• Turning 50 with ADHD
    Mar 26 2026

    Turning 50 didn’t come with a crisis. It came with clarity.

    In this episode of PRIMED for ADHD, I reflect on what it means to live with ADHD in midlife, after decades of trying to make systems work, holding things together, and quietly adjusting behind the scenes.

    This isn’t about reinvention. It’s about recognition.

    ADHD doesn’t stay the same over a lifetime. It shifts, sometimes subtly, sometimes abruptly, especially as hormones, identity, and expectations change. What worked in your 20s or 30s may not hold the same way now, and pushing harder often makes things worse, not better.

    I talk about how my own experience of ADHD has evolved, why inconsistency is part of the pattern, and what it means to stop measuring yourself against a version of you that no longer exists.

    If you’ve found yourself thinking, “This shouldn’t feel this hard anymore,” this episode will help you understand why it does, and what to do with that awareness.

    In this episode, I cover:

    • Why ADHD is not static, and how it changes across your life
    • The concept of “flare-ups” and why consistency can be misleading
    • How midlife, including hormonal shifts, changes how ADHD shows up
    • The gap between how ADHD is described online and lived experience
    • Identity shifts that come with age, awareness, and diagnosis
    • Why pushing through stops working, even if it used to
    • What it looks like to respond differently, without overcorrecting

    In this episode, I referenced episode 3, Why ADHD feels harder in perimenopause, and thought it was later in the season.

    If this episode resonates, share it with someone who’s navigating ADHD in midlife and trying to make sense of why things feel different now.

    You can learn more about working with me or reach out with questions and comments at:
    www.andreatoolecoach.com

    You'll find links to my social media there.


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    22 mins
  • ADHD, Authority, and Power at Work
    Mar 9 2026

    PRIMED for ADHD is a podcast about ADHD in high-functioning professionals, leadership, and sustainable performance at work.

    In this episode of PRIMED for ADHD, I explore how professional hierarchy influences the way ADHD traits are interpreted at work.

    I look at ADHD from both sides of authority: what happens when you report to power, and what happens when you hold it.

    You can learn more about my work at
    www.andreatoolecoach.com

    In this episode

    • Why hierarchy amplifies ADHD stress responses
    • The effort-perception gap many professionals experience at work
    • How rejection sensitivity shows up in workplace feedback
    • Why masking can sustain careers for years before burnout appears
    • The leadership blind spots ADHD managers sometimes face
    • Why accountability strengthens authority
    • How psychological safety improves performance for entire teams

    Beyond Corporate Burnout Summit

    If you're listening before March 17, join me at the Beyond Corporate Burnout Summit for high-achieving women leaders who are still performing at a high level.

    https://www.goalsuccesscoach.co/pages/beyondcorporateburnoutsummit-register?ref=lmxskgdr

    Follow the show

    If this episode was helpful, follow the podcast, rate it and review it.

    If someone in your life is quietly carrying the pressure of workplace expectations, share this episode with them.

    Stop Making It Harder Sessions

    I’m opening five Stop Making It Harder sessions.

    In one 60-minute session, you identify the one place you’re making this harder than it needs to be and define one shift that makes the rest easier.

    If you’re interested, email hello@andreatoolecoach.com with the subject line “Stop making it harder.” I’ll send you two short questions and the booking link.



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    20 mins
  • How adult ADHD affects marriage, friendship, and family
    Feb 17 2026

    How does adult ADHD affect romantic relationships, friendships, and family in midlife?

    In this episode, I explore how adult ADHD changes the meaning of long-standing relationship patterns, especially when it’s identified or diagnosed in midlife.

    What can appear as carelessness, selfishness, emotional distance, or lack of effort often has very different neurological roots. When ADHD patterns are understood, conversations and expectations shift.

    I look at how ADHD shows up in:

    • Romantic partnerships and long-term marriage
    • Friendship inconsistency and reliability
    • Family dynamics shaped by decades of misunderstanding

    I discuss intimacy, resentment, executive functioning, divorce statistics, infidelity risk, masking, shame spirals, and what changes once ADHD is understood. I also share practical ways to support a partner, family member, or friend with ADHD, and why working with a marriage counsellor who understands ADHD can make a significant difference.

    Understanding ADHD doesn’t automatically fix a relationship. But it can change perspective, and that changes what happens next.

    Stop Making It Harder Sessions

    I’m opening five Stop Making It Harder sessions.

    In one 60-minute session, you identify the one place you’re making this harder than it needs to be and define one shift that makes the rest easier.

    If you’re interested, email hello@andreatoolecoach.com with the subject line “Stop making it harder.” I’ll send you two short questions and the booking link.

