Living with ADHD: A Complete Listener's Guide

ADHD has come up across the show more than almost any other topic — not as an abstract diagnosis but as lived experience. These twenty episodes cover the full arc: the science of what’s happening in the brain, the medication maze, the productivity systems that actually work, and what it means to explain yourself to a world that wasn’t built for you.

Understanding the ADHD Brain

  • The ADHD Rebrand is the place to start if you or someone close to you has recently been diagnosed as an adult. Herman and Corn dismantle the “hyperactive kid” stereotype and explain why so many people reach mid-life before anyone connects the dots. They walk through the gap between psychiatric and neurological diagnostic methods, and cover masking — the exhausting performance of appearing neurotypical that delays diagnosis and depletes energy.

  • The Chemistry of Focus goes deep into the neuropharmacology. The “chemical imbalance” explanation is too simple — this episode explains how dopamine and norepinephrine actually regulate attention, why stimulants have the counterintuitive calming effect they do in ADHD brains, and what the reward pathway has to do with all of it.

Neurodiversity: The Bigger Picture

  • Beyond the Diagnosis traces the neurodiversity movement from its origins in 1990s sociology to today’s push for workplace equity. The “spiky profile” framing — peaks of exceptional ability alongside real challenges in other areas — offers a more honest and useful model than deficit-only thinking.

  • The 2E Brain examines what happens when high intellectual ability and neurodivergence coexist. The “twice exceptional” individual has a Ferrari engine and a bicycle steering wheel — gifted in some domains, genuinely struggling in others. The episode covers why 2E people often fall through the cracks of both gifted programs and support services.

  • The Power of the Jagged Profile explores the intersection of multipotentialism, giftedness, and ADHD. Rather than a single deep specialty, some people are wired for breadth — drawing connections across fields in ways that pure specialists can’t. The hosts make the case that this “jagged profile” is increasingly valuable in an era of AI synthesis.

  • Genius or Forgetful? used Moravec’s Paradox as a lens for understanding why brilliant people can’t remember where they put their keys. The tension between the Task Positive and Default Mode Networks in the brain explains a lot about the absent-minded professor pattern — and why the things that feel easy are often the things others find hard.

Sensory Life

  • Why the World Feels Too Loud explored the deep connection between ADHD and Sensory Processing Disorder. When a humming refrigerator registers as a physical assault, it’s not drama — it’s a neurological reality. The episode covers what SPD actually is, why it so frequently co-occurs with ADHD and autism, and practical strategies for managing sensory environments.

Medication: The Honest Discussion

  • The ADHD Med Maze tackled the bureaucratic nightmare that is ADHD medication access — DEA quotas, pharmacy shortages, controlled substance regulations that treat patients like suspects. This is one of the most practically useful episodes for anyone currently trying to navigate the US (or similar) prescription system.

  • Balancing Brain and Body went broader: what happens when physical health complicates medication management? The episode broke down the roles of dopamine and norepinephrine, why the same medication hits differently depending on cardiovascular health and body composition, and how to have a useful conversation with a prescriber when things aren’t working.

  • The Science of Vyvanse answered the question many Vyvanse users have wondered about: why does it seem to kick in faster if you take it an hour before getting up? The hosts explained the prodrug mechanism — lisdexamfetamine is biologically inert until enzymes in red blood cells convert it — and what that means for timing your dose relative to meals, sleep, and activity.

  • Vyvanse and Diet debunked several persistent myths, including the citrus/grapefruit interaction claim (it doesn’t apply to Vyvanse the way it does to other medications). More usefully, it explained why protein in the morning matters, how carbohydrates affect the duration and quality of medication response, and what the afternoon crash is actually about.

Productivity and Daily Life

  • Beyond the Pill asked what ADHD management looks like beyond medication. The answer involves building external scaffolding for executive function: the practical differences between what an occupational therapist provides versus an ADHD coach, how to restructure your physical environment to reduce friction, and what “body doubling” actually does neurologically.

  • The Transition Tax addressed the specific challenge of ending a workday — something that sounds simple until you have ADHD. The Zeigarnik Effect (the brain’s tendency to keep unfinished tasks active in working memory) explains why ADHD brains struggle to “close” the workday. The hosts explored voice-note and AI approaches for creating a psychological bridge between work mode and home mode.

  • The Spiky Profile Time Code dug into time blindness — the neurological reality that for many ADHD brains, time exists as “now” and “not now” rather than as a linear progression. Traditional scheduling systems assume a relationship with time that many neurodivergent people simply don’t have. The episode covered why this happens and what actually helps.

  • The Mechanics of Executive Function and Task Drift compared the neurotypical brain’s internal management system to the ADHD brain’s and explained the mechanism behind “task drift” — the pull toward tangential activity that is not laziness but a predictable consequence of how the ADHD attention system responds to low-salience tasks.

  • The Science of Stuck: Why Your Brain Won’t Let You Start stripped away the “lazy” label and dove into the neurobiology of procrastination in the ADHD context — specifically the role of task aversion, impaired working memory, and dopamine anticipation in creating the paradox of knowing what you need to do and being physically unable to start.

AI as an ADHD Tool

  • Beyond GTD took aim at Getting Things Done, the productivity methodology that works beautifully in theory and collapses for ADHD brains at the “organize and prioritize” step. The hosts explored autonomous AI scheduling agents that can take a list of tasks and convert them into an executable daily plan — removing the executive function bottleneck that stalls so many ADHD productivity attempts.

  • AI as a Lifeline went further, documenting the quiet revolution in AI-powered assistive technology. Beyond task management, LLMs are becoming tools for communication support, emotional regulation scaffolding, and memory prosthetics. The episode makes the case that AI is changing the accessibility landscape in ways that matter far more than the headline use cases.

  • AI for ADHD: Taming the Executive Function Bottleneck explored the specific problem of task triage for ADHD brains — not the productivity system that works in theory, but the AI-assisted workflows that remove the executive function requirement from the most cognitively demanding parts of the workday, particularly the transition between tasks and the decision of where to start.

Explaining Yourself to Others

  • The Art of ADHD Diplomacy tackled one of the most exhausting parts of adult ADHD: the ongoing work of advocating for your cognitive style to people who don’t have it. The episode introduced the concept of “ADHD Diplomacy” — how to communicate your needs at work and in relationships without sounding like you’re making excuses or demanding special treatment. It covers monotropism, how to frame accommodation requests, and what to do when goodwill isn’t enough.

Seventeen episodes, one through-line: ADHD is not a character flaw or a failure of effort — it’s a distinct neurological profile with specific challenges and, often, specific strengths. The more precisely you understand the science, the better you can build systems that actually work for your brain.

Episodes Referenced