Before Diagnosis
The worst part was not knowing I had ADHD — and hating myself for feeling broken while everyone else seemed fine.
I couldn’t understand why most interactions felt foggy. Why I struggled to remember simple tasks or conversations I just had. It felt like a handicap of the mind.
You feel compassion for those who live with visible disabilities, and yet you can’t imagine living like that. But when your disability is invisible — and your body is “healthy,” your genetics “good,” your appearance “normal” — the failure feels like a personal defect. A disappointment. Someone you wish you weren’t.
Every day was exhausting. Every day I struggled. Every day was more proof that I was inadequate and incapable, while everyone around me seemed to be handed the missing pieces they needed to feel whole — confidence, competence, connection.
Knowing that my brain worked differently filled me with dread every time I had to speak to someone.
“They’re going to see how empty I am. How broken I am.”
When nearly every interaction makes you feel foolish, you start avoiding them. The conversations get fewer. The people get more distant. And then the thoughts kick in:
“Everyone hates me.”
“No one likes me.”
“I’m weird. I’m broken.”
So the next conversation becomes high-stakes. You tell yourself this one has to go well. But the nerves kick in. Maybe I mix up facts. Maybe I stutter. Maybe I forget what I was saying halfway through the sentence.
And once again, I “fail.”
Each interaction became confirmation that I was defective — and that people were right to keep their distance. My confidence shattered. My mental health deteriorated. I began to fear speaking at all. Social anxiety took over. I isolated myself.
One of the hardest things I’ve ever done in my life was to keep walking into spaces where I felt humiliated — workplaces, social circles, family gatherings — knowing I would likely screw up again. But I kept going. I kept trying. And I kept being hurt.
I was bullied. I was mocked for being “weird,” “awkward,” for “never relaxing.”
People would joke:
“Why don’t you open up?”
“She’s like a cardboard cutout.”
I knew exposure therapy was supposed to help, but in a toxic environment, it only deepened the fear. The anxiety. The damage. Still, I kept showing up.
My family knew what I was going through and told me I had incredible inner strength. That even walking into those rooms was bravery.
Wearing a wig while doing it? Another kind of bravery altogether.
Wigs are… complicated. You get bad ones, okay ones, and maybe a decent one. I’ve yet to find one that looks real. They’re uncomfortable, itchy, and frustrating.
(But that’s a whole separate blog post.)
The worst part of all of it? Suppression. Bottling up emotions became a survival tactic. I had to stay on guard constantly — hide the ADHD, hide the fear, hide everything. Over time, I wasn’t just hiding the “defective” parts. I was hiding me.
And sometimes, those suppressed emotions would start to bubble up — and I’d be terrified to let them out.
What if I lose control? What if I do something I can’t take back? What if I push everyone away and end up alone forever?
So I kept the bottle sealed. I only let out enough to catch my breath… but never enough to heal.
The Vicious Cycle
It’s a vicious cycle. One that’s incredibly hard to break.
The people you surround yourself with can either help you climb out of it — or drag you deeper in.
(In another post, I’ll share stories of the people who played both roles.)
But the truth is something I’ve heard time and time again:
No one can save you but you.
And the moment you decide to change your life — for your good — everything begins to shift.
After Diagnosis
ADHD feels like you’re being pulled in ten directions at once.
Your brain is buzzing constantly. Everything feels urgent. Everything needs to be done now — all at the same time.
So you bounce from one task to another without finishing anything. You interrupt one activity to start a new one. You forget the first thing while trying to remember the third. And because you’re so afraid of forgetting something else, you just keep starting and abandoning.
It’s exhausting. No wonder we feel confused and foggy all the time.
This isn’t laziness. It’s not a character flaw. It’s neurology.
And knowing that? Understanding that my brain just works differently?
It changed everything.
It gave me permission to stop beating myself up. It gave me hope.
It gave me back me.
My brain is not broken. And neither is yours.
We are not defective. We are not failures.
We are healing.
Thank you for reading.
For the healing hearts.
Love,
Jenna
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