Life Management

ADHD and Anxiety in Women and Adults: Understanding the Link and Finding Balance

ADHD and Anxiety in Women and Adults: Understanding the Link and Finding Balance

ADHD in adults—and especially in women—is finally getting the recognition it deserves. For years, countless women were misdiagnosed or overlooked because their symptoms didn’t look like the stereotypical “hyperactive boy.” Instead, they battled quiet chaos: disorganization, overwhelm, forgetfulness, and the creeping anxiety that follows.

The latest research shows that treating ADHD often reduces anxiety by addressing the root causes of daily stress—executive functioning challenges like planning, time management, and emotional regulation. From practical strategies like the OHIO technique (“Only Handle It Once”) to calming evening rituals that reset the brain, there are concrete tools that can transform frustration into confidence.

If you’ve ever wondered why anxiety seems to follow your ADHD everywhere, this post will help you connect the dots—and give you actionable steps to build structure, find calm, and finally feel in sync with your brain.

Get To The Root Of Your Stress: 5 Things That Make You Vulnerable To Stress

Get To The Root Of Your Stress: 5 Things That Make You Vulnerable To Stress

Stress is a state of mental or emotional strain or tension resulting from adverse or very demanding circumstances. It is the body’s physical response to a real or perceived threat, demand, or danger.

Everyone experiences stress at different levels. Even when the same stressors are present, our experiences can be different. Certain groups experience higher levels of stress, for example, communities of color, LGBTQIA+, women, and parents.

Stress isn’t always harmful. For example, think about the motivation you feel to study for your next exam, or the urge to make a to-do list on a Sunday. These are positive ways that stress can help you focus and complete tasks. But when stress is frequent and intense, it can affect your overall health, resulting in a reduced quality of life.

This is why we want to help you get to the root cause of your stress, understand the ays it manifests for you, and learn preventative tools for coping with stress. Because you deserve a healthy, happy life.

ADHD and Women Part 2: Practical Tools and Interventions for Coping with ADHD

ADHD and Women Part 2: Practical Tools and Interventions for Coping with ADHD

In our last blog about ADHD, we discussed what ADHD is, how it typically manifests in women, information on diagnoses, and resources. Today we’re digging in deeper and sharing real, meaningful ways you can combat the symptoms of ADHD. From time management to emotional regulation and sorting paper chaos, these research-based strategies will provide you with straightforward approaches to ease stress and overwhelm so you can live a better, more satisfying life. Before we get started, let us remind you that you don’t need to do all the strategies mentioned to be productive and successful. Find what techniques resonate with you and leave the rest. Honor your humanness. It’s important to be gentle with yourself on your mental health journey.

PRACTICAL TOOLS AND INTERVENTIONS FOR ADHD MENTIONED:

  • The Pomodoro Technique

  • OHIO Technique

  • Evening Rituals

  • Four-Field Strategy

  • Bullet Journal

  • Mindfulness Techniques

  • Working from home - STACC

  • Pragmatic and Concrete Tips

ADHD and Women

ADHD and Women

You keep losing your phone, locking your keys in the car, you’re constantly late and feel emotionally overwhelmed. You feel you can never pay attention, you start a lot of projects which you never end up finishing, and you are constantly feeling burnt out. Maybe someone in your life has told you “you might have ADHD” or maybe you’ve been hearing more about the signs and symptoms on Instagram or TikTok and something resonates in you. Whatever the reason, educating yourself is the first step in getting treatment for the symptoms that may be wreaking havoc in your life.

Today we will be talking all about ADHD and women, why it goes unnoticed, common symptoms, if a diagnosis matters, and resources to help you gain control of your life.

8 Tips for coping with social anxiety

8 Tips for coping with social anxiety

Anxiety is a feeling of worry, nervousness, dread, and uneasiness, typically about an imminent event or something with an uncertain outcome. Social anxiety is a feeling of worry or nervousness focused mainly on social interactions. To better understand social anxiety, let’s start by learning the main components that anxiety is created and sustained by: