ADHD with Jenna Free

Jenna Free
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Jan 19, 2026 • 22min

EP. 43: What does regulation do for ADHD?

Explore how motivation plays a crucial role in regulating ADHD. Push motivators often lead to guilt, while pull motivators inspire genuine desire for a vibrant life. Discover five key benefits of regulation, from enhanced blood flow for clearer thinking to improved executive functioning and reduced symptoms. Jenna emphasizes sustainable living and the importance of enjoyment as a primary motivator. Reflect on what you truly want, not what you think you should do.
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15 snips
Jan 12, 2026 • 23min

EP. 42: Why Your ADHD Apps Aren't Working (Try This Analog Approach Instead) | ADHD with Jenna Free

Explore why many ADHD apps can create more chaos than clarity. Discover the benefits of grounding with physical tools, like a paper calendar system that simplifies your routine. Jenna emphasizes the importance of choosing functional tools over flashy ones, encouraging a 'less is more' philosophy. Learn to avoid digital overstimulation and find peace with analog solutions that help regulate your nervous system. With practical insights and a checklist, this discussion paves the way for a more effective ADHD management approach.
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Jan 5, 2026 • 19min

EP. 41: Why You Can't Change Your ADHD Habits (Your Identity Is Keeping You Stuck) | ADHD with Jenna Free

Explore how self-identity shapes experiences for those with ADHD. Discover the pitfalls of common stereotypes that limit change. Learn how your brain defends its identity, making transformation feel unsafe. Jenna shares her journey from strict dieting to intuitive eating, showing the power of identity shifts. Understand that lasting habits stem from your core self, not sheer willpower. Practical steps are offered to start changing self-descriptions and limiting beliefs, promoting a healthier ADHD identity.
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Dec 29, 2025 • 24min

EP. 40: Why Long-Term Goals Feel Impossible with ADHD (And How to Change That) | ADHD with Jenna Free

Long-term goals often feel impossible due to pursuing them from a dysregulated survival state. Urgency, shame, and fear lead to sprint motivation, creating burnout and anxiety. Jenna illustrates this with a bear versus berry-picking metaphor, highlighting the need for calm, steady focus. She emphasizes the importance of regulated motivation for sustainable growth. By sharing her own experience, Jenna shows how consistent, present-focused efforts yield better results. A practical tip encourages shifting from urgency to enjoying small tasks.
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Dec 22, 2025 • 34min

EP. 39 (Replay of EP. 1): STOP FIGHTING Your ADHD Brain! The UNEXPECTED Path to Success No One's Talking About | ADHD with Jenna Free

This is a replay of our foundational Episode 1 - perfect for new listeners or anyone who wants a refresher on The ADHD Regulation Method! (Called the ADHD Reset in this episode) You can get your free ADHD Regulation Guide here - www.adhdwithjennafree.com/adhdguide Chapters 00:00 Rethinking ADHD: A New Perspective 11:38 The Journey to Regulation: Finding Balance 19:07 The Impact of Regulation on Daily Life 26:03 Awareness and Acceptance: The Key to Transformation Summary Hi! I'm Jenna Free, therapist for ADHD with ADHD here to share a transformative perspective on ADHD, emphasizing the importance of understanding that we have ADHD but we are also in fight or flight and that is the true problem. I discuss the concept of dysregulation and how ADHDers often find themselves in a chronic state of fight or flight, which can lead to feelings of overwhelm and paralysis. I am here to advocate for deeper internal work to achieve regulation and balance, moving away from superficial coping strategies. Today I am sharing my unique approach - learning the philosophy of The ADHD Reset (now called the ADHD Regulation Method) is vital in living well with ADHD. From here we will talk about how to implement this in your life and beyond. Takeaways ADHD should be viewed as a brain difference, not a problem. Many (all?) ADHDers experience chronic dysregulation and fight or flight. Superficial coping strategies are not enough for true transformation. Awareness of dysregulation is the first step to change. Regulation allows for a more relaxed and sustainable way of living. Fear and shame can fuel short bursts of energy but are not sustainable. Finding balance is key to managing ADHD symptoms effectively. The journey to regulation involves internal work and acceptance. Enjoyment of life should be the ultimate goal, not just productivity. Transformation is possible with the right approach and mindset. Connect with Me Instagram TikTok
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8 snips
Dec 15, 2025 • 21min

EP. 38: Why Your ADHD Symptoms Feel Worse as You Age (It's Not What You Think) | ADHD with Jenna Free

Find out why ADHD symptoms can feel worse as you age, and it's not just aging! Hormonal changes during perimenopause and menopause disrupt dopamine regulation, leading to emotional dysregulation. Jenna shares what this dysregulation looks like and offers three supportive strategies. The pressure of societal expectations around aging also plays a significant role in how we perceive ourselves. Personal stories and celebrity examples highlight the importance of embracing aging with confidence and recognizing the difference between discomfort and genuine threats.
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Dec 8, 2025 • 20min

