ADHD

Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) is a neurodevelopmental condition affecting attention regulation, impulse control, and executive function — not a character flaw, a sign of laziness, or the result of insufficient willpower or effort…

Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) is a neurodevelopmental condition affecting attention regulation, impulse control, and executive function — not a character flaw, a sign of laziness, or the result of insufficient willpower or effort…

Understanding ADHD

Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) is a neurodevelopmental condition affecting attention regulation, impulse control, and executive function — not a character flaw, a sign of laziness, or the result of insufficient willpower or effort. This distinction matters enormously, because the narrative of personal failure is one that people with ADHD absorb deeply and carry heavily, often for decades before receiving a proper diagnosis. ADHD is a real, well-documented neurological condition with a strong genetic basis and consistent neuroimaging correlates — one that responds well to both behavioral treatment and, for many people, medication management.

ADHD presents differently across the lifespan and across gender. The hyperactive, impulsive child who cannot stay in his seat is one presentation — but it is not the only one, and increasingly not the most commonly recognized one. Adults with ADHD often present primarily with inattention, disorganization, time blindness, emotional dysregulation, and chronic underperformance relative to their intelligence. Women and girls with ADHD have historically been underidentified because they more often present with internalizing rather than externalizing symptoms. Understanding this diversity of presentation is essential for effective treatment.

Challenges We Address

ADHD creates challenges across virtually every domain of daily life. At work or school, ADHD affects the ability to begin tasks (especially large, complex, or boring ones), maintain focus through to completion, manage time effectively, organize materials and information, prioritize competing demands, and regulate the emotional responses to frustration and failure that ADHD commonly produces. At home, ADHD affects organization, household management, financial management, and the consistency demanded by parenting. In relationships, ADHD can produce patterns of forgetfulness, apparent inattentiveness, emotional volatility, and chronic underdelivery on commitments that strain even loving partnerships.

ADHD-related shame is one of the most important and often underaddressed dimensions of the condition. Years of falling short of expectations — despite genuine effort — produce a deeply internalized narrative of inadequacy, laziness, and fundamental brokenness that accurate psychoeducation and targeted therapy can substantially address. One of the most meaningful aspects of ADHD treatment at LC Psych is the opportunity to reframe a lifetime of experiences through an accurate, compassionate, and neurologically informed lens.

Our Therapeutic Approach

Cognitive Behavioral Therapy for ADHD is the most evidence-based psychological treatment for ADHD in adults, and LC Psych therapists are experienced in delivering it. CBT for ADHD targets executive function skill-building in the areas most affected by the condition — including task initiation, time management, organization, and follow-through — using practical, structured strategies adapted to the ADHD profile. Cognitive components of CBT for ADHD address the negative self-beliefs, shame-driven avoidance, and cognitive distortions that develop in the context of chronic executive dysfunction and repeated failure experiences.

Psychoeducation is an important and often transformative component of ADHD treatment — helping clients understand the neuroscience of their condition, normalize their experiences, and approach their challenges with self-compassion rather than self-criticism. Sessions are structured with a brief agenda to support executive function during the session itself, and practical skill-building exercises are assigned between sessions with explicit implementation intentions to bridge the gap between knowing and doing that is so central to the ADHD experience. When medication management is part of the client's treatment plan, LC Psych therapists actively collaborate with prescribers to coordinate care.

What to Expect in Sessions

ADHD treatment at LC Psych begins with a thorough clinical assessment that may include a formal ADHD evaluation or review of prior diagnostic documentation, as well as a comprehensive understanding of how ADHD affects the client's specific life circumstances and goals. Early sessions focus on building awareness of ADHD patterns and establishing practical strategies for the most pressing challenges. The session format is deliberately structured — with an agenda reviewed at the start and key takeaways summarized at the end — because this structure compensates for some of the executive function demands that unstructured sessions place on clients with ADHD.

Progress in ADHD therapy tends to be active and skill-focused, with a practical quality that many clients find genuinely engaging. Real, functional improvements — in work performance, organization, relationship quality, and emotional regulation — are achievable with commitment to the process. Your therapist will celebrate your progress, problem-solve your setbacks, and provide the consistent, supportive accountability that is often itself one of the most therapeutic elements of ADHD treatment.

Getting Started at LC Psych

If ADHD has been making life harder than it needs to be — whether newly diagnosed or long recognized — the skilled clinicians at LC Psych are ready to help you build the strategies and self-understanding to turn things around. To schedule an appointment, call 859-525-4911 or visit lcpsych.com. Your brain works differently — and with the right support, differently can become a genuine advantage.

Therapists Treating ADHD

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