The AuDHD Psych Podcast
Clinical psychologist, PhD student and AuDHDer, Aaron Howearth chats about Autism, ADHD and their combination in humans, framed within their lived experience, their work in clinical psychology, and the neurodiversity-affirming paradigm.
Where Your Support Goes
The AuDHD Psych Podcast is part of a longer-term plan to fund and undertake independent research into early intervention programs for neurodivergent children.
Our goal is to eliminate the experience of deficit and disorder by helping neurodivergent children grow to be adults understand their own characteristics simply as differences and choose “good-fit” environments that align with their goals.
The AuDHD Psych Podcast
Ep 3: Understanding ADHD: Traits, Truths, & Lived Experience
🎙Episode 3: Understanding ADHD: Traits, Truths & Lived Experience
“You’re not inherently broken. Your characteristics aren’t disordered — they just don’t always match what the environment demands.”
Summary:
In this episode, Aaron takes a deep dive into ADHD through a neurodiversity-affirming lens. He explores what ADHD actually looks like in daily life, why inattentive and internalizing ADHD is so often misunderstood, and how early labels like “lazy” or “unmotivated” shape lifelong beliefs. Aaron unpacks myths, stereotypes, gendered expectations, cultural influences, and the difference between ADHD traits and ADHD disorder. Blending clinical insight with personal stories, he shows how impulsivity, inattention, and hyperactivity can create both challenges and unique strengths — depending entirely on the environment that surrounds them.
Takeaways:
- ADHD is defined clinically by impulsivity, inattention, and hyperactivity, but lived experience goes far beyond these criteria.
- Internalizing ADHD (common in women and quieter kids) often shows up as daydreaming, anxiety, stress, and masking — not disruptive behaviour.
- Early messages like “lazy” or “not trying hard enough” become internalized beliefs that shape self-worth.
- ADHD traits are not inherently disordered — difficulty appears when the environment demands something mismatched to the person’s natural wiring.
- Culture and gender expectations influence how ADHD is expressed and who gets diagnosed.
- Social stereotypes and TikTok trends capture tiny fragments of ADHD but often romanticize or oversimplify it.
- Impulsivity and inattention can lead to challenges (like overspending) and strengths (like creativity, hyperfocus, career pivots).
- Neurodiversity-affirming practice reframes ADHD as a difference, not a defect.
- The right environment can turn traits that look “disordered” in one context into superpowers in another.
- You are not broken — you simply have a brain that works differently from the societal default.
Keywords: AuDHD podcast, autism and ADHD, neurodivergent psychologist, neurodiversity affirming, Howearth Psychology, queer psychologist, autism diagnosis, ADHD awareness, lived experience, neurodivergent mental health, clinical psychology podcast