This Is How To Determine If You Have ADHD
8 min
•Feb 16, 20264 months agoSummary
This episode outlines five key symptoms of ADHD (short attention span, distractibility, disorganization, procrastination, and impulse control issues) and explains the neurological basis for each. The host discusses how ADHD manifests differently across contexts, why people with ADHD seek stimulation, and evidence-based treatment approaches including medication, supplements, diet, and behavioral strategies.
Insights
- ADHD is characterized by selective attention deficits—people with ADHD struggle with routine tasks but can hyperfocus on novel, stimulating, or high-stakes activities due to low adrenaline levels
- Untreated ADHD drives chronic stress-seeking behaviors (thrill-seeking, conflict initiation, risk-taking) as individuals unconsciously self-medicate through stimulation
- The prefrontal cortex dysfunction in ADHD impairs impulse control and forethought, leading to poor decision-making and relationship instability patterns
- ADHD significantly impacts physical health—people with ADHD visit doctors 3x more frequently due to immune system stress from chronic drama and disorganization
- Parental response strategies matter: yelling reinforces negative behaviors in ADHD children, who may develop addiction-like patterns to parental anger as stimulation
Trends
Rising awareness of ADHD as a neurobiological condition linked to prefrontal cortex activity rather than character flawsRecognition of ADHD's impact on workplace productivity and organizational performance through disorganization and procrastination patternsIncreased vulnerability to digital distraction (phones, email, tablets, video games) in ADHD populations as technology amplifies existing attention challengesGrowing understanding of ADHD's systemic health costs through chronic stress-induced immune system suppressionShift toward holistic ADHD treatment combining medication, behavioral strategies, diet optimization, and family involvement rather than medication alone
Topics
ADHD diagnosis and symptom identificationPrefrontal cortex function and impulse controlAdrenaline deficit and stimulation-seeking behaviorADHD medication and stimulant treatmentAttention span and selective focus in ADHDDistractibility and sensory sensitivityDisorganization and time management in ADHDProcrastination and deadline-driven motivationImpulse control and decision-making deficitsADHD in relationships and family dynamicsParenting strategies for ADHD childrenChronic stress and immune system healthADHD behavioral interventionsDiet optimization for ADHDADHD in adults vs. children
Quotes
"Every day you are making your brain better or you are making it worse."
Host•Opening
"People with ADD can usually pay attention just fine for things that are new, novel, highly interesting, stimulating, or frightening."
Host
"We often think of ADD as adrenaline deficit disorder because people with ADD can focus really well with stress or excitement but not that well without it."
Host
"The prefrontal cortex is called the brain's supervisor or CEO because it's involved with forethought, judgment, planning, and impulse control."
Host
"One important reason to treat ADD is that the chronic stress can wear out your immune system. People who have it go to the doctor three times more than others for being sick."
Host
Full Transcript