Cover image of show Angry On The Inside - ADHD Women Talking Late Diagnosis

Angry On The Inside - ADHD Women Talking Late Diagnosis

Podcast by Angry On The Inside

English

Health & personal development

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About Angry On The Inside - ADHD Women Talking Late Diagnosis

Angry on the Inside is a podcast for women with late-diagnosed ADHD, hosted by Jessica from AlternativePath Coaching and Jeannine from Everyday Greatness Coaching. So many of us have spent our lives feeling broken, fighting against an invisible current, or wondering why things that seem easy for others feel so much harder for us. Here, you don’t have to push that anger away. We give it space, we honor it, and we remind you that you’re not alone. Because when we share our stories, process our emotions, and find community, that anger can become a path to self-acceptance, healing, and even laughter. Join us for real talk, deep dives, and the tools to navigate life on your own terms.

All episodes

42 episodes

episode S1 E42 Why Moving Is So Hard for Women With ADHD: Executive Function, Grief, & Overwhelm artwork

S1 E42 Why Moving Is So Hard for Women With ADHD: Executive Function, Grief, & Overwhelm

What happens when moving isn't just stressful it completely overwhelms your brain? For many women with ADHD, moving is far more than packing boxes and changing addresses. It's a nonstop barrage of decisions, deadlines, disrupted routines, unexpected emotions, and executive function demands that can leave you exhausted long before the first box is unpacked. In this episode of Angry on the Inside, Jess and Jeannine explore why moving can feel so much harder for ADHD brains than anyone seems to understand. From time blindness and decision fatigue to emotional overwhelm, grief, and the loss of familiar routines, they share personal experiences of moves that left them physically, mentally, and emotionally depleted. You'll hear why the excitement of a fresh start can quickly turn into burnout, how losing your familiar environment impacts executive functioning, and why even positive life changes can trigger grief. Most importantly, you'll learn why struggling during a move is often a normal response to an extraordinarily demanding transition. Whether you're preparing for a move, unpacking from one, or simply trying to understand why major life transitions feel so overwhelming, this conversation offers validation, humor, and practical insight from two late-diagnosed ADHD women who have been there. In this episode: • Why moving creates executive function overload • ADHD time blindness and unrealistic moving timelines • The dopamine-fueled "fantasy phase" of moving • Decision fatigue, overwhelm, and ADHD paralysis • Why moving can trigger grief even when you're excited • The role of routines, familiarity, and environmental cues • How your brain rebuilds its "mental map" after a move • Body doubling, support systems, and giving yourself grace during transitions If this episode resonates with you, share it with another woman who is currently surrounded by boxes, second-guessing every decision, and wondering why moving feels so much harder than everyone else makes it look.

5 Jun 2026 - 20 min
episode S1 E41 What if Nothing Is Wrong With You? Why ADHD Women Blame Themselves artwork

S1 E41 What if Nothing Is Wrong With You? Why ADHD Women Blame Themselves

What if the problem was never that something was wrong with you? For many late-diagnosed ADHD women, everyday struggles can slowly become deeply personal. Missing an appointment, forgetting something important, struggling to start a task, getting overwhelmed, or falling behind doesn’t just feel frustrating it can start to shape the way you see yourself. In this episode of Angry on the Inside, Jess and Jeannine explore the powerful shift from: “What’s wrong with me?” to: “What’s going on with me?” They talk about how years of self-blame, masking, unrealistic expectations, and trying to force themselves into systems that never truly fit can leave ADHD women constantly doubting themselves even after diagnosis. This conversation dives into: * ADHD self-blame and internalized shame * executive dysfunction and emotional overwhelm * why “just do it” advice feels so dismissive * accommodations, burnout, and nervous system overload * why most ADHD productivity advice doesn’t actually work * learning to work with your ADHD brain instead of fighting against it * self-trust, self-awareness, and redefining what “normal” means for you Jess and Jeannine also talk about the emotional exhaustion that comes from constantly trying to meet expectations that were never designed for neurodivergent minds and why curiosity will always take you further than shame. If you’ve ever wondered why normal life friction feels so personal, or why you’ve spent years believing you were failing instead of struggling, this episode is for you. Take what resonates and leave the rest. CHAPTERS: 00:00 — Why ADHD Women Feel Like They’re Failing at Life 01:10 — “What’s Wrong With Me?” vs “What’s Going On With Me?” 04:24 — Neurotypical Expectations, Self-Blame & ADHD Shame 06:29 — ADHD Accommodations & “Run the Dishwasher Twice” 11:41 — Why Most ADHD Productivity Advice Doesn’t Work 15:00 — Stop Fighting Your ADHD Brain 18:33 — ADHD Self-Trust, Shame & Learning What Works for You

