ADHD Eavesdrop

Art Is the Closest I’ve Come to Peace


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What if the only place your brain ever feels right… is on stage? This episode dives deep into ADHD, autism, OCD, RSD, and the neurodivergent need for creative expression—not as a hobby, but as regulation.

My guest is a wildly artistic neurodivergent performer who shares how poetry, music, and live shows became the only place his mind goes quiet. We talk about dopamine, hyperfocus, OCD spikes, emotional ignition, and why traditional systems like school and college simply cannot hold a brain wired for passion over compliance.

If you've ever felt “too much”—too intense, too sensitive, too creative, too emotional—this conversation is a love letter to the way your brain works.

“Give it time. It will grow beautifully.”

🧠 What We Explore

  • ADHD, autism & the dopamine rush of being truly seen
  • Stage as meditation — when performance quiets the noise
  • OCD spikes, undiagnosed epilepsy & misunderstood behaviors
  • Rejection Sensitive Dysphoria (RSD) & emotional firestorms
  • Creativity vs conformity — why some brains cannot be contained
  • The power of finding one adult who sees your potential
  • Advice to our 13-year-old neurodivergent selves

🎧 Chapters

00:00 Welcome & why the stage is the only place the brain feels right 01:00 Poetry, music & the first dopamine hit of performance 02:20 ADHD, autism & finding brain quiet through creative focus 03:45 Hyperfocus, presence & stage as meditation for neurodivergent minds 05:10 Growing up "too much" in traditional schools 07:00 OCD spikes, undiagnosed epilepsy & being misunderstood 09:00 RSD (Rejection Sensitive Dysphoria) & emotional ignition moments 11:00 Creative wiring vs academic conformity — leaving college behind 12:30 The one teacher who saw something different — and why it mattered 14:00 Final reflection: “Give it time. It will grow beautifully.”

If this conversation made you feel seen, you’re not alone. Subscribe, share it with another creative brain, and keep being beautifully too-much.

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ADHD EavesdropBy Janine VanStee