This Voice is Mine: the Unquiet Podcast

You Are Always Believed: Menopause, ADHD and the Fight to Be Heard in Women's Health, with Dr Helen Wall

58 min · Gestern
Episode You Are Always Believed: Menopause, ADHD and the Fight to Be Heard in Women's Health, with Dr Helen Wall Cover

Beschreibung

Dr Helen Wall spent years quietly noticing something no one had trained her to see: that hormones shape the brain, and for neurodivergent women, that shift can be seismic. Her own perimenopause took her ability to function before it touched anything else. She was told she was too young. She believed it, for six months, until she couldn't cope and finally sought help. In this episode, Dr Emma Offord and Jolene Ironside talk with Helen, GP, menopause specialist and author of Menopause and ADHD, about medical misogyny, endometriosis diagnosis times that are rising rather than falling, and the pressure to secure a formal diagnosis before you're allowed to trust your own experience. Helen's message throughout is simple and hard won: you don't have to wait for permission to understand yourself. Connect with Helen: @doctorhelenwall | tvhealthdoctor.com This Voice Is Mine: The Unquiet Podcast is hosted by Dr Emma Offord, clinical psychologist and founder of Divergent Lives.

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15 Folgen

Episode You Are Always Believed: Menopause, ADHD and the Fight to Be Heard in Women's Health, with Dr Helen Wall Cover

You Are Always Believed: Menopause, ADHD and the Fight to Be Heard in Women's Health, with Dr Helen Wall

Dr Helen Wall spent years quietly noticing something no one had trained her to see: that hormones shape the brain, and for neurodivergent women, that shift can be seismic. Her own perimenopause took her ability to function before it touched anything else. She was told she was too young. She believed it, for six months, until she couldn't cope and finally sought help. In this episode, Dr Emma Offord and Jolene Ironside talk with Helen, GP, menopause specialist and author of Menopause and ADHD, about medical misogyny, endometriosis diagnosis times that are rising rather than falling, and the pressure to secure a formal diagnosis before you're allowed to trust your own experience. Helen's message throughout is simple and hard won: you don't have to wait for permission to understand yourself. Connect with Helen: @doctorhelenwall | tvhealthdoctor.com This Voice Is Mine: The Unquiet Podcast is hosted by Dr Emma Offord, clinical psychologist and founder of Divergent Lives.

Gestern58 min
Episode You Were Never the Problem: Late Diagnosis, Shame, and the Power of Finally Understanding Your Brain Cover

You Were Never the Problem: Late Diagnosis, Shame, and the Power of Finally Understanding Your Brain

Lou was diagnosed ADHD in her 30s. By that point, she had already been through secondary school struggling and unidentified, failed college three times, experienced serious mental health crises, and spent years being told to try harder. When she finally sat with a therapist, everything she brought to that room turned out to be ADHD. Not failure, but simply a neurotype the world had never named for her. In this episode, Dr Emma Offord and Lou, founder of ADHD Interrupted, have the kind of conversation that doesn't happen enough: one where the full cost of late diagnosis is named with honesty and without flinching. The shame. The anger at the systems that missed her. The grief for the years lived without language or support. And the slow, extraordinary work of building a life rooted in self-understanding rather than self-blame. Lou's hope, that one day your neurotype is known as simply as your blood type, is a thread that runs through this whole conversation. That kind of world starts with conversations like this one. If you have ever felt like you were trying your hardest and still falling short, like something was always slightly off but no one could tell you why, this episode is for you.

11. Mai 202650 min
Episode Internal Realities: Tuning Into Your Neurodivergent Body with Dr Clare Jacobson Cover

Internal Realities: Tuning Into Your Neurodivergent Body with Dr Clare Jacobson

Dr Clare Jacobson has spent over 20 years holding people's most intimate inner worlds. As a specialist clinical psychologist in teenage and young adult cancer care, she knows what it means to sit with invisible experience - the kind that doesn't show up on a blood test, but is completely real. Over the past year, Clare has been on her own journey of neurodivergent identification. And in this conversation with Emma, she brings both lenses: the clinician who has learned to approach people's inner lives with curiosity rather than certainty, and the late-identified person who spent decades being told  -  by the world and eventually by herself -  that the parts of her that didn't fit were somehow wrong. They talk about the hunter-farmer analogy, the card game metaphor, hypermobility and proprioception, receiving extra sensory data, and what Clare calls the original Internet  -  the idea that neurodivergent people might be evolved to tap into collective consciousness in ways that neurotypical people simply can't access. It's a conversation about bodies, belonging, and learning to trust what you've always known. If you've ever felt like the call was coming from inside the house, this episode is for you. It probably isn't. This Voice Is Mine: The Unquiet Podcast is hosted by Dr Emma Offord, clinical psychologist and founder of Divergent Lives. For every neurodivergent mind that was masked, misread, or missed.

4. Mai 20261 h 4 min
Episode When Everything Shifts at Once: Hormones, Neurodivergence, and the Midlife Unmasking with Sophie Cartledge Cover

When Everything Shifts at Once: Hormones, Neurodivergence, and the Midlife Unmasking with Sophie Cartledge

What happens when perimenopause and neurodivergent identification arrive at the same moment? When hormones shift, the mask starts to slip, and nobody in the medical system has any idea what is actually going on? In this episode, Dr Emma Offord speaks with Sophie Cartledge, founder of Hormones on the Blink, a training platform working at the intersection of hormone health, menopause, and neurodivergence. Sophie is late-identified autistic and ADHD, discovered both through her own perimenopause journey, and has since dedicated her work to helping women, clinicians, and workplaces join the dots. This conversation covers identity whiplash, the oestrogen-dopamine connection, rage as information, burnout versus unmasking, and what it actually takes to get through the darkest moments of midlife. It also covers what becomes possible on the other side. If your nervous system is shifting and nobody is naming it properly, this one is for you. Connect with Sophie: @hormonesontheblink  This Voice Is Mine: The Unquiet Podcast is hosted by Dr Emma Offord, clinical psychologist and founder of Divergent Lives. For every neurodivergent mind that was masked, misread, or missed.

27. Apr. 202657 min
Episode Different, Not Less: Communication, Selective Mutism, and Finding Your Voice with Eve Harrison Cover

Different, Not Less: Communication, Selective Mutism, and Finding Your Voice with Eve Harrison

What does it take to build a movement of over a million people when you started secondary school unable to speak a single word? In this episode, Dr Emma Offord speaks with Eve Harrison, founder of Let's Make A Difference, a grassroots campaign raising awareness about communication challenges and the power of small acts of understanding. Eve is autistic, learned BSL during the pandemic when speech was not available to her, and has since used that journey to educate, include, and advocate for others. This conversation moves through selective mutism, the invisibility of quietly struggling neurodivergent young people, diagnosis, the SEND white paper, and the raw truth about what schools do not yet understand. Eve is 18 years old and already changing the conversation. Different, not less. That is the message. And it has always been true. Connect with Eve on Instagram: @lets.make.a_difference1 This Voice Is Mine: The Unquiet Podcast is hosted by Dr Emma Offord, clinical psychologist and founder of Divergent Lives. For every neurodivergent mind that was masked, misread, or missed.

20. Apr. 202654 min