Women & ADHD Podcast Por Katy Weber arte de portada

Women & ADHD

Women & ADHD

De: Katy Weber
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A late diagnosis turned her world upside down. Now Katy Weber interviews other women who discovered they have ADHD in adulthood and are finally feeling like they understand who they are and how to best lean into their strengths, both professionally and personally.

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Desarrollo Personal Higiene y Vida Saludable Psicología Psicología y Salud Mental Éxito Personal
Episodios
  • Rae Jacobson: The diagnosis boom … and backlash
    Dec 1 2025

    Episode 204 with Rae Jacobson.


    “There is a difference between traits and impairment. If we dilute the idea of ADHD into something that just seems familiar, we risk shutting out the people who really need help.”


    Rae is a journalist, an ADHD and learning disorders expert, and the Lead of Insight at Understood, where she also hosts the podcast Hyperfocus. Rae has spent over 20 years digging into the stories and science of neurodivergence. She’s a former senior editor at the Child Mind Institute, and her work has appeared in New York Magazine, the Daily Beast, Rolling Stone, Parenting, American Girl, and more.


    Rae and I talk about her very winding path to an ADHD diagnosis: growing up as the “smart kid who did terribly at school,” getting diagnosed with LD-NOS, dyscalculia, and dysgraphia, and then finally, in her early 20s, realizing she has ADHD. Rae shares the life-changing experience of attending Landmark College — a school specifically for students with ADHD and learning disabilities.


    We also wrestle with the current ADHD discourse: the difference between relatable traits and true impairment, what happens when “everyone has ADHD,” and why that can both broaden awareness and quietly shut people out of care. We talk about internalized ableism, the ongoing cycles of skepticism (“quit your whining”) and backlash online, and the need for voices that pair lived experience with journalistic fact-checking.


    And of course, we talk about Hyperfocus, Rae’s podcast at Understood that zeroes in on what fascinates us most about ADHD, mental health, and learning.


    Website: Understood.org

    Instagram: @understoodorg


    Links & Resources:

    The Berkeley Girls with ADHD Longitudinal Study (S. Hinshaw)


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    Episode edited by E Podcast Productions


    Find the transcript of this episode at www.womenandadhd.com/transcripts


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    Women & ADHD coaching: www.womenandadhd.com/coaching

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    Work 1-on-1 with Katy: www.womenandadhd.com/katy

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    Order the “Hey, it’s ADHD!” course: www.womenandadhd.com/adhdcourse

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    Did you love this episode? Click here to pledge a one-time donation to the podcast!

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    If you are a woman who was diagnosed with ADHD and you’d like to apply to be a guest on this podcast, visit womenandadhd.com/podcastguest.


    Instagram: @womenandadhdpodcast

    Tiktok: @womenandadhdpodcast

    Twitter: @womenandadhd

    Facebook: @womenandadhd



    Our Sponsors:
    * Check out Calm: https://calm.com/WOMENADHD


    Support this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/women-and-adhd/donations

    Advertising Inquiries: https://redcircle.com/brands

    Privacy & Opt-Out: https://redcircle.com/privacy
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    59 m
  • Dr. Anupriya Gogne: ADHD & executive dysfunction in the perinatal period
    Nov 3 2025
    Episode 203 with Dr. Anupriya Gonge.“For mothers, the executive functioning demands keep shifting. Just as you find your rhythm, everything changes again.”Dr. Anupriya Gogne is a board-certified addiction psychiatrist who specializes in women’s mental health, She is also the Division Director of Outpatient Psychiatry at Brown University Health in Rhode Island. Over the past eight years, she has worked closely with adult and perinatal women navigating a wide range of psychiatric challenges. After her own late-in-life ADHD diagnosis, Dr. Gogne began to reframe much of what she was seeing in her clinical work — particularly in high-achieving women who had spent years feeling overwhelmed, misunderstood, or misdiagnosed. This personal and professional insight led her to write the book “Neurodevelopmental Disorders in Adult Women: Special Considerations in the Perinatal Period,” which offers a clinical guide for trainees and practitioners and sheds light on the often-overlooked experiences of neurodivergent women and mothers.We discuss how ADHD often presents differently in women, especially during the perinatal period, and how executive dysfunction can be mistaken for laziness, depression, or character flaws. Dr. Gogne shares her own experience of being a high-functioning but chronically exhausted student and professional, and how the diagnosis helped her understand her lifelong struggles with attention, restlessness, and self-criticism. We talk about the gendered ways society responds to executive dysfunction in mothers vs. fathers, the importance of strengths-based and trauma-informed care, and the intersection of ADHD with culture, trauma, and hormonal transitions. Dr. Gogne also shares how cultural norms in India shaped her ability to mask and compensate for her symptoms, and why she believes ADHD is not a disorder, but rather a state of nervous system dysregulation that deserves more compassionate and individualized treatment.In this episode, we discuss:Dr. Gogne’s late ADHD diagnosis and its impact on her clinical workThe need for strengths-based, individualized approaches in perinatal psychiatryHow mothers and fathers experience executive dysfunction differentlyHow trauma and hormonal shifts intersect with executive dysfunctionWebsite: https://www.brownhealth.org/providers/anupriya-gogne-mdLinks & Resources:Neurodevelopmental Disorders in Adult Women: Special Considerations in the Perinatal Period by Dr. Anupriya Gogne(Get 20% off with code: SPRAUT)- - - - - Episode edited by E Podcast ProductionsFind the transcript of this episode at www.womenandadhd.com/transcripts- - - - -Women & ADHD coaching: www.womenandadhd.com/coaching- - - - -Work 1-on-1 with Katy: www.womenandadhd.com/katy- - - - -Order the “Hey, it’s ADHD!” course: www.womenandadhd.com/adhdcourse- - - - -Did you love this episode? Click here to pledge a one-time donation to the podcast!- - - - -If you are a woman who was diagnosed with ADHD and you’d like to apply to be a guest on this podcast, visit womenandadhd.com/podcastguest.Instagram: @womenandadhdpodcastTiktok: @womenandadhdpodcastTwitter: @womenandadhdFacebook: @womenandadhdSupport this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/women-and-adhd/donationsAdvertising Inquiries: https://redcircle.com/brandsPrivacy & Opt-Out: https://redcircle.com/privacy
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    1 h y 2 m
  • Laura Kerbey: The hidden costs of masking
    Oct 6 2025

