Episodios

  • Ignored to icons: These trailblazers changed the game for women with ADHD
    May 22 2025

    On this very special episode of Hyperfocus, host Rae Jacobson interviews three of these women — Sari Solden, Terry Matlen, and Dr. Ellen Littman — along with Dr. Michelle Frank, a psychologist taking up the torch for a new generation.

    Together, they discuss how they met, their journey to legitimize ADHD in women, and what they hope for the future.

    Related resources

    • Climbing the Walls
    • MissUnderstood: The ADHD in Women Channel

    Timestamps

    (06:22) Discovering you aren’t alone

    (13:18) The disconnect between academia and the rest of the world

    (21:22) The benefits of treatment and community

    (28:05) ADHD isn’t always a superpower

    For a transcript and more resources, visit the Hyperfocus page on Understood.org.

    We love hearing from our listeners! Email us at hyperfocus@understood.org.

    Introducing “MissUnderstood,” the first-ever podcast channel for women with ADHD. Listen now: lnk.to/missunderstood

    Understood is a nonprofit organization dedicated to empowering people with learning and thinking differences, like ADHD and dyslexia. If you want to help us continue this work, donate at understood.org/give

    Más Menos
    40 m
  • Mother’s Day special: Rae on ADHD Aha!
    May 8 2025

    Join health and science journalist Danielle Elliot as she investigates the rise of women recently diagnosed with ADHD. Listen to Climbing the Walls now.

    In honor of Mother’s Day weekend, we’re sharing an episode of our sibling podcast from Understood.org, ADHD Aha! The episode features our very own Rae Jacobson and, appropriately, it’s a conversation about motherhood. More specifically, it’s about being a mom (and a woman) with ADHD. Hope you enjoy, and see you in two weeks.

    What makes being a mom with ADHD so hard? Navigating executive functions and emotional labor, for one. And feeling burned out when burnout isn’t an option — because there’s always something else that needs your very limited attention!

    Talking about it with someone who just “gets it” is such a relief. In this episode, Laura talks to her friend and colleague Rae Jacobson, also a mom with ADHD. Listen to their conversation and insights on this bonus Mother’s Day episode.

    Related resources

    • Rolling with my ADHD Mom Brain
    • Building self-compassion skills
    • 3 things I’m learning as a new mom with ADHD

    To get a transcript of this show and check out more episodes, visit the “ADHD Aha!” podcast page at Understood.

    We’d love to hear from you. Email us at hyperfocus@understood.org.

    Introducing “MissUnderstood,” the first-ever podcast channel for women with ADHD. Listen now: lnk.to/missunderstood

    Understood is a nonprofit organization dedicated to empowering people with learning and thinking differences, like ADHD and dyslexia. If you want to help us continue this work, donate at understood.org/give

    Más Menos
    37 m
  • What does it actually mean to “thrive” with ADHD?
    Apr 24 2025

    Join health and science journalist Danielle Elliot as she investigates the rise of women recently diagnosed with ADHD. Listen to Climbing the Walls now.

    “Thriving” is often held up as something to work toward in life, the gold standard for existence. If you have a learning difference or you’ve experienced mental health issues or even just went through a tough time, you’ve probably gotten some advice on what it takes to thrive.

    But for me, it’s never been clear what it means to thrive. It’s an abstract concept with many definitions. As someone with ADHD, it feels like thriving can be a codeword for hiding parts of myself that aren’t exactly desirable to the rest of the world.

    Yet thriving remains a constant point of discussion in mental health. It’s a conversation my colleague Sarah Greenberg and I have been having on and off for years. That’s because Sarah’s been working on a new way to understand and measure thriving, and she has a take on it I’ve never heard before.

    Sarah is the vice president for expertise and strategic design at Understood.org. She’s a licensed psychotherapist and has been a leader in digital mental health for many years. She’s also really smart, thoughtful, and has a very different perspective on thriving than I do.

    So we decided it would be a good idea to record one of our conversations for an episode of Hyperfocus.

    Related resources

    • What does it mean to thrive?
    • Masking my ADHD at work was exhausting, so I stopped

    Timestamps

    (2:12) Are you thriving, or are you masking?

    (5:11) Internal vs. external thriving

    (23:04) The deficit model and erasure

    (27:35) Privilege and thriving

    For a transcript of this episode and more resources, visit the episode page on Understood.org.

    We’d love to hear from you. Email us at hyperfocus@understood.org.

