the
stress? How do we make sure that our children are not exposed to this kind of stress because they're
going into fight or flight? So the nervous system, as you said, the brain has an on switch and an
off switch. The on switch to stress is the amygdala, the hippocampus is the off switch. And you'd say
the stress response is in a negative feedback loop, it's actually important. Like, in other words,
if a sable tooth tiger is chasing you, very important that you can activate, right? Run or fight.
So the stress response is supposed to be short term. It's supposed to be not, it's supposed to be
acute rather than chronic. So we can kind of manifest it. We can activate it. But then it's
supposed to be turned off by the turnoff switch, the hippocampus. What we're seeing in children's
brains is that the amygdala is growing very precociously large, and the hippocampus, which is the
off switch, is very small. So we have this problem. As we say Houston, we have a problem. We have an
on switch going full speed, gas, no brakes, and no off switch. And that's causing ADHD,
behavioral problems that are hugely rising in children in school, a lot of aggression and violence.
So that's what's happening.
This is a stress response.
And again, instead of asking the right questions, like, where is this coming from?
What's causing the stress?
Instead, we silence the children's pain.
We tell parents, we'll medicate it and we'll just relieve the symptoms.
For me, that's malpractice.
The way we treat ADHD is malpractice.
A child develops, goes into fight or flight when they are under stress.
It could be psychosocial stressors at home, in the family.
It could be at school.
It could be with their friends.
It could be a learning disability.
There's so many things that can cause kids stress.
So instead of medicating them, why don't we figure out what's happening to that child deeply
that's causing them to go into fight or flight?
isn't that point of view. I've got two questions here. The first is how do you know that it's
stress? And the second is, if it is stress, then the problem, or at least the inconvenient
truth that then creates is that the parent is responsible. Yes, there's the inconvenient truth
for their child's ADHD. Yes. Yes, that's the inconvenient truth. It's not so simple. Sometimes
it's the family, usually it's the family, particularly with small children, but
When children get to school, it could be social.
As I said, you know, you can't control whether your children are exposed to social issues or bullying or there's many things that can cause stress in children.
But when they're very little, you are their environment.
So the inconvenient truth is that when your child gets an ADHD diagnosis, the first thing you should do is go to a therapist who will do parent guidance with you.
Don't rush that child to a psychiatrist to medicate them.
you go with your partner or spouse and talk to a parent guidance expert about what could be causing
this child to feel such stress. And look at the psychosocial stressors. Look at the influences and the
dynamics in this child's life that would be causing them to go into a state of stress like this.
Give me some examples of the type of stresses, the everyday stresses, that we're now exposing children to
that are leading to ADHD, in your opinion. Well, again, let's start at home, at home.
home, the stresses might be that they were handed over to a daycare center at an early age,
which turned that amygdala response on, which turned the stress regulating part of their
brain on too early. Now you have that hypervigilant reaction, and they can't turn it off,
right? It could be a divorce situation, 50% of couples divorce, which means that divorce is an
adversity. You know, I have a book coming out in a year about how to divorce and mitigate the impact
of the divorce on the child, but no matter what, a divorce is an adversity on a child and a stress.
When parents fight dramatically in the home, if there's tremendous sibling rivalry issues in the
home, if there's the birth of another child, it's stressful, right? If you have a sibling,
believe it or not, that's a very stressful thing. If parents are sensitive about that, then it can be
mitigated, but if parents are insensitive about the birth of a second child and the feelings
that your first child may have, that can cause stress, moving can cause stress, illness or
mental illness in a parent can cause stress, alcoholism, any kind of addiction can cause stress,
a grandparent or uncle or aunt or even a parent getting sick and dying can cause, I mean,
there are so many things that can cause stress. But the point is that stress can be regulated,
but it can only be regulated if parents are introspective and self-aware and willing to look at their part in it.
If parents hand a child over to a psychiatrist and say, fix my child, of course psychiatrists will cooperate with you and silence your child's pain.
