ADHD & Hormonal Imbalance: The Hidden Struggle in Women

Let's get into it, sis—hormones. They are the ones pulling the strings, and when they are out of whack? Whoa, it's a rollercoaster ride with no seatbelt.

What Is Hormonal Imbalance, Then?

Hormones are your body's chemical messengers, and when they are out of kilter, it's a domino effect in the form of symptoms.

The Endocrine Society reports that hormonal imbalance affects nearly 80% of women throughout their lifetime, and most of us don't know it.

The Signs That Your Hormones Might Be Off Balance

  • Mood swings like none other

  • Fatigue, which no nap can cure

  • Heavy or Irregular Periods

  • Weight gain (especially in the abdominal area)

  • Brain clouding and forgetfulness

  • Depression, anxiety, or irritability

Does it ring a bell for you?

It's not your imagination. It might be your hormones.

Regular Offenders of Imbalance in the

  • Chronic stress can disrupt cortisol levels and upset the estrogen-progesterone balance.

  • Poor Sleep: Your body regulates hormones while it sleeps. Without sleep, there's an imbalance of hormones.

  • Processed food and sugar: These can also trigger increased insulin resistance and inflammation.

  • Postpartum Changes: Giving birth puts hormones through the wringer.

  • Perimenopause: the gradual lead-up period towards menopause, most commonly in your 40's or 30's.

How to Know for Sure

  • You can ask your doctor for the following tests, which measure:

  • Levels of estrogen, progesterone, and testosterone

  • TSH, T3, and T4 are

  • Cortisol levels

  • Blood sugar level and insulin sensitivity

Pro tip: Speak up for yourself. If you're not feeling right, speak up for testing. You know your body best.

Treatment Options—Because You Deserve to Feel Good

  • Medical Therapies: hormone replacement therapy (HRT), thyroid medication, the pill (depending on the condition).

  • Lifestyle Change: Adopt sleep hygiene, healthy diet, and stress management as practiced by royalties

  • Supplements include magnesium, vitamin D, omega-3 fats, and adaptogens

  • Holistic Practices: Yoga, chiropractic, acupuncture, and mindfulness

Personal Note by Netta (aka Chatterbrain Mommy)

I didn't know my mood swings, insomnia, and anxiety were linked with hormonal shifts until the day I visited a functional medicine physician for the first time. It was a game-changer. Monitoring my period taught me my body's rhythm—and broke the habit of judging myself as "moody."

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The Overlooked Struggles – Emotional Well-being of ADHD Moms

Let’s talk about something that doesn’t get enough airtime: the emotional toll of being a mom with ADHD. Sure, we hear a lot about managing chores, routines, and to-do lists, but what about the deep stuff—the guilt, the overwhelm, the constant sense of falling short?

The Hidden Weight ADHD Moms Carry: Being a mom is already a full-time mental load, but add ADHD into the mix, and it becomes a whirlwind of emotional highs and lows. According to a 2022 study published in Journal of Attention Disorders, women with ADHD are more prone to anxiety, depression, and emotional dysregulation, especially during motherhood.

You’re not just trying to manage your own life—you’re managing little humans, expectations, and all the invisible work of motherhood with a brain that resists structure. That’s a LOT.

Emotional Struggles We Don’t Talk About Enough

  • Guilt: For forgetting appointments, for snapping at the kids, for not having it all together.

  • Shame: For comparing yourself to the “organized moms” and constantly coming up short.

  • Overwhelm: The mental noise is never-ending. It’s not just the mess—it’s the emotional chaos that comes with it.

  • Imposter Syndrome: Feeling like you’re faking this whole motherhood thing and someone’s about to expose you.

Coping Strategies That Actually Help

1. Reframe the Narrative: You’re not a “bad” mom—you have a different brain. Period. Repeat that until it sticks. Use affirmations like, “I’m doing my best, and that’s enough,” or “Progress over perfection.”