    Introducing “MissUnderstood,” the first-ever podcast channel for women with ADHD. Listen now: lnk.to/missunderstood

    Understood is a nonprofit organization dedicated to empowering people with learning and thinking differences, like ADHD and dyslexia. If you want to help us continue this work, donate at understood.org/give

    Más Menos
    36 m
  • Introducing “Climbing the Walls,” an investigative ADHD podcast
    Apr 17 2025

    We have a special treat for you this week on the usual off-week in our feed. It’s an episode of a brand new, investigative podcast called Climbing the Walls.

    If you caught our last episode, you heard from the podcast’s host, Danielle Elliot. She’s been working with a team of us at Understood.org to put together the limited series, which just launched.

    On Climbing the Walls, Danielle digs into the reasons behind the rise of ADHD diagnoses in women since the pandemic and uncovers what going undiagnosed for so long has cost women.

    The first episode is called “I didn’t want to have ADHD.” Give it a listen and if you like what you hear, check out Climbing the Walls wherever you get your podcasts.

    See you next week!

    For a transcript of this episode and more resources, visit the Climbing the Walls page on Understood.

    Introducing “MissUnderstood,” the first-ever podcast channel for women with ADHD. Listen now: lnk.to/missunderstood

    Understood is a nonprofit organization dedicated to empowering people with learning and thinking differences, like ADHD and dyslexia. If you want to help us continue this work, donate at understood.org/give

    Más Menos
    31 m
  • Meet the reporter who threw herself into the ADHD universe
    Apr 10 2025

    If you follow ADHD news, you might’ve heard that diagnosis rates in women nearly doubled during the pandemic. Danielle Elliot was one of them, receiving her diagnosis just before she turned 37.

    Danielle is also a science and health journalist. So, she did the thing that many reporters are inclined to do — she began investigating this big, new thing in her life and how it fit into the world around her.

    As she dug in deeper, she landed on two big questions relating to the pandemic diagnosis boom: Why women? And why now? Her answers culminated in a new podcast from Understood.org called Climbing the Walls. It’s a six-episode series, and the first installment is out now.

    This week on Hyperfocus, Danielle visits the show to talk about her ADHD experience and what it’s like reporting a story where you’re one of the characters.

    Related resources

    • Listen to Climbing the Walls
    • I’m a journalist with ADHD. Here’s how I get it done.
    • ADHD and women

    Timestamps

    (1:25) The origins of Danielle’s story

    (7:50) Surprises during the reporting process

    (12:05) What it felt like to get a diagnosis

    (22:14) Danielle’s big takeaways from making the show

    For a transcript and more resources, visit the Hyperfocus page on Understood.

    We’d love to hear from you. Email us at hyperfocus@understood.org.

    Introducing “MissUnderstood,” the first-ever podcast channel for women with ADHD. Listen now: lnk.to/missunderstood

    Understood is a nonprofit organization dedicated to empowering people with learning and thinking differences, like ADHD and dyslexia. If you want to help us continue this work, donate at understood.org/give

    Más Menos
    28 m
  • Can you really “hack” your dopamine?
    Mar 27 2025

    Join health and science journalist Danielle Elliot as she investigates the rise of women recently diagnosed with ADHD. Listen to Climbing the Walls now.

    It often seems that the more complex a subject is, the more people tend to oversimplify it.

    If your social media feeds are anything like mine, that’s definitely the case. Especially when it comes to science.

    One of those often-oversimplified things is dopamine. This neurotransmitter, or brain chemical, has become a target for catchy headlines promising new ways to “hack your dopamine.” Seriously. If you don’t believe me, type in “dopamine hacks” on YouTube and enjoy the endless scroll.

    This week on Hyperfocus, we take a deep dopamine dive with psychologist Dr. Ari Tuckman and sort out fact from fiction.

    Related resources

    • How I beat my social media habit (and how you can too)
    • Tips from an ADHD Coach: Is it love or is it dopamine?
    • Attention: How it’s different from working memory

    Timestamps

    (3:01) What is dopamine?

    (8:48) How do dopamine and ADHD relate?

    (16:59) The truth behind dopamine “hacks”

    (25:25) What a clinician wishes we knew

    For a transcript and more resources, visit the Hyperfocus page on Understood.

