The ADHD Dopamine Collective with Rhonda Estling
You're not doing it wrong. You've just been working on the wrong piece of the system. I had a conversation in my therapy office recently that I haven't been able to stop thinking about. A woman — smart, capable, doing the work — looked at me and said, "I feel like I'm doing something wrong." She'd read the books. Tried the hacks. Bought the planners. Was on TikTok and in the Facebook groups. And she still felt like she was failing at her own brain. I don't want a single one of you to ever sit with that belief. So today I'm walking through the reframe I use in my office that takes the shame out of all of this and finally puts the work in the right place. It's the hardware/software metaphor — and once you see it, you can't unsee it. The metaphor (and where it came from) This came up in a session a year or two ago with a client who works in IT. We were talking about the parts of his ADHD that weren't going to change no matter how much effort he poured in, and the metaphor showed up on instinct. It landed for him. It landed harder for me. Your hardware is your brain. The wiring. The way it processes (or doesn't) the things that we know ADHD impacts — working memory, emotional regulation, prioritization, sensory input. Hardware shifts somewhat with sleep, hormones, medication, and maturity, but it isn't curable. It's the template you came with. Your software is everything built on top of it. The perfectionism. The people pleasing. The shame loops. The masking. The anxiety-as-fuel. All of it was learned. All of it can be updated. The hardware/software pairs we cover Most of the episode is spent walking through specific paired examples so you can start spotting them in your own life: * Dopamine seeking is hardware. The shame about it is software. * Sensory sensitivity is hardware. Believing you should be able to push through it is software. * Hyper-focus is hardware. The guilt about everything you didn't do during it is software. * Variable energy is hardware. "I should be on all the time" is software. * Masking started as hardware-protection. It's the biggest software issue most of us are running. The honest part about updating your software This is where I'll disappoint anyone hoping for a nine-step fix. Updating software is slow work, and it starts with noticing. Noticing when you're trying to change hardware versus when you're punishing yourself for it. Noticing the shoulds. Treating your life like an experiment instead of a performance review. Finding the people who get it. The episode goes deep on what this looks like, including a recent moment I had where choosing not to attend my kid's volleyball tournament was the most caring choice I could make for myself and for them. It's the kind of trade-off math that only makes sense once you stop trying to change the unchangeable. The takeaway Your hardware is not the problem. It never was. The problem is what you've learned to do to cope with it. The goal isn't to fix your brain. It's to build a life your brain can actually live in.
8 episodios
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