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ADHD Success Community 🧠

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7 contributions to ADHD Success Community 🧠
Lesson 1.4 Discussion — The ADHD Iceberg 🧠
In this lesson, we looked at the ADHD Iceberg. The idea is simple: People often judge the bit they can see. The lateness. The forgetting. The unfinished tasks. The emotional reactions. The mess. The inconsistency. The distractions. But they don’t always see what’s happening underneath. The shame. The overwhelm. The mental noise. The emotional effort. The masking. The low self-trust. The constant feeling that you’re trying harder than it looks. This matters because so many ADHD adults get judged by the visible behaviour, without anyone understanding the hidden effort behind it. And after a while, you can start judging yourself the same way. You only see what didn’t get done. You forget how much energy you spent trying to hold everything together. Your turn 💬 What’s one thing underneath your ADHD iceberg that people in your life don’t really see or understand? You could share: - something you hide or mask - something that takes more effort than people realise - something people misinterpret - something you wish others understood better - something you’ve blamed yourself for Example: People see me being late, but they don’t see the panic, time confusion, and mental chaos that happens before I even leave the house. Or: People see me forgetting things, but they don’t see how much shame I feel when I realise I’ve let someone down again. Only share what you’re comfortable sharing. And if someone else’s comment feels familiar, reply to them. Sometimes being understood by people who genuinely get it can take some of the weight off.
1 like • 13d
Emotional effort, ,masking and mental noise. Frankly, participation in this course is aneffort to better handle these underneath things, as much as it is to handle the effects of my brains way of dealing with things.
Lesson 1.3 Discussion — The Biggest ADHD Myths Busted 🧠
In this lesson, we looked at some of the most common ADHD myths. Things like: “ADHD is just laziness.” “Adults grow out of it.” “If you can focus sometimes, you can’t have ADHD.” “ADHD only affects boys.” “You just need to be more organised.” These myths might sound small, but they can do a lot of damage. Because when you believe the wrong explanation, you usually choose the wrong solution. If you believe ADHD is laziness, you try to shame yourself into action. If you believe ADHD is just about focus, you miss the emotional, time, memory, and executive function parts. If you believe ADHD only looks one way, you might dismiss your own experience completely. That’s why busting myths matters. Not to win arguments. But to stop carrying explanations that were never accurate in the first place. Your turn 💬 Which ADHD myth has affected you the most personally? You could share: - a myth someone told you - a belief you had about yourself - something you’re now starting to question - a myth that made it harder to ask for help - a myth that caused shame, masking, or self-blame Example: The myth that affected me most was “you’re just lazy.” I believed that for years, even though I was constantly exhausted from trying to keep up. Or: I used to think ADHD meant you couldn’t focus at all, so my hyperfocus made me doubt myself. No need to write loads. One honest comment is enough. And if someone else shares a myth you’ve carried too, reply to them. A lot of people have been blaming themselves for things they were never properly taught to understand.
1 like • 13d
The myth that ADHD is laziness was a predominant theme throughout my childhood. Repeated over and over to prove that I was consciencely to blame for my life's issues. Usually grades, trouble for disrupting a class, trouble for not participating properly, etc)Excitable Boy, they said (Shout out to Warren Zevon)
Lesson 1.2 Discussion — The Three Types of ADHD 🧠
In this lesson, we looked at the three main ways ADHD can show up: Inattentive: The quieter version that often looks like daydreaming, forgetting, losing focus, feeling mentally scattered, or struggling to follow through. Hyperactive-Impulsive: The more outwardly restless version that can show up as fidgeting, interrupting, acting before thinking, talking a lot, or feeling like your brain and body won’t slow down. Combined: A mix of both inattentive and hyperactive-impulsive traits. One of the biggest takeaways is this: ADHD does not always look loud, obvious, or disruptive. Sometimes it looks like a person who seems calm on the outside but feels chaotic on the inside. Sometimes it looks like someone who starts well but cannot sustain focus. Sometimes it looks like someone who is constantly tired from masking how much effort everything takes. And for adults, this is one reason ADHD can be missed for years. Your turn 💬 Which ADHD pattern feels most familiar to you right now, and why? You could share: - whether you relate more to inattentive, hyperactive-impulsive, or combined traits - whether your ADHD looks different on the outside compared with how it feels inside - whether your pattern has changed as you’ve got older - whether this lesson helped explain why ADHD may have been missed before Example: I relate most to the inattentive type. People never saw me as hyperactive, but inside my head has always felt busy and scattered. Or: Combined feels most accurate for me. I can be forgetful and distracted, but I’m also impulsive and restless when I’m stressed. No need to get it perfect. This is about recognising patterns, not putting yourself in a box. And if someone else describes a pattern that sounds like yours, reply to them. That kind of “same here” moment is often what helps the shame drop.