2. Therapy Is Not a Luxury—It’s a Lifeline: Consider ADHD-informed therapy or coaching. Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT) has shown strong results for emotional regulation in adults with ADHD. Coaching can also offer practical, non-judgmental support.

3. Mindfulness, But ADHD-Friendly: Let's not do 60-minute quiet meditations here. Give this a try:

  • Five-minute guided meditations (check out Insight Timer)

  • Walking meditations

  • Doodling or journaling with some tunes playing

4. Join Your Tribe Community is key: Get in touch with other ADHD moms (online or locally). Begin with communities like the Chatterbrain Mommy Podcast community—we keep it real, unfiltered, and judgment-free.

Expert Opinion: Dr. Kathleen Nadeau (clinical psychologist, ADHD) states, "When women feel understood and supported emotionally, their executive functioning improves. Connection reduces shame and motivation."

Netta's Point from Chatterbrain Mommy Podcast "I used to cry in the bathroom just to have five minutes of peace. As soon as I quit pretending to do it all and started getting help, life lightened up. Not perfect—just lighter.".

If you're nodding your head, then I wrote for you. Get my ADHD mom survival eBook, Focus, Energize, and Thrive. It's half pep talk, half toolkit, and all heart.

Also, check out my Amazon list of emotional wellness goodies—from weighted blankets to fidget rings. Because soothing your nervous system is a form of self-love. 

Planners with Gratitude

Planners with Doodles

Stress Reliever Fidget

Stress Reliever Kitty Cozy 

Cozy and Relaxing

Cute and Cozy


Disclaimer: This post may contain affiliate links. If you make a purchase through these links, I may earn a small commission at no extra cost to you. I only recommend products I genuinely love and trust!
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Managing Household Chaos: Tips for Moms with ADHD

Let’s be real: managing a household with ADHD is like trying to organize a rave in a wind tunnel. You’ve got kids yelling, dinner burning, and a calendar full of events you forgot to add reminders for. If this sounds like your daily life, welcome to the club. But don’t worry—chaos can be managed.

The ADHD Brain vs. Daily Routines: Moms with ADHD often struggle with executive dysfunction. Translation: starting tasks, prioritizing them, and actually finishing them can feel nearly impossible, especially when there are a million interruptions. According to ADDitude Magazine, routines are a lifeline, but only if they’re flexible, simple, and dopamine-friendly.

Strategy #1: Keep It Simple, Sis (K.I.S.S.) Don’t try to be a Pinterest-perfect planner mama. Use a dry-erase board or a visual daily flow chart for you and the kids. Break things down into mini routines—like a “morning flow” or “evening wind-down”—instead of a strict schedule. ADHD brains thrive with short sprints, not marathons.

Strategy #2: Use ADHD-Friendly Tools. Here’s what can help:

  • Time Timer: A visual timer that shows how much time is left.

  • Todoist or Trello: Task apps that let you brain-dump and organize your chaos into boards.

  • Alexa or Google Assistant: Set up recurring voice reminders and alarms (trust me, lifesaver).

  • Color-coded calendars: One color per family member = instant sanity.

Strategy #3: Create ADHD-Approved Zones. Think stations—not full-on room overhauls. A snack zone. A homework zone. A drop zone for keys, bags, and all the random stuff. Label everything. Bonus points if it's cute and makes you feel like a boss.

Strategy #4: Boundaries ARE Self-Care. You are not everyone's everything, every second. Set quiet hours, delegate chores (even if they do it “wrong”), and stop saying yes to every school volunteer role. ADHD burnout is real, and you deserve time to breathe.

Therapist Tip: ADHD expert Dr. Sharon Saline says, "Structure combined with empathy is key." That means building a system that works with your brain, not against it, while giving yourself grace.

Interview Spotlight: Netta from Chatterbrain Mommy Podcast “I learned that setting a timer for 15 minutes and blasting 90’s or good ole gospel music while cleaning helps me finish what I start. It’s weird, but it works. ADHD-friendly hacks are all about joy and movement.” — Netta

Need more hacks, humor, and realness? Grab my eBook Focus, Energize, and Thrive—your not-so-typical guide to managing motherhood, ADHD, and all the chaos that comes with it.