But is that really what you want to be doing?
Because in the end, you're just putting your finger in a dike.
You're putting your finger in a dam and eventually that dam is going to burst.
What do you say to some of the evidence around there being a link to a hereditary component?
In twin studies, they found that ADHD is about 74 to 80 percent heritable, making it one of the most genetically influenced psychiatric conditions.
Let me tell you a different study that will help you to understand that study, which is that we know that there is no genetic precursor to mental illness.
There is no genetic precursor to ADHD.
There is no genetic precursor to depression and no genetic precursor to depression and no genetic.
precursor to anxiety. What do you mean by precursor? Meaning there's no genetic connection. You don't
get it in your genes. If your father or your mother were depressed, you get it by something called
the inheritance of acquired characteristics. If you're raised by a depressed parent, you're more
likely to become depressed. It's the nature-nurture argument. Okay, but what they did find.
Now, schizophrenia has a genetic connection, bipolar disorder. Those have genetic, but the rest do not.
anxiety, depression, ADHD, no genetics. What they did find is a genetic tie to something called
the sensitivity gene. It's a short allele on the serotonin receptor, and serotonin, as we know,
is used to regulate happy emotions, to regulate emotions, right? So when you have a short allele,
it means that you have a harder time picking up the serotonin, but it also means that you are
more sensitive to stress. Now, those children who are born with this gene, this short allele on
the serotonin receptor gene, they are more prone to mental illness later on because of that
sensitivity to stress. What the study shows is if those children who are born with that gene
for sensitivity are provided with emotionally and physically present attachment
security in the first year, it neutralizes the expression of that gene. So epigenetics means
that we're born with genes, like you might have a gene for rheumatoid arthritis or you might have a
gene for cancer, but it never gets expressed. Well, we all have genes for something. But they don't
necessarily get expressed. That's what epigenetics is it means the environment has to turn on the gene
to make it, let's rock and roll, right? What it showed in this study is that the children who are
born with this genetic precursor, this sensitivity to stress, if they had sensitive empathic nurturing
and present parents in the first year, it neutralized the expression of that gene so those children
could be as healthy as children born without that gene. If, however, children born with that sensitivity
gene were neglected, you know, abandoned, not provided with sensitive empathic present nurturing,
it exacerbated that gene.
So we know that that sensitivity gene is tied and correlated to mental illness later on
unless the sensitive empathic nurturing mitigates that gene.
And what do you say to people that point to MRI scans?
FMRIs and yeah, there's all kinds of neurological tests now
where we can see the brain in action.
So it's not a static thing.
We can actually see the blood flow.
the brain. We can see the electrical activity in the brain. It's amazing, actually. Some people say that
this proves that it's the way your brain is. And lots of my friends that have ADHD, when they talk
about their ADHD or the way that they are, they say, my brain works like this.
No, it's not correct. Their brain is sensitive to stress. Someone with ADHD is more sensitive
to stress. So you could ask them questions like this. You could say, are you a more sensitive
person? Are you more sensitive to noise, to smells, to touch when you were a child? Did you not like
itchy things? Did you cry more? Were you more sensitive when your parents would go out for the
night? Were you more sensitive when your mom would go to work? Or were you more sensitive when you
were left at nursery school? And they're probably going to say yes. But if they say no and they
still have an ADHD diagnosis? I would guarantee, almost guarantee they wouldn't say no. Because
people with ADHD are people who are sensitive. Sensitivity is an amazing strength if it's met with
sensitivity. If you have a sensitive child, so what does a sensitive child look like? If you have
multiple children, then you know, because the first thing I'll do when I give a public talk is I'll
say, okay, everybody here, who has a sensitive child? And I describe, okay, sensitive child is a
child who cries more, is harder to soothe, is more clingy, doesn't like you leaving them,
is harder, it has a harder time separating, has a harder time going to sleep and being left to
sleep on their own, is sensitive to things like noise and smells and touch.
