• How to Notice Progress Without Measuring It
    Jul 9 2026

    At the end of the day, when your brain starts tallying everything you didn't finish, where's the credit for everything you did? In the Season 32 finale, we close out the season on the quiet skill that gets buried under all that mental accounting — noticing your progress instead of measuring it.

    The unfinished stuff is loud: the laundry pile, the twenty-item list, the messages still waiting. The progress is silent, and a lifetime of report cards and performance reviews has trained us to see only what's left. We get into why that happens — with a detour through a 1927 psychology experiment that explains a lot about the ADHD shame loop — what self-compassion actually looks like in a real day, and why the answer isn't a shinier scorecard. Plus a family-dinner ritual worth stealing, an optical illusion that makes the whole point, and one of the more memorable cold opens of the season.

    It's our send-off into summer break, and a reminder that sometimes the entire practice fits into one word.

    Links & Notes

    • Support the Show on Patreon
    • Dig into the podcast Shownotes Database
    • (00:00) - Welcome to Taking Control: The ADHD Podcast
    • (01:33) - Join the Community! https://patreon.com/theadhdpodcast
    • (03:04) - Progress Without Measurement
    ★ Support this podcast on Patreon ★
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    28 mins
  • You’re Not Broken. You’re Contextual.
    Jul 2 2026

    You can lose six hours to the thing that lights you up, then completely stall on a task that takes three minutes. Same brain, different room. In this conversation, Pete and Nikki get into why ADHD shows up hard in one setting and nearly disappears in another, why "broken" is the wrong word for any of it, and what changes when you stop asking how to fix yourself and start paying attention to the rooms where you do your best work. It's the capper on a season-long conversation about living with ADHD instead of fighting it, and a grounded look at the context, fuel, and environment that make hard things doable.

    Links & Notes

    • Support the Show on Patreon
    • Dig into the podcast Shownotes Database
    • (00:00) - Welcome to Taking Control: The ADHD Podcast
    • (01:41) - Check us out on Patreon
    • (02:44) - You're Not Broken. You're Contextual
    ★ Support this podcast on Patreon ★
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    27 mins
  • Self-Trust Is a Nervous System Skill with Dr. Tamara Rosier
    Jun 25 2026
    You can have the perfect planner, the right system, and the best intentions, and still not follow through. It isn't a caring problem. After enough broken promises to yourself, some quiet part of you simply stops believing the plan. That's where this conversation with Dr. Tamara Rosier begins, and it reframes self-trust as something closer to a nervous system skill than a mindset you can think your way into.Dr. Tamara Rosier has written the books and built the center and stood on the stages, and she still wakes some mornings and reminds herself, deliberately, that she is a trustworthy person. The belief underneath — the one she's carried since she was small — is that she's a person who screws things up. ADHD feeds a belief like that. It chips away at your sense of who you are, one forgotten thing at a time, until distrusting yourself stops feeling like a wound and starts feeling like good judgment.So much of that, it turns out, is happening in the body. An ADHD nervous system can spend its whole life braced — fight, flight, freeze, appease — switched on and calling it normal because it has never known the alternative. For years Tamara sat frozen on the couch, melting into the cushions, sure she was resting, when she was really stuck somewhere below the place where rest actually lives. There's a narrow band where you're calm and awake at once, and a lot of us have never spent much time there. Hearing her describe it, you may quietly start to wonder whether you ever have.The way back looks like catching yourself mid-loop — Tamara tells it through the week she lost one of her chickens, and the refrain that trailed her around the house, I failed her, I failed her, I failed her — and then learning to talk back to it, to move your body, to put on the Motown, to do the next small thing that nudges you up out of the freeze. It looks like noticing the clever ways we avoid all of that, too: the new app, the next fix, the dopamine that keeps us busy on the surface so we never have to turn toward the thing underneath.And the hope here is almost disappointingly ordinary. No system is going to fix you by Thursday. What there is, instead, is the small correction, made again and again, the way a sailor nudges the tiller rather than wrenching the whole boat around and tipping it over. There's learning to read your own weather, hour by hour. There's accepting that you may always need the timer, the Post-it, the reminder, and letting that be fine rather than shameful. Self-trust grows in that soil — in the quiet, stubborn belief that whatever goes sideways today, you'll know how to repair it.Links & NotesDr. Tamara Rosier — our guest's author site, where you can find her work and stay connected.ADHD Center of West Michigan — the coaching and support practice Tamara founded in Grand Rapids.Your Brain's Not Broken — Tamara's book on navigating your emotions and life with ADHD. A new edition for teens and young adults is on the way.You, Me & Our ADHD Family — her book on cultivating healthy relationships when ADHD is in the house.ADHD Coaches Organization (ACO) — the professional body for ADHD coaches; their directory is a solid place to start if you're looking for one.HeartMath — the heart-rhythm coherence and breathing tool Tamara leans on to drop into a calmer, parasympathetic state.Vagal nerve resets — Tamara's advice is to find the one that fits you; she points listeners to the many free walk-throughs on YouTube rather than any single "right" technique. Clicking that link saves you a search in YouTube.Join us on Patreon — early, ad-free episodes, extended editions, the post-show Q&A, the Discord community, and a seat in the Wednesday morning live stream.Dig into the podcast Shownotes Database (00:00) - Welcome to Taking Control: The ADHD Podcast(02:57) - Introducing Dr. Tamara Rosier(04:25) - Self-Trust and the Nervous System(12:32) - What are our beliefs doing in our bodies?(32:55) - Learn Your State ★ Support this podcast on Patreon ★
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    49 mins
  • Rewriting the Rules You Inherited About Worth
    Jun 18 2026