    Related Articles

    How ADHD Impacts Sex and Marriage, ADDitude Magazine – https://www.additudemag.com/adhd-marriage-statistics-personal-stories/
    Garcia, J. R., MacKillop, J., Aller, E. L., Merriwether, A. M., Wilson, D. S., & Lum, J. K. (2010). Associations between Dopamine D4 Receptor Gene Variation with Both Infidelity and Sexual Promiscuity. PLOS ONE, 5(11), e14162. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0014162

    Related posts on my website

    A Guide to Understanding Your Friends with ADHD – https://www.andreatoolecoach.com/blog/adhd-friend-guide

    Supporting Your Partner: A Guide to Navigating ADHD in Relationships – https://www.andreatoolecoach.com/blog/adhd-guide-for-romantic-partners –

    Navigating ADHD in Romantic Relationships: Insights and Strategies – https://www.andreatoolecoach.com/blog/adhd-and-romantic-relationships-part-2

    ADHD and Physical Intimacy: A Guide to Navigating Sex and Relationships –https://www.andreatoolecoach.com/blog/adhd-guide-to-sex-and-intimacy

    If this episode was helpful, follow the podcast and consider leaving a rating or review.





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    28 mins
  • How to talk about your ADHD diagnosis
    Feb 10 2026

    Deciding whether to talk about your ADHD diagnosis can feel surprisingly complicated, especially in midlife.

    This episode is about treating disclosure as a strategic decision, not a confession.

    Whether your ADHD is formally diagnosed or self-identified, the questions tend to be the same:

    • Who do you tell?
    • What do you share?
    • When does it make sense?
    • Why disclose at all?
    • And how do you say it in a way you don’t regret later?

    In this episode, I walk through:

    • Why disclosure is not a one-size-fits-all decision
    • How power dynamics affect when and where it’s safe or useful to share
    • The six questions that clarify disclosure decisions: who, what, when, where, why, and how
    • example scripts for work, family, and friends
    • Why don’t have to decide once and for all

    This conversation is designed to help you feel more confident in trusting your own judgment, rather than reacting under pressure or defaulting to oversharing or silence.

    Companion checklist:
    I’ve created a disclosure decision checklist to help you think through these questions privately and deliberately. The checklist is linked below and also available on the blog.

    Download the companion checklist:

    https://www.andreatoolecoach.com/s/ADHD-disclosure-decision-checklist.pdf

    Blog post:

    When, why, and how to talk about your ADHD https://www.andreatoolecoach.com/blog/when-why-and-how-to-talk-about-your-adhd

    In the next episode, we’ll take this further and look at disclosure in specific professional and relational contexts, where timing, language, and power dynamics play an even bigger role.

    Contact for questions or comments:
    https://www.andreatoolecoach.com/contact

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    22 mins
  • ADHD, hormones, and knowing when to pause
    Feb 6 2026

    This week’s episode is a short one.

    I originally planned to release a full episode, but I didn’t have the bandwidth, so I chose to respect my energy.

    This episode connects directly to how I think about ADHD management in midlife, and to one of the most overlooked realities for high-functioning women with ADHD: hormones change the rules, sometimes abruptly.

    In this episode, I talk about:

    • ADHD and hormonal shifts in midlife
    • Why irritability, reactivity, and sensory overload can spike unexpectedly
    • How perimenopause and PMS affect energy and emotional regulation
    • What it looks like to pause without spiralling into guilt or self-judgment

    This isn’t about doing less forever. It’s about recognizing when pushing through will cost more than it gives back.

    If this resonates, you may want to revisit the earlier episode “Why ADHD feels harder in perimenopause,” where I explain what’s happening neurologically and hormonally during this stage of life, and why strategies that once worked can suddenly stop working.

    Behind the scenes, I’m planning February content and updating my offers. The podcast continues as planned.

    Next episode, we’ll return to the original episode 6 topic: how to talk about your ADHD diagnosis with friends, family, and co-workers, including when disclosure is useful, when it isn’t, and how to think about it strategically.

    Thanks for listening.

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    9 mins
  • Late ADHD diagnosis in midlife: What changes once you know
    Jan 27 2026

    For many women, ADHD isn’t diagnosed because something suddenly goes wrong. It’s diagnosed because what used to work stops working.

    In this episode of PRIMED for ADHD, I talk about what actually changes after a late ADHD diagnosis in midlife, not just clinically, but internally. I explore why awareness often increases friction before it brings relief, how past experiences start to reorganize once you have language for them, and why insight alone doesn’t always translate into real-life change.

    We look at the emotional layers that often accompany late diagnosis, including relief, grief, anger, and recalibration, and why none of those reactions follow a neat timeline. I also explain why many high-functioning women feel stuck after diagnosis, even when they finally understand themselves, and how support, coaching, and therapy play different roles at this stage.

    This episode is for you if:

    • You were diagnosed with ADHD later in life, or are questioning a possible diagnosis
    • You feel relieved by the insight, but unsure what to do next
    • What worked for years no longer works the same way
    • You want to move forward with your ADHD in mind, not against it

    I also share reflective questions you can sit with as you begin integrating your diagnosis, without pressure to fix, explain, or overhaul your life all at once.