If you grew up in an environment that was stressful, and again, you've identified that stress
can come in many forms, it could be arguing parents, it could be a neighbor or whatever,
some environmental factor that caused that stress.
you are sensitive, you developed ADHD, you become an adult. You get diagnosed at 30 years old
as having ADHD. Yeah. You're offered medication. You take the medication. The medication makes
you much more functional in your career, in your relationships, in your life. It's a stimulant.
And so what stimulants do is they cause, they can cause great anxiety. They can cause panic attacks
in adolescents. They can cause growth issues. So I have patients who come to me. You
young men who didn't grow because they were put on stimulants when they were young.
So in terms of the consequences of using stimulants, the jury is still out, but we know that
they cause growth issues, they cause panic attacks, they cause anxiety disorders, they cause
depression.
They're quite life-saving for some people in terms of having a...
They can be, they can be.
So what I would say is if you have tried everything to uncover what they're not.
the stress is that's causing you to react this way and you still are feeling that way,
then sometimes medication can be a lifesaver. The problem is that we turn to medication
in adolescents and children and young adults. We turn to it as a performance drug because there's
so much stress in modern life and there's such a need for people to perform and be successful
in their careers and in school and get good grades. There's so much pressure on kids.
So, you know, I'm 60, and we didn't have this kind of pressure growing up.
And so the generations that follow have so much pressure.
That pressure makes children literally go off the rails.
We could talk about the academic pressure, the competitiveness, the perfectionism.
So ADHD is a bucket.
It's a bucket which you throw people in who have anxiety.
that has never been treated. And so, and there's different ways of thinking about treatment, too.
So we are a society that likes superficial quick fixes. We like drugs. We like CBT therapy.
The truth is that this is not a quick fix. Figuring out relationally, dynamically, what happened to you
as a child, what your losses were, what your traumas were, what caused you to feel so anxious, what's
caused you to go into fight or flight is hard work. It requires frustration. It requires
commitment. It requires going to someone who can think very deeply with you. You know,
I want to define what anxiety is because I think it's really important because we rarely
define depression and anxiety. Depression is preoccupation with past losses.
anxiety is preoccupation with future losses that may never occur.
What do they have in common?
It's all about losses?
All about loss.
And you could say the generations now are very preoccupied with loss.
Loss of status, achievement.
But because we're also very preoccupied with gain,
Well, we're preoccupied with what I say the, you know, I don't want to judge, but I want to say the
unimportant things in life. What are the important things in life? Relationships, love,
connection, health, right? You would say objectively, family. These are the important things in life.
But we've become very preoccupied with material success, money, career, achievement,
achievement, fame. I think there was a study that interviewed teenagers. And it was really
discouraging because they said that the thing they wanted more in life than anything was to be
famous. And so we're preoccupied with the wrong things. On this point of stress and the link with
ADHD, looking at some research from the Injury.com research education group. It says that children
with an ACE score, which is the trauma base score where I think it goes up to 10 different
sort of questions, with an ACE score of four or more, so four experiences of trauma
or more, have nearly four times, which is 400 percent, more chance of having parent-reported
ADHD compared to children with no ACEs.
And some of the factors that have big impact, a socioeconomic hardship increases your
probability of having ADHD by 40 percent, parental divorce by 35 percent, familial mental
illness, so a parent having a mental illness increases up to almost 60%, 55%, I believe,
and neighborhood violence, almost 50%, familial incarceration.
So if a parent goes to prison, then that increases your probability of ADHD by about
40% as well.
And that's published by the, I think it's the New England.
Yeah.
Or the National Library of Medicine, National Center of Biological Information.
Yeah, so remember what I said, that you can't control everything that happens to your
child.
Divorces do happen.
and adversities happen to children, health issues happen to children.
What you can control is you can control the first three years
and be as present as possible for your child.