    There's a rule most of us signed before we could read it. It decides whether we're worth anything, and it tends to set the same terms for everyone who carries an ADHD brain: you're valuable if you perform, if you keep every plate spinning, if you never let anyone down. Live under that contract long enough and it stops feeling like a belief and starts feeling like a fact — written, as the metaphor goes this week, in permanent ink.

    Where did the rule come from? Often from the earliest lessons — the pulled-out-of-class, extra-time, here-are-your-accommodations lessons that were meant to level the field but landed as proof you were different. The gap they leave behind doesn't shrink with age. There's research suggesting it widens. The assumption that everyone else has this figured out turns out to be the lie that keeps the rule in place.

    Links & Notes

    • Support the Show on Patreon
    • Dig into the podcast Shownotes Database
    • (00:00) - Welcome to Taking Control: The ADHD Podcast
    • (01:17) - Join the Patreon!
    • (03:13) - Rewriting Rules
    ★ Support this podcast on Patreon ★
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    31 mins
  • What It Means to Be “Good Enough” With ADHD
    Jun 11 2026

    "Good enough" is a phrase that can land like permission or like an accusation — and for ADHD brains that have spent a lifetime being told we're not trying hard enough, both feelings often arrive at once.

    This week, we're untangling that knot. Why does a phrase meant to release us so often feel like settling? Why does the ADHD brain hear "good enough" and translate it into "not enough"? And what would it actually take to reclaim the phrase as our own?

    This is really all about intention — the difference between walking away from something because you've been defeated by it, and walking away because you've made a choice. One leaves you smaller. The other builds something. We talk about the standards we measure ourselves against (almost always invented), the freeze that comes when nothing feels possible, and the small, almost invisible acts that count as progress even when they don't feel like it.

    By the end, we land somewhere unexpectedly tender: a reminder that the way we build trust with ourselves isn't by finishing things perfectly. It's by finishing them at all.

    There's a free download this week — five questions to help you decide what's good enough — linked below.

    Links & Notes

    • Download the What Does It Mean to be Good Enough? Worksheet!
    • Support the Show on Patreon
    • Dig into the podcast Shownotes Database
    • (00:00) - Welcome to Taking Control: The ADHD Podcast
    • (01:25) - Patreon.com/theadhdpodcast
    • (02:56) - What does it mean to be good enough?
    • (21:51) - How do you know it's good enough?
    ★ Support this podcast on Patreon ★
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    25 mins
  • Permission Slips You Keep Waiting For
    Jun 4 2026

    There's a kind of waiting most ADHDers know well — waiting for someone, somewhere, to say it's okay. Okay to rest. Okay to stop masking. Okay to take the accommodation. Okay to want what you want without justifying it.