And check out my Amazon ADHD Mom Survival List: from digital planners to colorful dry-erase calendars.

Planners with Gratitude

Planners with Doodles

3 in 1 Visual Timer

Weekly Dry Erase Planner for Busy Moms

Disclaimer: This post may contain affiliate links. If you make a purchase through these links, I may earn a small commission at no extra cost to you. I only recommend products I genuinely love and trust!
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Mother’s Day Reflections: Embracing the Chaos and Joy of Motherhood with ADHD

Happy Mother's Day to all the mothers, caregivers, guardians, foster mothers, adoptive mothers, grandmothers, and teachers who look after hundreds of children as their own each year.

With Mother's Day today, I sit here pondering the beautiful chaos that comprises my life. Being a mother with ADHD is a life of one-of-a-kind challenges and surprises of delight.

I homeschool my children, work the night shift as a postpartum doula, and operate both an online and bringing our reselling business back to life after my husband’s detrimental accident last year.

It's a life that calls for flexibility, determination, and a sense of humor.

The Dance of Homeschooling with ADHD

Homeschooling with ADHD is like playing an orchestra where each instrument has its own mind. Some days it's beautiful; other days it's a distraction symphony. I've learned that rules are necessary, but so is flexibility. We have a routine, but it's more of a plan than a schedule. If a lesson isn't going well, we change gears. If the sun is shining too brightly to be ignored, we go outside and learn.

Visuals are my favorite things. Bulletin boards, colored charts, and checklists remind us to stay on track. I also use alarms and reminders to help us make it through topic transitions. These are not just for my children—they're for me as well.

Night Shifts and the Art of Adaptation

Working at night as a postpartum doula is another aspect of my already complicated existence. Helping new mothers navigate their most vulnerable moments is immeasurably fulfilling, yet it means my sleep cycle is irregular. I sleep when possible and survive on caffeine and sheer willpower.

This nightlife style requires organization. I precook meals in advance, set study materials out in advance, and talk frankly to my family members about our unique timetable. We're in it together, and I appreciate that they accommodate my schedule.

Building and Rebuilding: The Entrepreneurial Spirit

It's both exciting and exhausting to have an online business and revive my reselling business. ADHD gives rise to a torrent of ideas and the urge for creativity but renders it challenging to concentrate and stay organized.

I've learned to utilize a hyperfocus period for productive time and forgive myself during distraction periods. I organize projects through task management tools to remain on top of tasks and create realistic goals so that I do not end up being burned out. Small successes remind me to remain encouraged and also understand the progress achieved.

The Power of Nature and Daily Grounding

Amidst the turmoil, nature is where I get my sanity. Every day, I spend a minute to step outside, get the grass between my toes, and inhale deeply. It is this little act that grounds me, allowing me to get a moment of peace and concentration. It's a reminder every day that, despite the chaos, there is beauty and peace to be found.

These little doses of the great outdoors aren't just a corrective thing—necessities. They get me back to me and facilitate the emotional grounding required to care for my loved ones and pursue my vocation.

Embracing the Journey with Love and Laughter

Motherhood with ADHD is a journey of self-discovery, resilience, and unshakeable love. It's learning to love the imperfections, finding beauty in small moments, and laughing through the chaos. I've learned to be compassionate with myself, to seek help when needed, and to honor the unique gifts that ADHD brings to my life.

This Mother's Day, I honor all mothers on their individual paths. Your creativity, resilience, and love are the threads that sewn together make up the beautiful tapestry of your family's story.

🌸 Celebrate Mother's Day with Empowering Resources 🌸

In honor of Mother's Day, I'm excited to offer two resources designed to support and empower mothers like you:

  1. Brain Bloom Bootcamp: A comprehensive program tailored for mothers managing ADHD, homeschooling, and entrepreneurial pursuits. Join now and receive a special 50% discount during our Mother's Day presale!  (Send “Bloom” to chatterbrainmommy@gmail.com)

  2. eBook – Focus, Energize, and Thrive: Discover practical strategies to enhance focus, boost energy, and thrive in your multifaceted life. Available now on Amazon: Focus, Energize, and Thrive

Step into these tools to feed your well-being and keep on your journey with confidence and joy.


