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Taking Control: The ADHD Podcast

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Taking Control: The ADHD Podcast
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547 episódios

  • Taking Control: The ADHD Podcast

    Why Advice Stops Working When You’re Tired

    28/05/2026 | 26min
    Grab the Guide ... FREE!
    If you've spent years thinking the problem with planning is you — too scattered, too inconsistent, not disciplined enough — this guide is FOR YOU! Visit https://takecontroladhd.com/planwithadhd and get started today!
    --- 

    We've all been there: someone offers a perfectly reasonable suggestion, and instead of taking it in, you bristle. You're tired. You're cranky. The last thing you want is advice. This week, Pete and Nikki tackle what happens when ADHD meets fatigue — and why the strategies that usually work suddenly don't.
    This isn't laziness. It isn't a character flaw. It's what happens when executive functions are already running on a deficit and you pile fatigue on top. Pete brings the research, including a study showing 62% of adults with ADHD meet the criteria for chronic fatigue syndrome — a reminder that "everybody gets tired" is true, but ADHD brains get tired in a different and vastly more significant way.
    The conversation moves from the science to the lived experience: the guilt loop that keeps you from resting, the way fatigue distorts reality until small tasks feel like moral referendums, and the rewiring required to treat recovery as part of the work — not a reward you have to earn.
    Plus: why "I don't wanna" might be a capacity check in disguise, the four categories of recovery that actually work (hint: sleep is only one of them), and Nikki's insight that the recovery muscle is built through trial and error, not advance planning.

    LINKS & RESOURCES
    Past episode referenced: The Opportunity Cost
    Past episode referenced: Capacity conversation with Brooke Schnittman
    Support the Show on Patreon
    Dig into the podcast Shownotes Database

    (00:00) - Welcome to Taking Control: The ADHD Podcast

    (03:49) - The Tired Problem

    ★ Support this podcast on Patreon ★
  • Taking Control: The ADHD Podcast

    Why “I’ll Deal With It Later” Is an Energy Leak with Ari Tuckman

    21/05/2026 | 38min
    Grab the Guide ... FREE!
    If you've spent years thinking the problem with planning is you — too scattered, too inconsistent, not disciplined enough — this guide is FOR YOU! Visit https://takecontroladhd.com/planwithadhd and get started today!
    --- 

    We've all said it. "I'll deal with it later." And somehow, later never comes. The thing just sits there — not in your calendar, but in your head. It pings you in the shower. It shows up right before you fall asleep. That's an energy leak.
    This week, Ari Tuckman returns for his sixth appearance to unpack what's actually happening when we tell ourselves "later." What is the ADHD brain doing in that moment? Are we making a real decision, or just kicking the can? And how do we tell the difference?
    We dig into:
    The two flavors of procrastination — not feeling the future vs. avoiding the discomfort
    Why "later" needs a "when," and what specificity actually changes
    The difference between a task that needs doing and a decision that needs making
    How to close an open loop that's been open way too long
    Going toward positives vs. avoiding negatives, and why one of those is more sustainable
    Time estimation, and why some things aren't knowable until you start
    Ari's new book, the ADHD Productivity Manual
    Guest Spotlight
    Ari Tuckman, PsyD is a psychologist, author, and international presenter specializing in ADHD. He's given more than 600 presentations and podcast interviews across America and nine other countries, and is the author of four books: ADHD After Dark, Understand Your Brain, Get More Done, More Attention, Less Deficit, and Integrative Treatment for Adult ADHD. He chairs the CHADD Conference Committee. This is his sixth appearance on the show.
    Links & Notes
    Ari's website: https://drarituckman.com
    Ari on Instagram: @AriTuckmanPsyD
    Books by Ari Tuckman:ADHD After Dark
    Understand Your Brain, Get More Done
    More Attention, Less Deficit
    Integrative Treatment for Adult ADHD
    ADHD Productivity Manual

    (00:00) - Welcome to Taking Control: The ADHD Podcast

    (01:52) - Join us over on Patreon!

    (02:52) - Introducing Ari Tuckman

    (03:45) - "I'll do it later..."

    ★ Support this podcast on Patreon ★
  • Taking Control: The ADHD Podcast

    The Schedule That Bends Without Breaking

    14/05/2026 | 26min
    Grab the Guide ... FREE!
    If you've spent years thinking the problem with planning is you — too scattered, too inconsistent, not disciplined enough — this guide is FOR YOU! Visit https://takecontroladhd.com/planwithadhd and get started today!
    --- 

    You've heard it before, probably said it yourself: time blocking doesn't work for me. Every block that slips becomes one more piece of evidence that you've failed the system — or that the system has failed you. So this week, Nikki and Pete try something different. They change the word.
    Nikki walks through three terms that get thrown around in planning circles — intentional planning, time blocking, and the one she's been reaching for more and more lately: flexible scheduling. Pete pushes back (gently, mostly) on why we need a new word for something that was never supposed to be rigid in the first place. And together they unpack the real reason so many ADHDers bounce off scheduling: it's not the strategy, it's the story we tell ourselves when the strategy bends.
    Along the way: the dangerous allure of hyperscheduling and why it only really works if your livelihood is measured in billable minutes; why time blindness isn't a reason to skip time blocking (and why estimation was never the point); the spoon theory and scheduling around energy instead of just hours; and Pete's brand-new metaphor — age of time — for thinking about margin, buffer, and what it feels like to live three weeks ahead of yourself instead of one day behind.
    Plus, Nikki drops another download: Your ADHD Schedule Starter, a short, practical guide for building a flexible schedule step by step, with a reflection section built in so you can keep adjusting as you go. Link in the show notes.
    Links & Notes
    Your ADHD Schedule Starter (free download)
    Unapologetically ADHD by Pete Wright and Nikki Kinzer — the book behind the framework
    Four Thousand Weeks: Time Management for Mortals by Oliver Burkeman
    GPS Planning Membership — Nikki's coaching community for planning, capture, and workflow
    Support the show on Patreon — early ad-free episodes, livestream recordings, members-only Discord
    Dig into the podcast Shownotes Database

