The question often asked in therapy is, “Tell me about a place you would never want to go back to—not a destination, a setting.” For many adults with ADHD, the answer is often school. Not just school in general, but a specific classroom, teacher, or period of time that felt confusing, discouraging, or humiliating.
Reflecting on their time in school, adults with ADHD remember being described as capable but inconsistent, bright but not applying themselves, or disruptive, distracted, or careless. These descriptions were written in report cards, spoken in meetings, or implied through daily interactions. The messages stay with them, buried deep within.
Effort is often misunderstood for students with ADHD. Difficulties with attention, organization, follow-through, or impulse control are frequently interpreted as a lack of effort or motivation. This can lead to feelings of unworthiness and not measuring up. However, the issue for most children with ADHD was never about effort but about being asked to function in ways that didn’t align with how their brain operated.
These early experiences can have a lasting impact. They persist because they were repeated across multiple years and contexts, came from authority figures, and because many people only come to understand their ADHD later in life. While a new understanding can reframe the past, self-doubt still lingers.
These early experiences don’t just stay in memory; they surface in subtle ways. Hesitation when facing new challenges, assuming you’ll fall short, sensitivity to feedback, and a drive to overcompensate are common patterns. For parents, these patterns can become especially visible when their own children navigate school.
It’s important to reconsider what those early school experiences actually reflected. They were not a clear measure of ability, motivation, or character but rather a gap between what the environment expected and how the individual’s brain functioned. It reflects a limited understanding of ADHD and systems not designed with neurodiversity in mind.
While there is no need to revisit every school memory, it can be useful to notice what still lingers. How do you feel when school comes up, what assumptions do you carry about yourself, and how quickly do old interpretations resurface under stress? This awareness allows for a shift in how you respond, separating your history from your current reality, and approaching yourself and your children with more understanding.
The goal is to ensure that those early experiences don’t define what you expect from yourself and your children today.
