ADHD Chatter PodcastThe Tragic Impact Of Undiagnosed ADHD & How To Reverse It | Dr. Jacob Ambrose
At a glance
WHAT IT’S REALLY ABOUT
Undiagnosed ADHD, shame cycles, and healing through validation and relationships
- Childhood criticism of ADHD traits often becomes internalized shame, lowering self-esteem through the belief that something is wrong at one’s core.
- Chronic overwhelm amplifies executive dysfunction and emotional reactivity, creating burnout and reinforcing stereotypes that reflect “overwhelmed ADHD” more than ADHD itself.
- Rejection Sensitive Dysphoria (RSD) is portrayed as an intense, body-based response to perceived rejection that drives rumination, mood crashes, and social withdrawal, sometimes compounding into depression.
- Women with ADHD may face heightened stress due to social pressure to “take up less space,” leading to intense masking, perfectionism-like behaviors, and relational strain.
- In dating and relationships, ADHD-linked hyperfocus (limerence), attachment insecurities, and masking/unmasking cycles can destabilize connection, but healing is possible through diagnosis, communication pauses, and repeated experiences of acceptance.
IDEAS WORTH REMEMBERING
5 ideasADHD-related low self-esteem is often learned shame, not a personality flaw.
Ambrose frames shame as the internalized conclusion that the problem is “me,” formed after years of disproportionate negative feedback for ADHD wiring starting in childhood.
Masking can make ADHD look “managed” while silently increasing stress and burnout.
He describes many adults—especially women—refining behavior to fit social boxes, which may resemble perfectionism/OCD-like presentation while driving chronic cortisol load.
Overwhelm doesn’t just coexist with ADHD; it magnifies its hardest symptoms.
When overwhelmed, working memory and impulse control worsen, so what people label as “ADHD behavior” may often be the overwhelmed version of an ADHD nervous system.
RSD is intensified by ADHD’s attentional zoom—negative cues get hyperfocused on.
The same capacity to lock onto interests can lock onto tone shifts, brief emails, or minor critiques, escalating emotion, rumination, and “what’s wrong with me” thinking.
Women with ADHD may carry extra shame because society punishes ‘taking up space.’
Ambrose argues women face harsher social consequences for big emotions/energy, leading to heavier masking, self-silencing, and stress that can spill into relationships.
WORDS WORTH SAVING
5 quotesI think the reason that a lot of people with ADHD experience so much shame is because you are judged from childhood for the very wiring that is you.
— Dr. Jacob Ambrose
I would bet that our definition and stereotype of ADHD is not actually ADHD, but the overwhelmed person with ADHD.
— Dr. Jacob Ambrose
Burnout is, by definition, the process of having to tell yourself no repeatedly.
— Dr. Jacob Ambrose
I would say it's the equivalent to being hurt physically really bad and then being accused for bleeding, you know?
— Dr. Jacob Ambrose
Yeah, and that's the sometimes the saddest message is that you just need to work harder because you've been working so hard your whole life.
— Dr. Jacob Ambrose
High quality AI-generated summary created from speaker-labeled transcript.