Advice for ADHD Women over 50

Terena Bell
4 min readJan 15, 2019
Elaine Taylor-Klaus of Impact ADHD

You may have ADHD and not even know it. “[I j]ust got a new client who was diagnosed at 63,” says Elaine Taylor-Klaus, cofounder of ImpactADHD, an Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder consultancy. She says its reputation as a “kids’ disease” is wrong: Present from birth, ADHD is a lifelong neurological condition .

Contrary to its name, Attention-Deficit doesn’t mean you can’t pay attention. Instead, you pay too much attention. When you have ADHD, it’s hard to focus on individual tasks because you can’t stop focusing on everything else that’s going on. Take work, for example: Maybe the person you share an office with types too loudly or you can’t zone out the conversations happening in the hall. Maybe you keep hearing the phone in the next room ringing through the wall. Whatever it is, you simply can’t screen out the noise the way that other people can. And when you finally do focus, you zone in so tightly that hours pass before you know it.

Here’s why: The ADHD mind has an undersupply of dopamine and norepinephrine, two neurotransmitters essential to filtering stimuli the brain doesn’t need from stimuli it does. Without them, your mind is a lake without a dam — flooded by every piece of information before it. You feel unable to pay attention because your attention goes to everything you encounter. It’s not easy.

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Terena Bell

Reporter & fiction writer; series editor, Writing Through the Classics; short story editor for hire; sponsor more writing here: buymeacoffee.com/terenabell