ADHD Grief: The Unjust Won’t Prosper
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Some wounds don’t come from loss alone… they come from the chaos left behind after someone you love is gone. In this episode of Chatterbrain Mommy Podcast, I open up about grief, spiritual warfare, family pain, and what it feels like when your mind is trying to process heartbreak, anger, unanswered questions, and injustice all at the same time.
After the passing of my sister, our family has continued to experience harassment, lies, confusion, and emotional turmoil connected to someone who brought pain into her life.
Watching someone disrespect the name and memory of a person you deeply loved can make grief feel even heavier.
And when you live with an ADHD mind, the overthinking, replaying conversations, emotional spiraling, and inability to “turn your brain off” can feel exhausting.
But this episode is not about revenge.
It’s about release.
I’m talking honestly about what it means to step back and let God fight battles that are too heavy for human hands.
Because eventually, you realize something: the unjust may look like they’re winning for a season, but evil never truly prospers.
Lies eventually collapse under their own weight. Darkness always comes to light.
And peace becomes more valuable than proving yourself to people committed to chaos.
This conversation is for anyone navigating:
- Family grief and loss
- Complicated mourning after trauma
- Anger while trying to remain faithful
- ADHD emotional overwhelm and rumination
- Feeling spiritually exhausted
- Letting go of vengeance and trusting God with justice
- Protecting your peace while still hurting
- Trying to heal while others continue creating confusion
I’m choosing to heal.
I’m choosing peace.
I’m choosing to protect my family, my mind, and my spirit.
And most importantly, I’m choosing to let God handle what I cannot.
The truth doesn’t need help surviving.
And what’s done in darkness always finds light.
If you’ve ever had to grieve while still dealing with toxic people, manipulation, or emotional attacks, I hope this episode reminds you that you are not alone. God sees every tear, every sleepless night, every anxious thought, and every silent prayer.
Sometimes the strongest thing you can do is stop fighting people… and start surrendering the situation to God.