The Self-Esteem Reframe Every ADHD Brain Needs to Hear
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About this listen
If you have ADHD, chances are "just believe in yourself" has never quite landed. Not because you're broken, but because traditional self-esteem advice wasn't built for a brain like yours.
In this episode, David offers a reframe that actually makes sense for neurodivergent minds: self-esteem isn't about confidence or positivity. It's about something more fundamental — the belief that you will survive what happens next. That one shift changes how you start things, why waiting to feel ready keeps you stuck, and why you can feel completely competent in one area of your life and utterly lost in another.
Isabelle works through it live — and it gets uncomfortably specific. The kind of specific that might stop you mid-listen and make you go: oh. that's me.
In this episode:
- Why "believe in yourself" feels abstract or impossible for ADHD and neurodivergent brains — and why that's not on you
- The difference between self-esteem and self-efficacy, and which one actually gets you moving
- Why your confidence can feel solid one day and completely gone by 4pm
- How ADHD variability makes traditional self-esteem advice quietly set you up to fail
- Why doing something imperfectly still builds more trust in yourself than waiting until you're ready
- Why outsourcing might actually be a self-esteem strategy — and when it isn't
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Wait, What's That? Here are some of the terms and people mentioned in this episode explained:
Albert Bandura — The psychologist behind self-efficacy theory. Shifted the conversation from "feeling good about yourself" to something more specific: your belief that you can handle a particular situation. David respectfully disagrees with part of his model. In the best way.
Self-efficacy — Your belief that you can act and influence an outcome. The key thing: it's built through experience, not feelings. You don't have to feel ready to start building it.
Self-esteem (reframed) — Traditionally, how you feel about yourself. David's version: the belief that you'll survive the outcome — even when things go sideways. That shift makes it possible to act without needing confidence first.
VAST (Variable Attentional Stimulation Seeking Trait) — From ADHD 2.0 by Hallowell & Ratey. A reframe of ADHD as variability of attention rather than a deficit. Your ability to focus, engage, and follow through shifts depending on context, stimulation, and internal state. Sound familiar?
Norepinephrine — A neurotransmitter tied to attention and alertness. More involved in your moment-to-moment sense of I can do this than most people realize.
Metacognition — Thinking about your own thinking. Useful for understanding your patterns. Also a reliable path to an overthinking spiral at 11pm. Both things are true.
Self-perpetuating feedback loop — When thoughts, feelings, and behaviors keep reinforcing each other. Not acting builds doubt. Acting — even imperfectly — starts building something else instead.
Neophobic — The very human tendency to resist new things. Especially loud when there's no precedent and the stakes feel like they have no bottom.
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💬 What's something you know you're good at — but still can't quite say out loud without adding a disclaimer? Tell us in the comments.
🎧 Follow Something Shiny: ADHD for more conversations that help you understand your ADHD and remind you—you were never too much.