    In this conversation, we get into the permission slips we keep waiting for, often from authority figures who may not even exist anymore. We talk about why ADHDers wait — the research-backed link between years of childhood correction and adult reliance on external validation — and what that has to do with decision paralysis, rejection sensitivity, masking, and the exhaustion of performing a version of yourself that you didn't sign up for.

    Plus the swan, self-determination theory, and a small concrete first step you can try this week.

    Links & Notes

    • Download The ADHD Permission Slip!
    • Support the Show on Patreon
    • Dig into the podcast Shownotes Database
    • (00:00) - Welcome to Taking Control: The ADHD Podcast
    • (01:26) - Patreon.com/TheADHDPodcast
    • (02:36) - Your Permission Slips
    ★ Support this podcast on Patreon ★
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    32 mins
  • Why Advice Stops Working When You’re Tired
    May 28 2026

    We've all been there: someone offers a perfectly reasonable suggestion, and instead of taking it in, you bristle. You're tired. You're cranky. The last thing you want is advice. This week, Pete and Nikki tackle what happens when ADHD meets fatigue — and why the strategies that usually work suddenly don't.

    This isn't laziness. It isn't a character flaw. It's what happens when executive functions are already running on a deficit and you pile fatigue on top. Pete brings the research, including a study showing 62% of adults with ADHD meet the criteria for chronic fatigue syndrome — a reminder that "everybody gets tired" is true, but ADHD brains get tired in a different and vastly more significant way.

    The conversation moves from the science to the lived experience: the guilt loop that keeps you from resting, the way fatigue distorts reality until small tasks feel like moral referendums, and the rewiring required to treat recovery as part of the work — not a reward you have to earn.

    Plus: why "I don't wanna" might be a capacity check in disguise, the four categories of recovery that actually work (hint: sleep is only one of them), and Nikki's insight that the recovery muscle is built through trial and error, not advance planning.


    LINKS & RESOURCES

    • Past episode referenced: The Opportunity Cost
    • Past episode referenced: Capacity conversation with Brooke Schnittman
    • Support the Show on Patreon
    • Dig into the podcast Shownotes Database
    • (00:00) - Welcome to Taking Control: The ADHD Podcast
    • (03:10) - The Tired Problem
    ★ Support this podcast on Patreon ★
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    26 mins
  • Why “I’ll Deal With It Later” Is an Energy Leak with Ari Tuckman
    May 21 2026

    We've all said it. "I'll deal with it later." And somehow, later never comes. The thing just sits there — not in your calendar, but in your head. It pings you in the shower. It shows up right before you fall asleep. That's an energy leak.

    This week, Ari Tuckman returns for his sixth appearance to unpack what's actually happening when we tell ourselves "later." What is the ADHD brain doing in that moment? Are we making a real decision, or just kicking the can? And how do we tell the difference?

    We dig into:

    • The two flavors of procrastination — not feeling the future vs. avoiding the discomfort
    • Why "later" needs a "when," and what specificity actually changes
    • The difference between a task that needs doing and a decision that needs making
    • How to close an open loop that's been open way too long
    • Going toward positives vs. avoiding negatives, and why one of those is more sustainable
    • Time estimation, and why some things aren't knowable until you start
    • Ari's new book, the ADHD Productivity Manual

    Guest Spotlight

    Ari Tuckman, PsyD is a psychologist, author, and international presenter specializing in ADHD. He's given more than 600 presentations and podcast interviews across America and nine other countries, and is the author of four books: ADHD After Dark, Understand Your Brain, Get More Done, More Attention, Less Deficit, and Integrative Treatment for Adult ADHD. He chairs the CHADD Conference Committee. This is his sixth appearance on the show.

    Links & Notes

    • Ari's website: https://drarituckman.com
    • Ari on Instagram: @AriTuckmanPsyD
    • Books by Ari Tuckman:
      • ADHD After Dark
      • Understand Your Brain, Get More Done
      • More Attention, Less Deficit
      • Integrative Treatment for Adult ADHD
      • ADHD Productivity Manual
    • (00:00) - Welcome to Taking Control: The ADHD Podcast
    • (01:13) - Join us over on Patreon!
    • (02:13) - Introducing Ari Tuckman
    • (03:06) - "I'll do it later..."
    ★ Support this podcast on Patreon ★
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    38 mins