    (00:00) - Welcome to Taking Control: The ADHD Podcast

    (01:24) - Patreon.com/TheADHDPodcast

    (02:38) - Talking Schedules

    ★ Support this podcast on Patreon ★
  • Taking Control: The ADHD Podcast

    What to Look For in a Planning Tool

    07/05/2026 | 36min
    Grab the Guide ... FREE!
    If you've spent years thinking the problem with planning is you — too scattered, too inconsistent, not disciplined enough — this guide is FOR YOU! Visit https://takecontroladhd.com/planwithadhd and get started today!
    --- 

    There's a moment every ADHDer knows: you open the task manager, see the sea of red, and close it again. This week, Nikki and Pete sit with that moment — and with what it's actually telling you.
    The instinct is to blame the tool. Something's wrong with the app, the planner, the notebook. Time for something new. But what if the tool is doing exactly what it's supposed to do, and the thing you're really avoiding is something else entirely?
    Nikki walks through the two non-negotiables of any planning toolkit, why hybrid systems quietly fall apart in the in-between stages, and the one thing she asks every new one-on-one client to do within a week. Pete confesses to running four systems at once, lays out his tool-finding intestines on the table (his words, not ours), and makes the case for why your app isn't just an app — it's a lifeline. Plus: FOBO, task rot, the moral weight of a few simple minutes, and why the best tools are the ones that ask you to pay for them.
    Stick around for Nikki's brand-new download, Your Planning Tool Finder — a short guide to the questions worth answering before you pick your next tool. Link below.
    Links & Notes
    Your Planning Tool Finder (free download)
    Unapologetically ADHD by Pete Wright and Nikki Kinzer — the book behind the framework
    GPS Planning Membership — Nikki's coaching community for planning, capture, and workflow
    Support the show on Patreon — early ad-free episodes, livestream recordings, members-only Discord: 

    (00:00) - Welcome to Taking Control: The ADHD Podcast

    (02:22) - Patreon.com/TheADHDPodcast

    (03:13) - Talking Tools

    ★ Support this podcast on Patreon ★
  • Taking Control: The ADHD Podcast

    When Productivity Advice Ignores Capacity with Brooke Schnittman

    30/04/2026 | 38min
    Grab the Guide ... FREE!
    If you've spent years thinking the problem with planning is you — too scattered, too inconsistent, not disciplined enough — this guide is FOR YOU! Visit https://takecontroladhd.com/planwithadhd and get started today!
    --- 

    Most productivity advice was built for brains that start on demand, stay consistent, and prioritize logically. That's not us.
    This week, Brooke Schnittman returns for her third visit to the show to dig into one of the most frustrating disconnects in ADHD life: the gap between what we think we can do in a day and what our actual capacity will allow. Pete and Nikki walk through the familiar trap — fifteen red-line tasks, two hours of actual focus time, and the stubborn belief that somehow we'll get it all done anyway. Brooke names it for what it is: magical thinking backed by people-pleasing, propped up by shame.
    Together they explore why ADHD brains need to plan to plan, what "sampling the no" actually looks like in practice, and how masking shows up in our task lists in ways we rarely notice. Brooke introduces her STOP framework for sorting the week — Stressful, Time-consuming, Ordinary, Passionate — and makes a case for the kind of white space most of us have been taught to see as failure.
    There's also a frank conversation about burnout: what it looks like for neurodivergent people, why it lasts longer than we expect, and the 1% action that can keep momentum alive when everything else has stopped. And a reminder that if you're showing up at 40% battery, then 40% is your 100% for the day — and that's enough.
    GUEST SPOTLIGHT
    Brooke Schnittman, MA, PCC, BCC is a nationally recognized ADHD coach and the founder of Coaching With Brooke. She's the author of Activate Your ADHD Potential, a roadmap for high-achieving ADHDers who are tired of running fast and getting nowhere. Brooke trains ADHD coaches through her 3C Activation System and is passionate about bringing ADHD coaching into universities to support students directly. This is her third appearance on the show.
    LINKS & NOTES
    Coaching With Brooke
    Activate Your ADHD Potential by Brooke Schnittman
    Support the Show on Patreon
    Dig into the podcast Shownotes Database

    (00:00) - Welcome to Taking Control: The ADHD Podcast

    (03:30) - Intentions Versus Expectations

    (09:58) - Productivity and People Pleasing

    (20:41) - The Complicated Question of Capacity

    (31:54) - Burnout

    ★ Support this podcast on Patreon ★
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Sobre Taking Control: The ADHD Podcast
Nikki Kinzer and Pete Wright offer support, life management strategies, and time and technology tips, dedicated to anyone looking to take control while living with ADHD.
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