ADHD Blog

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Insights on ADHD diagnosis, treatment, research, and living well with neurodiversity.

Trauma Bonds: The Silent Struggle in Abusive Relationships — A Psychotherapist's Perspective

Trauma Bonds: The Silent Struggle in Abusive Relationships — A Psychotherapist's Perspective

March 25, 2026 · Reading time: 3 minutes

Trauma bonding describes a powerful psychological attachment that forms between a person and someone who harms them — typically characterised by cycles of abuse, intermittent reinforcement, and an intensity of connection that makes the relationship feel impossible to leave. From a psychotherapist’s perspective, it is one of the most misunderstood dynamics in clinical practice, and it is significantly more common in people with ADHD than the general population.

Transforming Homework Hustle for ADHD-Affected Teens

Transforming Homework Hustle for ADHD-Affected Teens

March 25, 2026 · Reading time: 3 minutes

Homework is one of the most reliably difficult battlegrounds for teenagers with ADHD. It demands exactly the skills that ADHD impairs most: the ability to start tasks that are not immediately rewarding, to sustain focus across long uninterrupted stretches, to manage time, and to tolerate frustration without quitting. For many ADHD teens, the homework hour becomes a source of daily conflict — with parents, with themselves, and with the school system that keeps sending more of it.

Beat the Nerves: Coping Strategies for Pre-ADHD Test Anxiety

Beat the Nerves: Coping Strategies for Pre-ADHD Test Anxiety

March 25, 2026 · Reading time: 3 minutes

Waiting for an ADHD assessment can be a surprisingly anxious experience. Whether you are being tested yourself or supporting a child through the process, the uncertainty about what the results will mean — and what happens next — can create a particular kind of pre-test dread. Ironically, anxiety and ADHD are frequent companions: roughly 50% of adults with ADHD also have an anxiety disorder. Knowing how to manage that anxiety before the assessment not only makes the experience less stressful, but can also mean you arrive able to communicate your experiences clearly.

ADHD in Children: Understanding and Supporting Your Child

ADHD in Children: Understanding and Supporting Your Child

March 25, 2026 · Reading time: 3 minutes

ADHD is among the most common neurodevelopmental conditions in childhood, affecting approximately 5–7% of children globally. For parents, a diagnosis can arrive as both a relief and an upheaval — relief because behaviour that seemed inexplicable now has a name, and upheaval because the path forward is unclear. Understanding how ADHD actually presents in children, what the assessment process involves, and which interventions have solid evidence behind them is the foundation of effective support.

What Does Autism and ADHD Together Look Like?

What Does Autism and ADHD Together Look Like?

March 25, 2026 · Reading time: 3 minutes

Autism spectrum disorder (ASD) and attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) are two of the most common neurodevelopmental conditions, and they co-occur far more often than chance would predict. Research suggests that between 50 and 70 percent of autistic people also meet diagnostic criteria for ADHD, and around 20 to 37 percent of people with ADHD show significant autistic traits. Understanding what this combination looks like in practice is essential for accurate diagnosis and effective support.

What Is the Best Way to Deal With a Toxic Person?

What Is the Best Way to Deal With a Toxic Person?

March 25, 2026 · Reading time: 3 minutes

People with ADHD are disproportionately likely to find themselves in toxic or one-sided relationships — not because of any personal failing, but because the hallmark traits of ADHD, including impulsivity, emotional sensitivity, and difficulty reading social cues, can make it genuinely harder to spot warning signs early or to act on them when they appear.

Online Misophonia Testing: What the Assessments Measure and What to Do Next

Online Misophonia Testing: What the Assessments Measure and What to Do Next

February 11, 2026 · Reading time: 5 minutes

Misophonia — a condition characterised by intense, automatic emotional and physiological reactions to specific sounds — is increasingly recognised by clinicians, yet formal diagnosis remains inconsistent and access to specialist assessment is limited. Online misophonia tests have become an important first step for the large number of people who suspect they have the condition but have never had it named or assessed. Understanding what these tools measure, how they compare to clinical instruments, and what to do with your results can help you navigate a pathway that is still emerging.

Online ADHD Testing: What It Can Tell You and What It Can’t

Online ADHD Testing: What It Can Tell You and What It Can’t

January 14, 2026 · Reading time: 4 minutes

The number of adults seeking an ADHD assessment has grown sharply over the past few years, and online ADHD tests have become many people’s first point of contact with the diagnostic process. Understanding what these tools can reliably tell you — and where their limits are — is essential for anyone trying to make sense of their results and decide on next steps.