1 like • 13d
I feel like I am in the combined type at the moment. Want to start things, start some things, lose interest and set it aside start something else and finish it but it wasnt what needed to be finished so false glory ... implusive actions like shopping or researching item to buy to fill the void of getting the first thing moving or actually completed. Messy.
Lesson 1.1 Discussion — What ADHD Is and What It Isn’t 🧠
In this lesson, we looked at one of the biggest ADHD reframes: ADHD isn’t just a focus problem. It’s a regulation problem. That means the issue is not simply: “I can’t focus.” It’s often more like: “I can’t always choose what my brain focuses on, when it switches on, how long it stays there, or how easily it comes back.” That reframe matters. Because if you think ADHD is just about not focusing, you’ll keep blaming yourself every time you struggle to start, forget something, react emotionally, lose track of time, or fall behind. But ADHD affects much more than attention. It can affect motivation, memory, emotions, time, organisation, impulsivity, consistency, and follow-through. That does not mean you’re broken. It means your brain works differently, and it needs different support. Your turn 💬 What’s the most unhelpful thing someone has ever said to you about ADHD, focus, laziness, or the way you struggle? It could be something from a teacher, parent, partner, boss, doctor, friend, or even something you’ve said to yourself. Example: I was always told I had loads of potential but just needed to apply myself. I believed that for years. Or: People used to say I was lazy, but I was actually overwhelmed and didn’t know how to explain it. No need to write a big post. One honest sentence is enough. And if someone else’s comment hits home, reply to them. Sometimes just seeing someone else say the thing you’ve carried for years can be powerful.
1 like • 13d
My father would always berate me with "You just need to put your seat of your pants to the seat of the chair, mister!" "you have the brains, you just don't want to apply yourself." I heard it and understood it, but couldnt change it. Even all these decades later.
Myth Busting Quiz Discussion — What Surprised You Most? 🧠
Before getting into the main lessons of the Understanding Your ADHD Brain course, you were asked to take the ADHD Myth Busting Quiz. This quiz is there for one simple reason: A lot of what people believe about ADHD is wrong. Not because they’re stupid. Not because they’re trying to be unhelpful. But because ADHD has been misunderstood for years by schools, workplaces, families, social media, and sometimes even by people with ADHD themselves. And those myths matter. Because if you believe ADHD is just laziness, you’ll keep trying to shame yourself into action. If you believe ADHD is only about focus, you’ll miss the emotional regulation, time blindness, impulsivity, working memory, and executive function pieces. If you believe ADHD only looks one way, you might dismiss your own experience completely. So this quiz is here to help clear the fog before we go deeper. Your turn 💬 Once you’ve taken the quiz, comment below and answer: What score did you get, and which answer surprised you most? You could share: - the myth you were most confident about - the one that caught you out - something you used to believe about ADHD - something you’re starting to see differently already Example: I got 7/10. The one that surprised me most was the hyperfocus question because I always thought being able to focus for hours meant I couldn’t really have ADHD. No shame if you got a few wrong. That’s literally why this is here. The goal isn’t a perfect score. The goal is to start questioning the old beliefs that may have kept you stuck, ashamed, or confused about your brain. And if someone else mentions a myth you used to believe too, reply to them. You’ll earn points, and you’ll probably help them feel a lot less alone. The ADHD Myth-Busting Quiz: https://adhdquizbrighterbrains.netlify.app/
1 like • 13d
i seem yo have a decent grasp of the myths. Several family members experience neurodivergence so a lot is familiar.
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Dave Gerns
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Active 5d ago
Joined Jun 10, 2026