So if my kid starts screaming in a supermarket,
one of the prevailing piece of advice says,
just walk off or start screaming yourself as the parent to show them.
Am I supposed to just ignore my child when it's screaming and throwing a tantrum?
Am I meant to drop what I'm doing and go and,
cater to them. What am I meant to do in these situations? You can have me on speed dial,
Stephen. You be careful, because if you make a promise like that, I promise. I promise. I'll be on
speed down. You only want to drop your career and focus on raising my children. You can, no, but you can
call me. I've got this on video. That's legally binding. No, you can have me on speed dial.
How much? Yeah, you can as much as you want. So the deal is, you don't yell at your children.
An emotionally regulated parent, a healthy parent produces a healthy child. So what is a healthy parent?
healthy parent is a parent who feels good about themselves, who has authentically good
self-esteem, not grandiosity, but really feels good about themselves, knows their strengths
and limitations, and overall as a whole person feels good about themselves. They have the
capacity to regulate their emotions, to keep their emotions from going too high and too low. Remember
sailing in the Caribbean, meaning they can stay calm in a storm, is sensitive and empathic as a
nurture. These are signs of health in a parent. So if my kid says, I want that pack of sweets and I go,
you can't have that pack of sweets. Well, first you have to, so before you discipline, you always want to
be empathic first. So I always say that if you are going to discipline a child, first you have to
recognize how they feel. I mean, recognizing how children feel is important anyway, meaning when you
recognize a child's feelings. If they're sad, you mirror their sadness. If they're angry,
you say, I can see you're angry. If they're happy, you look happy with them. That kind of
reflection is the way that your child knows that you acknowledge them, that they're a person
to you, that they're a separate person to you. It's how they feel valuable. So when you acknowledge
their feelings, that's the first critical, you'd say, parenting 101. Acknowledge your child's
feelings. So I would turn to my child and say, you want sweets or are you hungry? Yeah, you can say,
I can see that you really want that packet of sweets. I can see how hard it is because you really
want it, but you know you can't have it before dinner. You know that's the rule. And then they
start screaming and crying. And then they start screaming and you say, you broken record is a communication
style where you say, oh, I can see it's really hard for you, but just still can't have the
sweets. And you stay with them and you keep empathizing and then setting structure. Empathes
Structuring structure, empathizing structure. The mistake that parents make is that they go right into the no word. They don't use empathy. They don't bring empathy in. And the truth is that even as an adult, if somebody just says no without first recognizing how you feel, you feel very unsatisfied, right? For a child, it's critical. It's critical that even when you have to say no, and particularly if you have to say no, that you first recognize how they
feel. I mean, that's what all the relationship experts on the show tell me. They say, if you want to be
successful in a romantic relationship, then you first must make your partner feel heard and understood.
That's right. Even if you disagree in an argument, first acknowledge what they said, maybe
repeat it back to them, and then they'll feel heard and understood, and it kind of stops the broken
record. What you just listened to was a most replayed moment from a previous episode. If you
want to listen to that full episode, I've linked it down below. Check the description. Thank you.
I've just got back from a few weeks away on my speaking tour in Asia with my team,
and it was absolutely incredible.
Thank you to everybody that came.
We travelled to new cities.
We did live shows and places I'd never been to before.
During our downtime, talking about what's coming for each of us.
And now that we're back, my team has started planning their time off over the holiday period.
Some are heading home, some are going traveling,
and one or two of them have decided to host their places through our sponsor, Airbnb, while they're away.
I hadn't really considered this until Will, in my day.
mentioned that his entire flat, all of his roommates were doing this too. And it got me thinking
about how smart this is for many of you that are looking for some extra money. Because so many
of you spend this time of the year traveling or visiting family away from your homes and your
homes just sit there empty. So why not let your house work for you while you're off somewhere else?
Your home might be worth more than you think. Find out how much at Airbnb.c.ca.com slash host. That's
Airbnb.ca slash host.
