The Stone in My Shoe
What happens when you've spent your entire life believing you're the problem? In this deeply honest conversation, Debbie Thompson sits down with Amanda Gorman — artist, ADHD advocate, TEDx speaker, founder of Distractd, and mother of two — to explore the emotional reality of living for decades without understanding why life felt harder than it seemed for everyone else. Amanda shares her experience of juggling work, parenting, caregiving, grief, and the relentless pressure to keep everything together while quietly blaming herself for struggles she couldn't explain. What begins as a conversation about ADHD becomes something much deeper. It's a conversation about identity. About the stories we create about ourselves. About carrying invisible burdens. And about the freedom that comes when understanding replaces self-judgment. Together, Debbie and Amanda explore: * The emotional impact of receiving an ADHD diagnosis later in life * The hidden cost of masking and high-functioning coping strategies * Grief, burnout, and what happens when life becomes too heavy to carry alone * Why many women grow up believing they're "too much" or "not enough" * The difference between a character flaw and a neurological difference * Learning self-compassion after years of self-criticism * Why understanding yourself changes everything * The powerful question: "What do I need?" This episode is for women who have spent years doing everything for everyone else while quietly questioning themselves. For women navigating life transitions, identity shifts, emotional exhaustion, people-pleasing, or the feeling that something doesn't quite fit anymore. Most of all, it's for the woman who has carried a story about herself for a very long time and is beginning to wonder if that story is actually true. Sometimes healing doesn't begin with fixing yourself. Sometimes it begins with seeing yourself differently.
20 episodes
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