The ADHD habits podcast

Shame, guilt and your ADHD Child

5 min · 4. juni 2026
episode Shame, guilt and your ADHD Child cover

Beskrivelse

Shame and guilt are not the same thing, and for children living with ADHD the difference matters. Shame builds slowly over years of correction and comparison, and Mon unpacks the research, explains why children living with ADHD accumulate it faster than their peers, and shares the daily habits that interrupt that pattern before it takes hold. Hit play and find out what small, consistent actions can do to protect your child. Be Everything You Are! Organiser [https://www.beeverythingyouare.com.au/products/2026-undated-school-15-week-organiser] SCIENCE REFERENCES Brown, B. (2010). The Gifts of Imperfection: Let Go of Who You Think You're Supposed to Be and Embrace Who You Are. Hazelden Publishing. Dodson, W. (n.d.) Musser, E.D., et al. (2016). Emotion regulation and criticisms in families of children with ADHD. Journal of Abnormal Child Psychology, 44(3).

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Alle episoder

48 episoder

episode The five minute habit that helps kids sleep cover

The five minute habit that helps kids sleep

If your child lies awake with a racing mind at bedtime, this episode is exactly what you need tonight. Mon explains the science behind why the ADHD brain struggles to switch off at night and introduces the worry dump, a simple five minute pre-sleep habit backed by a 2018 study in the Journal of Experimental Psychology. She also shares the small bedtime question she asks her own boys every night to shift their focus from worry to what went well. Hit play and find out how to help your child let go of the day so they can actually rest. SCIENCE REFERENCES Scullin, M.K., Krueger, M.L., Ballard, H.K., Pruett, N., & Bliwise, D.L. (2018). The effects of bedtime writing on difficulty falling asleep: A polysomnographic study comparing to-do lists and completed activity journals. Journal of Experimental Psychology: General, 147(1), 139–146. Digdon, N., & Koble, A. (2011). Effects of constructive worry, imagery distraction, and gratitude interventions on sleep quality: A pilot trial. Applied Psychology: Health and Well-Being, 3(2), 193–206.

9. juni 20265 min
episode Food dyes, ADHD and what to do next cover

Food dyes, ADHD and what to do next

Artificial food colours have been linked to behavioural changes in children across dozens of clinical trials, and in 2025 the US FDA began banning them for the first time. Mon shares her personal story, the science and a practical starting point for reducing your child's exposure without creating anxiety around food. Hit play and find out whether food dyes could be affecting your child. SCIENCE REFERENCES California Office of Environmental Health Hazard Assessment (OEHHA). (2021). Systematic evidence review on the relationship between synthetic food dyes and neurobehavioral outcomes in children. State of California. Damotharan, K., Sudhakaran, G., & Ramu, M. (2024). Biochemical processes mediating neurotoxicity induced by synthetic food dyes: A review of current evidence. Chemosphere, 364, 143295. Nigg, J.T., & Holton, K. (2014). Restriction and elimination diets in ADHD treatment. Child and Adolescent Psychiatric Clinics of North America, 23(4), 937–953. US Food and Drug Administration. (2025). FDA announces phase-out of petroleum-based synthetic dyes in food supply. FDA Press Release, April 2025. Food Standards Australia New Zealand (FSANZ). (2012). Supplementary colours report: Dietary exposure estimates for added colours in foods available in Australia.

8. juni 20265 min