Welcome to the ADHD-ish Blog

ADHD-ish Blog

If you've ever Googled "why can't I just get my act together" at midnight, you're in the right place.

The ADHD-ish Blog is where business strategy meets brain science — written for entrepreneurs and small business owners who are tired of advice that wasn't designed for the way their minds actually work.

Whether you're officially diagnosed or just ADHD-adjacent, this is your no-fluff resource for building a business that works with your brain, not against it.

What You'll Find on the ADHD-ish Blog

Every blog is grounded in 20+ years of clinical experience and real-world business strategy — not toxic positivity and generic productivity hacks.

Browse the blog for episodes, frameworks, and straight-talk insights on focus, decision-making, pricing, boundaries, and everything else nobody warned you about when you started your business.

New to the ADHD-ish Blog? Start anywhere. That's kind of our thing.

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The ADHD Trap: Breaking Free from Social Media’s FOMO and RSD Triggers

As female entrepreneurs, most of us are juggling a multitude of responsibilities, from managing our businesses to looking after our families. This intense balancing act can be particularly daunting for those of us with ADHD. ADHD is characterized by symptoms of inattention, hyperactivity, and impulsivity, which can significantly impact our daily lives and our ability to focus and manage our tasks. Add the uncertainty of entrepreneurship and lack of structure that comes with working from home and distractions multiply.

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Why Female Entrepreneurs with ADHD Struggle with Emotions

If you have ADHD, you're no stranger to emotional dysregulation and overwhelm. If you're a female entrepreneur, you know the ups and downs of running a business are a major source of stress. Combine these realities, and the task feels monumental. In my recent conversation with ADHD Women's Wellbeing Coach Kate Moryoussef, we explored how deeply loving and accepting ourselves—especially when we make mistakes—isn't just a lofty ideal; it's a survival strategy. Kate's reminder that treating ourselves with the same nurturing kindness we use when teaching children is transformative. From self-awareness and somatic work to breath work and Emotional Freedom Techniques, these tools help bring our nervous systems under control when triggered. Kate's practice of committing to decisions "no matter what" and extracting lessons from them without shame aligns with my belief that flexibility beats rigid routines. For female entrepreneurs with ADHD, radical self-acceptance and self-compassion aren't optional—they're essential for sustainable success.

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