
When I was diagnosed with ADHD at 48, it didn’t feel like a beginning. It felt like an explanation.
For decades, I had built a life and career in coaching, counseling, and supporting others—yet underneath that competence was a quieter, more complicated reality. I lived with constant mental noise, inconsistent focus, and a persistent sense that I was working harder than others just to stay in step. I had developed systems, habits, and coping strategies that allowed me to function—and often excel—but they came at a cost. The cost was often emotional dysregulation that impacted my personal and professional relationships: one divorce and some work challenges.
The Diagnosis Reframed Everything
Suddenly, the patterns made sense. The bursts of creativity alongside periods of paralysis. The ability to deeply connect with people, paired with difficulty managing administrative tasks. The intensity, the sensitivity, the drive—and the exhaustion. What I had once interpreted as personal shortcomings began to resolve into something far more accurate: a different neurocognitive wiring.
Like many adults diagnosed later in life, I experienced a mix of relief and grief. Relief, because there was a name for what I had been navigating alone. Grief, because I wondered what might have been different if I had understood this earlier. I had long suffered with low level depression that led to worsening symptoms and challenges as I aged. As an example, I often wondered, if I had had the ADHD diagnosis earlier in life, would my depressive symptoms have been less severe? How might I have been supported differently? What would I have told my younger self, who worked so hard to appear “together”?
Menopause Amplified the Struggle
But the story doesn’t end with diagnosis. ADHD is not something that gets “resolved.” It evolves—and at times, it intensifies.
For me, that became especially clear during menopause. The hormonal shifts didn’t just affect mood or energy; they amplified my ADHD symptoms in ways I hadn’t anticipated. Focus became more elusive, memory less reliable, and the systems I had relied on for years no longer worked in the same way. It was disorienting—and, at times, discouraging.
Research shows I’m far from alone. Studies confirm that declining estrogen levels during perimenopause disrupt dopamine and serotonin—the brain chemicals central to ADHD regulation—leading to worse inattention, executive dysfunction, and emotional dysregulation. For many women, symptoms peak between 40-59, often unmasking ADHD for the first time or making medications less effective. Over 60% report this transition as when ADHD most disrupts daily life.
A New Professional Focus
This experience clarified my path forward. I began to see how many women, particularly high-functioning professionals, navigate this intersection of ADHD and midlife transition—often without adequate language, support, or recognition. Women who had spent decades compensating, only to find those strategies breaking down. Women questioning their competence, when in fact their neurobiology was shifting.
My work has increasingly focused on supporting professionals with ADHD and/or high-functioning autism, with a growing emphasis on midlife adults—particularly women—whose challenges are often overlooked or misunderstood. These are individuals who are capable, insightful, and deeply committed, yet operating in environments that don’t always align with how their brains work best.
These talented, dedicated and highly intelligent woman don’t need to be fixed. They need translation, alignment, and strategy. My coaching focuses on how attention, energy, and motivation truly work, not on idealised versions. We build systems that are sustainable, not aspirational. We work with strengths, rather than constantly compensating for perceived deficits. And we address the emotional layers: the years of self-doubt, shame, the internalized narratives, and the quiet erosion of confidence that can come from feeling out of sync. My sessions include cognitive reframing, challenging limiting beliefs and creating an ability to pause before reacting, to name a few tools in my toolbelt. I lean into my doctorate degree in mental health counselling frequently and have grown my understanding of neuroscience and continue to bring my learnings to each session.
Turning Challenge into Contribution
There is something uniquely powerful about being supported by someone who not only understands the theory but has also lived experience—across different life stages.
My ADHD did not derail my career—it shaped it. At 48, I received a diagnosis. In my 60s, I continue to navigate its complexities, especially as life changes like menopause bring new challenges. But I also see, more clearly than ever, how this journey has allowed me to align my work with those I am best equipped to support.
If there is one message I would share, it is this: understanding yourself is not a one-time event. It is an ongoing process—and at any stage of life, it can become a powerful foundation not just for coping, but for contribution.
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