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Do you feel overwhelmed, distracted, or like you’re constantly falling behind no matter how hard you try? You make lists, set reminders, promise yourself you’ll “just focus this time” – and still end up exhausted, scattered, and judging yourself.
If your brain struggles to organize, prioritize, and follow through, it can start to feel like you’re lazy, broken, or “crazy.” You’re not. You may be living with ADHD – and it’s more than just being distracted.
Adult ADHD can look like:
Many adults with ADHD have spent years calling themselves “a mess,” “too much,” or “not enough” – rather than realizing their brain is wired differently. Therapy can help you understand what’s actually going on, reduce shame, and build strategies that work with your brain instead of against it.
ADHD (Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder) is a neurodevelopmental condition that affects attention, motivation, impulse control, and executive functioning (planning, organizing, prioritizing, and following through). Some people experience more hyperactivity and restlessness; others have a quieter, more internal form often called “inattentive type” (historically referred to as ADD).
Most adults who have ADHD have had it since childhood, but many were never identified. They learned to compensate – working twice as hard, masking, or leaning on perfectionism – until work, school, relationships, or parenting demands made it harder to cope.
Everyone can be distracted or disorganized sometimes. With ADHD, these patterns are persistent and get in the way of the life you want to live.
Common ADHD-related challenges in adulthood include:
Over time, these struggles can erode self-confidence and fuel shame: “I know I’m smart, so why can’t I just do it?” Therapy gives us a space to understand these patterns and build tools that actually fit your nervous system.
You don’t have to figure this out alone. Let’s take the first step together. Call so we can schedule a consultation.
Untreated or unrecognized ADHD can create complications in nearly every area of life, including:
Many adults tell themselves they “should have it all together by now,” and blame their character instead of recognizing a brain-based pattern that can be understood and worked with.
ADHD rarely travels alone. It often overlaps with other mental health challenges, and each can intensify the others:
Depression, bipolar disorder, or chronic low mood can develop when repeated failures, criticism, and missed opportunities pile up. When you don’t understand why you’re struggling, it’s easy to conclude “something is wrong with me.”
Living with ADHD can be anxiety-provoking. Worry about forgetting things, letting people down, or missing important details can become constant. Anxiety then makes it harder to focus and plan, feeding a cycle of overwhelm and avoidance.
Some adults have ADHD alongside learning differences, earlier academic struggles, or trauma histories. Negative feedback from teachers, parents, or peers (“lazy,” “careless,” “not living up to potential”) can become deeply internalized, leading to self-doubt and perfectionism.
Part of our work is untangling what belongs to ADHD, what belongs to anxiety, depression, or trauma, and how they interact – so you can respond more effectively and with more self-compassion.
ADHD is not a character flaw or a failure of willpower. It is strongly influenced by genetics and brain development. Research suggests:
You didn’t choose ADHD, and you didn’t cause it. What you can choose now is how you want to understand it and what support you want moving forward.
Diagnosing ADHD in adults involves more than a quick checklist online. Many symptoms overlap with anxiety, depression, trauma, sleep issues, and burnout, so it’s important to look at the full picture.
An ADHD-informed evaluation typically includes:
As a licensed therapist in California, I provide ADHD-informed assessment and can collaborate with your physician, psychiatrist, or other providers if medication or additional testing is part of your treatment plan.
Effective ADHD treatment usually combines different supports tailored to you. For adults, this often includes:
Therapy helps you understand how ADHD shows up in your life and gives you strategies to work with your brain rather than against it. In our sessions, we may:
I integrate cognitive behavioral, mindfulness-based, attachment-focused, and trauma-informed approaches so we’re not just changing behavior, we’re also changing the way you see and treat yourself.
Many adults with ADHD find medication helpful for improving focus, impulse control, and follow-through. While I do not prescribe medication, I frequently collaborate with psychiatrists, primary care physicians, and other prescribers so that therapy and medication, when used, support each other.
Understanding how ADHD affects your brain and nervous system is powerful. We’ll talk about:
We’ll experiment and adjust – the goal is not perfection but sustainable change.
I am a licensed therapist in California (LMFT, LPCC) with a special focus on ADHD, trauma, and attachment. For years I’ve worked with adults who are bright, creative, and caring – and also exhausted from constantly feeling behind, disorganized, or misunderstood.
In our work together, we’ll slow down, make sense of your patterns, and build a toolkit that fits you – not a generic productivity system. My goal is to help you move from self-blame to self-understanding, and from constant overwhelm to more clarity, agency, and ease.
You don’t have to figure this out alone. Let’s take the first step together. Call so we can schedule a consultation.