    We’d love to hear from you. Email us at hyperfocus@understood.org

    Introducing “MissUnderstood,” the first-ever podcast channel for women with ADHD. Listen now: lnk.to/missunderstood

    Understood is a nonprofit organization dedicated to empowering people with learning and thinking differences, like ADHD and dyslexia. If you want to help us continue this work, donate at understood.org/give

    Más Menos
    30 m
  • Is ADHD genetic? We asked a Harvard scientist
    Mar 13 2025

    Join health and science journalist Danielle Elliot as she investigates the rise of women recently diagnosed with ADHD. Listen to Climbing the Walls now.

    We’re back with another episode from our Hyperfocus field trip to San Diego. While we were at the APSARD (American Professional Society of ADHD and Related Disorders) conference, one of the talks that really piqued our interest was on genetics and neurodevelopmental disorders, including ADHD.

    Genetic science is tough to understand. And, as you’ll hear in this interview, we had a lot to learn and a lot of questions. Is ADHD genetic? And if it is, what does that mean for people who have it? What does it mean for treatment?

    Luckily, Dr. Anne Arnett, a scientist at Boston Children’s Hospital and assistant professor of pediatrics at Harvard Medical school, was kind enough to brave a chilly, windy outdoor recording. In this conversation, she help us understand more about what we know (and what we don’t) about ADHD and genetics.

    Related resources

    • Video: Dyscalculia, dyslexia, and genetics
    • Can genetic testing help me find the right ADHD medication?
    • Is ADHD hereditary?
    • ADHD runs in the family (Michelle’s story)
    • The Arnett Lab at Boston Children’s Hospital

    Timestamps

    (2:01) Is ADHD genetic?

    (8:28) Genetic vs. environmental factors and ADHD co-morbidities

    (11:50) What does the latest research mean for people with ADHD?

    (13:55) Is there genetic testing for ADHD?

    (18:56) Why bother with early detection?

    (21:44) Anne’s goals for her research

    For a transcript and more resources, visit the Hyperfocus page on Understood.

    We’d love to hear from you. Email us at hyperfocus@understood.org.

    Introducing “MissUnderstood,” the first-ever podcast channel for women with ADHD. Listen now: lnk.to/missunderstood

    Understood is a nonprofit organization dedicated to empowering people with learning and thinking differences, like ADHD and dyslexia. If you want to help us continue this work, donate at understood.org/give

    Más Menos
    25 m
  • Head, heart, hormones: Why women’s ADHD care should treat the whole person
    Mar 6 2025

    Join health and science journalist Danielle Elliot as she investigates the rise of women recently diagnosed with ADHD. Listen to Climbing the Walls now.

    Earlier this year, Hyperfocus took a field trip to San Diego for an ADHD conference called APSARD, which stands for the American Professional Society of ADHD and Related Disorders (quite a mouthful).

    A conference of ADHD professionals might not sound fascinating, but it was — and we learned a ton. But there was one person and one talk I really wanted to find: A keynote speech about how ADHD affects women’s bodies by Dr. Sandra Kooij.

    What Sandra is doing is something so sensible and radical: Looking at ADHD as a whole-body issue. Digging into how it can affect women’s hormones, our health, and especially our hearts.

    I find Sandra’s research fascinating and was thrilled when she agreed to sit down for a conversation with me. We didn’t waste any time and quickly set up a makeshift studio for this week’s episode of Hyperfocus.

    Also, a quick note on the audio this week: We had to record this episode outside the conference hotel, on a bustling patio full of ADHD professionals and some noisy birds. So, please forgive the extraneous sounds.

    Related resources

    • MissUnderstood: The ADHD in Women Channel
    • Did my ADHD make me more likely to have postpartum depression?
    • ADHD Powerbank: Sandra’s video platform
    • The Head, Heart, Hormones foundation (in dutch with translations)
    • Prevalence of hormone-related mood disorder symptoms in women with ADHD
    • The heart health and ADHD connection

    Timestamps

    (4:07) Swedish registry study data on diseases in people with ADHD

    (7:06) ADHD and hormones

    (13:56) Cardiovascular disease in women

    (20:21) Talking to your doctor about diseases related to ADHD

    For a transcript of this episode and more resources, visit the Hyperfocus page on Understood.org.

    We’d love to hear from you. Email us at hyperfocus@understood.org

    Introducing “MissUnderstood,” the first-ever podcast channel for women with ADHD. Listen now: lnk.to/missunderstood

    Understood is a nonprofit organization dedicated to empowering people with learning and thinking differences, like ADHD and dyslexia. If you want to help us continue this work, donate at understood.org/give

    Más Menos
    26 m
adbl_web_global_use_to_activate_T1_webcro805_stickypopup