    If you’re navigating ADHD in midlife and wondering why things feel different now that you know, this episode will help you make sense of that shift.

    You can learn more about my ADHD coaching work, including private coaching and my group coaching space for professional women in midlife, at andreatoolecoach.com.

    If this episode was helpful, follow or subscribe so you don’t miss what’s next. Sharing it with someone who’s been asking the same questions helps more than you think.

    Contact for questions or comments:
    https://www.andreatoolecoach.com/contact

    **

    Blog post: Generational ADHD: How family patterns shape our lives and what to do about it - https://www.andreatoolecoach.com/blog/generational-adhd


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    22 mins
  • Coaching vs. therapy: who does what (and how to know what you need)
    Jan 20 2026

    Coaching vs. therapy is one of the most common questions I hear from women with ADHD, especially those diagnosed later in life.

    In this episode of PRIMED for ADHD, I slow the conversation down and explain, in practical terms, what therapy does well, what ADHD coaching actually looks like, where the two overlap, and how to think about what kind of support makes sense for you right now.

    If you’ve ever wondered whether therapy is enough, whether coaching is legitimate, or whether you should be doing both, this episode is for you.

    I talk about why coaching and therapy are often confused, how each supports the ADHD brain differently, and why insight alone doesn’t always translate into day-to-day change. I also share how coaching and therapy can work together, especially in midlife, when old coping strategies stop working and life transitions create new challenges.

    This episode isn’t about choosing sides. It’s about clarity, realistic expectations, and understanding what kind of support will actually help you move forward.

    In this episode, I cover:

    • Why coaching and therapy are often confused, especially for adults with ADHD
    • What therapy does best and when it’s the right place to start
    • How ADHD coaching works and what it focuses on in real life
    • The role of insight vs. application when managing ADHD
    • When coaching and therapy together can be most effective
    • How midlife transitions can change the kind of support you need

    If you’re listening and thinking, "I understand myself better, but I’m still struggling to function the way I want to," coaching may be the missing piece.

    You can learn more about my ADHD coaching work, including private coaching and my group coaching space for professional women in midlife, at andreatoolecoach.com.

    If this episode was helpful, follow or subscribe so you don’t miss what’s next. Sharing it with someone who’s been asking the same questions helps more than you think.

    Contact for questions or comments:
    https://www.andreatoolecoach.com/contact

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    21 mins
  • Why ADHD feels harder in perimenopause
    Jan 13 2026

    If you’re a woman with ADHD in midlife and your brain suddenly feels harder to manage, this episode is for you. (Men: Share this with the women in your life.)

    In this episode of PRIMED for ADHD, I explore what happens when ADHD intersects with perimenopause and why long-standing strategies stop working. You’ll hear how hormonal and brain chemistry shifts affect focus, motivation, memory, and emotional regulation for women with ADHD in midlife.

    I unpack what’s happening beneath the surface, why common advice often misses the mark, and how to let go of the belief that these changes are a personal failing. This is especially relevant for high-functioning women who have spent years compensating and holding everything together, only to find the same workload now feels much heavier and that life feels harder overall.

    In this episode, you’ll learn:

    • How perimenopause affects women with ADHD—beyond basic hormone explanations
    • Why estrogen fluctuations matter for focus, motivation, memory, and emotional regulation
    • How identity, competence, and self-trust are affected
    • Why this stage is a transition, not a regression
    • What support works better now than the strategies you’ve relied on for decades
    • Key questions to ask yourself now to find relief
    • Too much about my skin

    This episode offers clarity and context for women with ADHD in midlife and perimenopause, so you can recognize what’s changing and respond with steadiness instead of self-criticism.

    If you have any questions about what I discussed, there's a resource below and you can reach out with questions.

    Coming up next:

    The next episode will discuss coaching versus therapy and how each can support you in different ways

    Resources:

    Read Navigating ADHD during perimenopause: https://www.andreatoolecoach.com/blog/navigating-adhd-during-perimenopause

    Read When the house gets quiet: ADHD, midlife, and sending kids off to college:
    https://www.andreatoolecoach.com/blog/adhd-in-the-empty-nest

    Learn about my coaching framework:
    https://www.andreatoolecoach.com/the-primed-difference

    1:1 Support: https://www.andreatoolecoach.com/services

    If you want to practice this kind of support in real time, that’s what WILD Minds is for. Be a part of a community of professional women managing ADHD in midlife.: https://www.andreatoolecoach.com/wildminds

    Episode transcript:
    https://www.andreatoolecoach.com/s/PRIMED-season-2-episode-3-Transcript-ADHD-and-Perimenopause-b832.pdf

    Contact for questions or comments:
    https://www.andreatoolecoach.com/contact

    **

    Did you enjoy the podcast?

    • Subscribe on Apple and leave a review on Apple Podcasts. https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/primed-for-adhd-podcast-with-andrea-toole/id1581663470
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    25 mins