It's The ADHD-Friendly Show

Caren Magill hosts a show aimed squarely at creative women with ADHD, and her angle is that the condition is worth celebrating as much as it is worth managing. That framing could go wrong fast in the hands of a less grounded host, but Caren keeps it tethered. Episodes are short, often ten to fifteen minutes, and she picks a single idea per session rather than piling on. Recent runs have covered masking and the exhausting work of unmasking, the hormonal shifts that make ADHD louder in perimenopause, impulse spending, and what burnout looks like when you've been high-functioning for decades. Her voice carries the weight of someone who has actually done the reinvention she talks about, which matters when the topic is middle-age identity shifts and career pivots. What I like most is that she doesn't treat consistency as the holy grail. A lot of ADHD content secretly wants you to become neurotypical, and Caren rejects that premise outright. She's interested in playing to strengths, which she defines concretely rather than vaguely. The show rates 4.8 stars for good reason. If you're a woman who got diagnosed late, or suspects she should be, and you want a voice in your ear that sounds like a friend who gets it without coddling you, this is a strong weekly listen.
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