28 May 2026 - 20 min
episode S1 E40 ADHD Women: Why You Stop Showing Up For Yourself artwork

S1 E40 ADHD Women: Why You Stop Showing Up For Yourself

Because your brain doesn’t register your needs the same way it registers everyone else’s. They get into: * Why ADHD brains prioritize what’s immediate, visible, and tied to other people * How external expectations create urgency and why your own needs don’t * The identity shift that happens when you become “the dependable one” * Why self-abandonment doesn’t feel obvious but adds up over time * The difference between being capable of showing up and actually being able to do it when it’s just you This isn’t about trying harder or fixing yourself. It’s about understanding why this pattern exists and why it can feel so confusing when you can show up for everyone else but not for yourself. If you’ve ever felt reliable in everyone else’s life and completely unreliable in your own you’re not the only one. 00:02 – Showing Up for Everyone Else (But Not Yourself) 00:56 – Why ADHD Brains Prioritize Other People 01:39 – When Your Needs Don’t Feel Urgent 01:51 – Why It Feels Like Something Is Wrong With You 03:08 – Becoming the “Dependable One” 07:00 – Burnout, Shutdown, and Ignoring Yourself 13:46 – Why You Still Can’t Show Up for Yourself

4 May 2026 - 16 min
episode S1 E39 ADHD Women: Why Your Inner Voice Turns On You artwork

S1 E39 ADHD Women: Why Your Inner Voice Turns On You

Why does the voice in your head feel so real when it’s tearing you down? In this episode, Jess & Jeannine are talking about negative self-talk and why, for women with ADHD, it can get so loud, so convincing, and so hard to separate from who we actually are. From replaying conversations to assuming you’ve disappointed someone. Turning one mistake into “this is just who I am” this isn’t just overthinking. It’s a pattern that builds over time. We get into: * where that internal voice actually comes from * why ADHD (and things like executive dysfunction and rejection sensitivity) can amplify it * how rumination turns thoughts into something that feels like the truth They also talk about the identity piece how “I forgot” slowly turns into “I’m someone who always forgets” and why that shift matters more than we realize. And no, we’re not going to tell you to “just think positive.” This is about understanding where that voice came from, why it feels so real, and how to start creating space between you and it without pretending it doesn’t exist. If this this resonates for you, send it to the person who would recognize that voice immediately. Chapters: 00:00 When Your Brain Turns on You  01:14 Why Negative Self-Talk Gets So Loud with ADHD 03:09 How That Voice Gets Built Over Time 05:10 RSD, Rumination, and the Loop That Won’t Let Go 07:31 The Things We Say to Ourselves (That We’d Never Say Out Loud) 10:00 When Negative Self-Talk Becomes Your Identity 12:52 How to Separate Yourself from the Voice

24 Apr 2026 - 17 min
episode S1 E38 The Knowing/Doing Gap for ADHD Women and Why It Turns Into Pressure artwork

S1 E38 The Knowing/Doing Gap for ADHD Women and Why It Turns Into Pressure

Why can you know exactly what needs to get done and still not be able to make yourself do it? In this episode of Angry on the Inside, Jess and Jeannine break down the gap between knowing and doing and why it has nothing to do with laziness, discipline, or not caring. They talk about what’s actually happening in the ADHD brain when something is important but still doesn’t get done, why urgency and pressure seem to be the only things that create movement, and how quickly that can spiral into avoidance, overwhelm, and self-blame. This conversation gets into: * Why ADHD isn’t a “knowledge problem” * The difference between importance and activation * How the “window of opportunity” works and why it closes so fast * Why tasks start to feel like a threat * How the knowing–doing gap turns into pressure, avoidance, and shame * And what it actually means when you still can’t do something even when you care about it If you’ve ever sat there fully aware of what you need to do  watching the time pass, feeling the pressure build, and still not moving this episode puts words to that experience. This isn’t about fixing it. It’s about understanding what’s actually going on and why you’re not the only one who's angry on the inside. 00:00 — Knowing What to Do But Still Not Doing It 00:53 — Why ADHD Isn’t a Knowledge Problem 01:39 — The Knowing–Doing Gap What’s Actually Happening 03:10 — Why Importance Doesn’t Create Action Activation vs Urgency 05:27 — The “Window of Opportunity” Problem 07:11 — When Tasks Start to Feel Like a Threat 09:52 — It’s Not Motivation And It’s Not You 12:47 — The Real Gap: Why You Still Feel Stuck

16 Apr 2026 - 13 min
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