The moment the story changed
I didn’t get diagnosed with ADHD as a kid. I got diagnosed in my sixties—after decades of white-knuckling my way through calendars, shame, and the quiet belief that I was simply “too much” and somehow still not enough. If you’re reading this with a lump in your throat because it feels familiar, I want you to know: you’re not broken. You’re learning the name of your brain.
This blog—The Rewired Nomad—is where I’m telling the truth about late-life ADHD, especially for women who spent a lifetime masking. I’ll share what I’m learning, what I’m unlearning, and what actually helps, with Alaska as my backdrop: a place that keeps reminding me that seasons change, and so can we.Why late diagnosis hits differently (especially for women)
Many of us were trained to cope quietly: be capable, be pleasant, don’t forget the birthday cards, don’t lose the keys, don’t be “dramatic.” We got good at compensating—until life got bigger. Menopause, caregiving, grief, retirement shifts, health changes, or simply the exhaustion of holding it all together can make the old systems collapse. A late diagnosis can bring relief—and a wave of grief. Relief because there’s an explanation. Grief because we wonder what life might have been like with support earlier. Both can be true. Both deserve tenderness.An Alaska lesson: stop arguing with the weather
My seasonal job in Alaska taught me something I didn’t expect: you can’t negotiate with the elements. If the wind is up, you layer. When it snows in May, put on your coat and gloves. If the light is long, you set an alarm to go to bed and close your blackout curtains. When the wildfires come, you prepare, you wait or you reroute. You don’t waste energy calling yourself a failure for not controlling nature.
That’s what learning about ADHD has felt like. Not a moral correction. A weather report. A map. A new way to pack for the day.ADHD isn’t a character flaw. It’s a nervous system that needs different supports.
Three coping strategies that helped me right away
I’m not a clinician, and this isn’t medical advice—just what helped me move from shame to self-acceptance in real life. If you’re newly diagnosed (or newly self-suspecting), consider trying one small experiment at a time.
- Externalize the remembering. I stopped expecting my brain to “hold” everything. I use one capture place (notes app or a small notebook) and one calendar. If it isn’t written down, it isn’t real—no guilt, just a rule.
- Make the first step tiny. When I’m stuck, I ask: “What’s the smallest next action?” Not “clean the kitchen,” but “put one dish in the sink.” Momentum is kinder than motivation.
- Use body-based resets. Two minutes of breathing, a short walk, cold water on my wrists, or stretching by the window. My brain listens better after my body feels safer.
