


The forgotten homework. The big feelings that come out of nowhere. The bright, capable kid who somehow can't get her shoes on in time for school.
You recognize it because you lived it.
Maybe you were diagnosed late. Maybe you're still figuring it out. Either way, you know what it cost you — the years of thinking you were lazy, dramatic, too much, not enough.
You don't want her to wait that long.
You want her to understand her brain now, while she's still building her sense of who she is. You want her to know there is nothing wrong with her — there's just a different way her brain works, and once she gets it, everything starts to make more sense.
You've already done the research...
You've read the books. You've followed the accounts. You've watched the Reels at 11pm trying to figure out if what she's doing is ADHD or just being a kid.
You've talked to her teachers. You've maybe gotten the diagnosis. You've maybe started meds. You've maybe tried the planners, the chore charts, the reward systems.
And some of it helps. Some of it doesn't. Most of it leaves you wondering if you're missing something — or making it worse.
Here's what nobody tells you: the information isn't the problem. There is more ADHD content available right now than ever before. The problem is figuring out what applies to her — her specific brain, her specific patterns, her specific stage of life.
That's what we do together.