EP. 37: Should I Take ADHD Medication? The Truth About Meds and Regulation | ADHD with Jenna Free

You can get your free ADHD Regulation Guide here - www.adhdwithjennafree.com/adhdguide Chapters 00:00 Introduction: Meds and Regulation - Do They Go Together? 02:00 What ADHD Medication Actually Does 04:00 The Gas vs The Steering Wheel Analogy 06:00 Medication is a Tool, Not the Foundation 08:00 What ADHD Meds Can and Can't Do 10:00 Medication Can Magnify Your Current State 13:00 Trial and Error is Normal (And Expected) 15:00 Possible Side Effects and Who Can't Take Meds 17:00 Where Regulation Work Fits In Summary In this episode, I clarify my stance on ADHD medication and where it fits with regulation work. This isn't about whether you should or shouldn't take meds - that's deeply personal. But I want to give you context on what to expect and why both can work together beautifully. ADHD medication and regulation do two very different things. Medication is like gas in your tank - it helps with attention, impulsivity, working memory, and brain fog. But regulation provides the steering wheel, brakes, and pedals - it gives you the ability to actually maneuver with that energy. Medication doesn't regulate your nervous system, change fear-based beliefs, or get you out of fight or flight. I share results from a poll where the most common response about what meds help with was "I don't know" - which shows how important it is to get clear on what you want from medication. Medication can magnify the state you're in, so if you're dysregulated, stimulants might intensify that frantic energy. Whether meds work for you or not, regulation work should be the foundation - it helps every ADHDer with no side effects or downsides. Action Step This week, if you're on ADHD medication, get really honest with yourself: What do I want from my medication? Is it doing what I want it to do? How do I actually feel on it - not just "am I more productive" but am I present, am I happy, am I enjoying my day, or am I just anxious and getting more paperwork done? You are the expert on how it feels in your body. If you don't love how you feel, it doesn't mean meds aren't right for you or that you don't have ADHD - it might mean you need a dosage change or different type. Talk to your doctor about it. And whether you're on meds or not, start or continue regulation work as your foundation - it's accessible to everyone and helps with or without medication. Takeaways ADHD medication and regulation work together - meds are like gas in the tank (performance enhancer for brain functions), regulation is the steering wheel, brakes, and pedals (ability to maneuver that energy) Medication helps with attention, impulsivity, working memory, and brain fog, but it doesn't regulate your nervous system, change fear-based beliefs, or get you out of fight or flight Medication can magnify the state you're in - if you're dysregulated, stimulants might intensify that frantic energy rather than help Get clear on what you want from medication and whether it's actually doing that - you're the expert on how it feels in your body, not a chart or your doctor Regulation work is the foundation that helps every ADHDer with no side effects or downsides - whether you take meds or not, regulation should be the base everything else builds on Connect with Me Instagram TikTok
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Dec 1, 2025 • 21min

EP. 36: "What Will People Think?" Why ADHD Makes You a People Pleaser (The Fawn Response) | ADHD with Jenna Free

You can get your free ADHD Regulation Guide here - www.adhdwithjennafree.com/adhdguide Join the waitlist for ADHD Groups (starting January) - www.adhdwithjennafree.com/groups Chapters 00:00 Introduction: Worrying What People Think 01:00 The Fawn Response: A Safety Mechanism 03:00 The Trap of External Regulation 05:00 It's Safe to Be Misunderstood 07:00 My Garbage Bag Story: Regulation in Action 09:00 How Fawn Costs Us Our Lives 11:00 The Fear No Longer Drives the Bus 13:00 Practice: Who Am I Trying to Keep Safe? 16:00 Building Freedom Through Tiny Moments 18:00 Their Dysregulation Doesn't Have to Be Mine Summary In this episode, I talk about ADHD people pleasing and the fawn response - why worrying what people think isn't about being nice, it's a nervous system safety response. If you've ever changed what you were going to do because of what someone might think (even a stranger), this is for you. For people with ADHD and chronic dysregulation, the fawn response makes us believe that keeping everyone happy, approved of, and not upset is what keeps us safe. When we've lived in fight or flight for years, our body reads conflict, judgment, or criticism as life-threatening danger - even though logically we know it's not. I explain how this people pleasing pattern is actually external regulation, where we try to control what other people think so we can feel calmer and safer. But here's the trap: when we worry what people think, we're not actually hearing them - we're hearing ourselves and reacting to imaginary opinions as if they're facts. I share a personal story about taking out the garbage with a plastic bag on my head (conditioner treatment) when construction workers were outside, and how I caught myself in the fawn response and chose to do it anyway to show my nervous system I'm safe. The fawn response costs us a lot - we live smaller, shape our lives around imaginary opinions, delay what we want, and let fear dictate our decisions. When we start regulating, we stop needing other people's approval to feel safe. We can handle being misunderstood, judged, or criticized because we know we're safe regardless. This episode gives you a practice to start breaking down these walls and building freedom through tiny moments of choosing what you want to do instead of what feels safest. Action Step This week, catch yourself hesitating or about to change what you're doing because of what someone might think. Pause and ask: "Who am I trying to keep safe right now? What am I fearing?" Notice the specific worry - are you worried your coworker will think you're lazy if you take a break? That someone will judge you? Once you're aware, take one small step toward what you actually want to do. Push yourself just a little past that discomfort (not obliterating your comfort zone, just stretching it). Go grab that coffee, take that break, ask for that help. See if you can collect evidence that you're safe even when people might be thinking things about you. Remember: their potential thoughts are not dangerous. You are safe. Takeaways ADHD people pleasing isn't about being nice - it's the fawn response, a nervous system safety mechanism where your body believes keeping everyone happy is what keeps you safe When we worry what people think, we're not hearing them - we're hearing ourselves and reacting to imaginary opinions as if they're facts The fawn response costs us our lives - we live smaller, delay what we want, and let 10% (or way more) of our decisions be dictated by imaginary scenarios Real regulation means the fear no longer drives the bus - you can handle being misunderstood, judged, or criticized because you trust you're safe regardless Most people aren't thinking about you anyway - they're worried about what you think of them, and any judgment they do have is usually their dysregulation talking Connect with Me Instagram TikTok
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23 snips
Nov 24, 2025 • 27min