    Episode 202 with Laura Kerbey.


    “Masking is bloody exhausting. Then again, not masking is scary because we worry people won’t like us or accept us.”


    Laura is an educator, consultant, and author who has been working with autistic children and young people for nearly 25 years. Laura is the founder of PAST, which stands for Positive Assessments Support and Training, and co-founder of KITE Therapeutic Learning Services, and she’s known internationally for her expertise in autism, PDA (Persistent Drive for Autonomy), and neurodivergent education.


    She’s also the author of several books, including the newly released “The Kids’ Simple Guide to PDA” and “The Parents’ and Professionals’ Simple Guide to PDA” as well as The (Slightly Distracted) Woman’s Guide to Living with an Adult ADHD Diagnosis, which was released this past summer. Laura brings both professional expertise and lived experience to her work — she was diagnosed with ADHD in her forties and self-identifies as autistic.


    In this episode, Laura and I discuss:


    • Laura’s personal journey to her ADHD diagnosis in her forties, and her self-identification as autistic
    • Why so many women are overlooked or misdiagnosed until adulthood
    • The physical and mental impacts of masking and “seeming fine”
    • Strategies for unmasking and advocating for oneself
    • The power of reframing ADHD from “deficit” to difference


    Laura is also offering a 6-week course in January for late-diagnosed and late-identifying women with ADHD, which is based on her book. For information or to register for the course: https://www.trybooking.com/uk/FFKX



    Website: www.p-ast.co.uk

    Instagram: @laura_kerbey

    Facebook: @LauraKerbeyPast



    Links & Resources:

    The (Slightly Distracted) Woman’s Guide to Living with an Adult ADHD Diagnosis by Laura Kerbey

    KITE Therapeutic Learning Services


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    Episode edited by E Podcast Productions


    Find the transcript of this episode at www.womenandadhd.com/transcripts


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    Women & ADHD coaching: www.womenandadhd.com/coaching

    - - - - -

    Work 1-on-1 with Katy: www.womenandadhd.com/katy

    - - - - -

    Order the “Hey, it’s ADHD!” course: www.womenandadhd.com/adhdcourse

    - - - - -

    Did you love this episode? Click here to pledge a one-time donation to the podcast!

    - - - - -


    If you are a woman who was diagnosed with ADHD and you’d like to apply to be a guest on this podcast, visit womenandadhd.com/podcastguest.


    Instagram: @womenandadhdpodcast

    Tiktok: @womenandadhdpodcast

    Twitter: @womenandadhd

    Facebook: @womenandadhd



    Support this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/women-and-adhd/donations

    Advertising Inquiries: https://redcircle.com/brands

    Privacy & Opt-Out: https://redcircle.com/privacy
    Más Menos
    1 h y 2 m

Featured Article: Care for Your Body and Mind with the Best Health Podcasts Out There


Just about any genre of podcast can improve your health in some way. Learning about something you enjoy or listening to something that makes you laugh might brighten your mood, while having a gripping listen queued up for the gym may encourage you to work out longer. But if you're looking specifically for podcasts to help guide you on the road towards better health—physical, mental, and overall—there’s no shortage to be found.

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I am 48-yr professional technical single mom of 3 girls, and I am about 3 yrs since my adhd diagnosis. I found this podcast about 6 months ago. Here are select ways I find this podcast helpful…
-Terminology around the experience of being a woman with adhd. I will hear a word in this context and I can look it up and know it’s a thing.
-I get ideas for strategies I can try.
- I get validation of my experiences.
- Sometimes gives me the words to express my experience and struggles.
-Reflect on my experience and process. Helps to answer some of my questions about my experience, or even to identify things I don’t struggle with is helpful.
-Hearing the real voices of real women describing the things I struggle with is very powerful and reassuring about my experience.

Terminology

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I loved the variety of topics and how they all completely fit my life as adult onset ADD.

Very helpful podcast

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I would like to be able to read the subtitles before choosing which episode i want to listen to but it always cuts off after two words. Have stopped listening because Of this…there’s no work around either

Can’t read the subtitles

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I really enjoyed saying, "that's me" so many times or "yep". Ms Propok inspired me and listening to you ladies talk as two women with neurodivergent.

I Relate!!!

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Dr. Rosier was fantastic. Such a great interview. Her phone in the trash story reminded me of the time I threw away the full med bottle, rather than the empty one. Who does that?!? Was so grateful for my husband, who dug it out while I tried to hold it together for work. It was a terrible moment for me. Hearing both of your stories was healing for me. Thank you, both.

Threw away my full ADHD med bottle

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