Disclaimer: This post may contain affiliate links, which means I may earn a small commission, at no extra cost to you—if you make a purchase through one of these links. I only recommend products I genuinely love and believe can add value, especially for ADHD brains like ours. Thank you for supporting this blog!
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My Birthday Reflection on Growth with ADHD

Today is my birthday. And honestly, most birthdays once used to have a tinge of bitterness for me. There was always this undertone of sadness underlying the celebrations, because my mom isn't with me anymore.

Not being able to celebrate this day with her, not getting to hear her voice or catch her hug, left an aching gap which felt hard to fill.

A photo of my beautiful Momma, Dorothy W. Jones, on the right and my, her twin, Netta on the left. This is one of my favorite photos that I will always cherish♥️♥️♥️

But somewhere along the way, I've grown to accept that grief and temper it into something different—into joy, into gratitude, into living my life in her honor.

And today, I am complete. I am at peace. I am at ease. I am ready—with open arms—to welcome whatever God has in store for me.

Reflecting on 42: A Year of Miracles

Looking back over this past year of my life—age 42—I can see how far I've come.

I have accomplished more in one year than I ever could have imagined, and honestly, more than many get to accomplish in a whole lifetime. And I don't say this triumphantly—I say it gratefully.

New Callings and Creative Courage

I began a new profession (my 4th and final career) as a birth and postpartum doula, stepping in intentionally and working with families through some of their most sacred moments.

I launched two publications on Substack, Vent to Victory, where I turn vents of day-to-day life as an ADHDer, mom, wife, and Black woman in America into a victory. The main publication is ADHDventures in Homeschooling, where I talk about the life of homeschooling as a mommy with ADHD, the goods, the chaos, and gratitude.

I began a blog, a podcast (Chatterbrain Mommy), and an e-book that is deeply personal and emotional to my journey.

Connections That Became Chosen Family

With all that, I've encountered some of the sweetest souls—those who've not only advised me but who now are friends, sisters, and chosen family.

They've invested in me just as I've learned to invest in others.

The Radical Shift: Choosing Myself First

But perhaps the most revolutionary of this journey? I've learned to put myself first.

As someone with ADHD, that hasn't always been intuitive. We get pulled in by the hustle, by the whirl of overthinking and overstimulation, constantly chasing after the next thing or trying to "catch up."

But this year, I took my foot off the gas.

I learned to sleep without guilt.

I embraced quiet.

I re-established my spirituality, deepening my connection with God in a way that keeps me centered no matter what's going on around me.

I began to turn about the old habits and replacing them with intentional routines. I found joy within myself. I stopped waiting for peace and instead learned how to create it.

A photo of me as I embrace the beautiful bloom of many flowers, meaning many opportunities arise as I walk in my purpose.

A photo of me as I am so joyful. These flowers were given to me by my baby daughter on my 21st anniversary on 4/13/2025.

Walking Boldly in My Purpose

That's why I'm still strutting my stuff confidently in my ministry as an ADHD life and wellness coach. In spite of the bumps, in spite of the doubt, I know this is what I am called to do.

My coaching website will be live in a few weeks, and I'm already taking pre-appointments.

I've had single-session work that has reminded me how desperately this work is needed—and I'm just so blessed to be creating a successful business where I can come fully, not only for my clients, but for my family as well.

Welcoming 43: A Year for Blooming

This year, 43 is going to be about growth and establishment. Last year was establishing—putting the foundation down. This year is about watering the seeds that I planted last year and watching them bloom.

So stay tuned. God’s not done. I’m walking in my purpose, with love in my heart, and fire in my spirit—and I’m ready to help others do the same.

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