EP. 35: How to Regulate For Real: Why Tips and Tricks Don't Work for ADHD | ADHD with Jenna Free

Shift your perspective on ADHD regulation! The discussion dives into why surface-level tips and tricks fail to create lasting change. Explore the importance of internal regulation over external coping methods. Learn how to work through your nervous system, examine your beliefs, and shift toward sustainable behaviors. Discover that true regulation requires deeper understanding and patience, along with practical cues to help you notice your body's responses. Real change is all about internal transformation, not just quick fixes!
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Nov 17, 2025 • 23min

EP. 34: ADHD at Work: Putting Work in Its Place (The Severance Episode) | ADHD with Jenna Free

You can get your free ADHD Regulation Guide here - www.adhdwithjennafree.com/adhdguide Take the free Dysregulation Quiz here - https://adhdwithjennafree.typeform.com/adhdquiz Register for the ADHD at Work 2.0 Workshop - www.adhdwithjennafree.com/adhdwork Chapters 00:00 Introduction: ADHD at Work and the Severance Episode 01:00 When the Mental Boundary Between Work and Life Disappears 03:00 Why Everything Feels Urgent When You're Dysregulated 05:00 You Can't Work Your Way to Peace 06:00 Signs You've Lost Your Work-Life Severance 08:00 Regulating Your Body at Work and at Home 10:00 The Beliefs Behind Your Urgency 13:00 Regulating Your Behavior: Finding Balance 16:00 My Personal Experience with Work Boundaries 19:00 What Regulation Actually Looks Like 21:00 ADHD at Work 2.0 Workshop Announcement Summary In this episode, I talk about ADHD at work and how to actually put work in its place - not with better time management or productivity hacks, but with nervous system regulation. If you've ever been at your kid's soccer game and suddenly remembered an email you should have sent, and now your whole body feels uncomfortable until you send it, this is for you. I'm calling this "the Severance episode" after the TV show, because for ADHDers struggling with ADHD burnout and work-life balance, the mental boundary between work and life can completely disappear. I break down why ADHD makes it so hard to stop thinking about work, even when you desperately want to rest. When you're dysregulated, everything feels urgent - you can't stop thinking about work at home, but then when it's actually work time, you might be stuck in ADHD procrastination and overwhelm. It's the worst trap. I explain how working from dysregulation creates more dysregulation, so you'll never work yourself into peace. I also share the three types of regulation you need: body (slowing down, breathing, relaxing tension), mind (challenging beliefs like "if I don't stay on top of this, everything will fall apart"), and behavior (creating consistency instead of extreme work patterns). I share my own journey from obsessively thinking about work 24/7 to now having natural boundaries and actually feeling done at the end of the day. This episode will help you understand why ADHD at work feels so exhausting and what you can actually do about it. Action Step This week, pick one area to start practicing regulation. For your body: slow your walking between meetings or around your house, bring your shoulders down from your ears, and check if you're breathing or holding your breath. For your mind: notice when you feel urgent and ask yourself "what belief is driving this urgency?" Is it "if I don't stay on top of this, everything will fall apart" or "if I'm not thinking about it, I'll forget something"? For your behavior: set a quitting time and actually stop, regardless of how much you got done. Notice when you think "just one more email" - that's dysregulation trying to externally regulate. Start small with whichever feels most doable. Takeaways For dysregulated ADHD brains, the mental boundary between work and life can completely disappear When you're dysregulated, everything feels urgent - this is why you can't stop thinking about work You can't work your way to peace - working from dysregulation creates more dysregulation Three types of regulation: body (slow down, breathe, relax tension), mind (challenge beliefs behind urgency), behavior (create consistency instead of extremes) Regulation gives you the internal ability to turn work off when you want rest, and turn it on when you want to work - that's the real skill Connect with Me Instagram TikTok

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