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In this special episode, the roles are reversed as Adrian takes the interviewer’s seat to speak with Dave about a subject that is both deeply personal and increasingly relevant: neurodiversity, late ADHD diagnosis, and the profound impact this can have on our relationship with money.
Dave reflects on being diagnosed with ADHD later in life, prompted initially by his children’s experiences and a growing realisation that many lifelong patterns finally had an explanation. What follows is a candid discussion of how neurodiversity shapes how people process information, manage attention, experience boredom, and engage with complex topics such as finance, risk, and long-term planning.
Together, Adrian and Dave explore:
The conversation also looks forward, asking how AI could help bridge gaps in financial literacy and accessibility, especially for those who struggle with conventional formats, while warning against blind reliance on automated advice.
Above all, this episode is about understanding brains, not labelling them, and recognising that neurodiversity is not a weakness but often a source of insight, creativity, and commercial instinct. For Dave, diagnosis became “a key unlocking the brain” — and a catalyst for healthier relationships with money, family, and self-understanding.
This is a thoughtful, honest episode for anyone interested in neurodiversity, financial well-being, and the future of advice in an AI-enabled world.
By CavendishwareIn this special episode, the roles are reversed as Adrian takes the interviewer’s seat to speak with Dave about a subject that is both deeply personal and increasingly relevant: neurodiversity, late ADHD diagnosis, and the profound impact this can have on our relationship with money.
Dave reflects on being diagnosed with ADHD later in life, prompted initially by his children’s experiences and a growing realisation that many lifelong patterns finally had an explanation. What follows is a candid discussion of how neurodiversity shapes how people process information, manage attention, experience boredom, and engage with complex topics such as finance, risk, and long-term planning.
Together, Adrian and Dave explore:
The conversation also looks forward, asking how AI could help bridge gaps in financial literacy and accessibility, especially for those who struggle with conventional formats, while warning against blind reliance on automated advice.
Above all, this episode is about understanding brains, not labelling them, and recognising that neurodiversity is not a weakness but often a source of insight, creativity, and commercial instinct. For Dave, diagnosis became “a key unlocking the brain” — and a catalyst for healthier relationships with money, family, and self-understanding.
This is a thoughtful, honest episode for anyone interested in neurodiversity, financial well-being, and the future of advice in an AI-enabled world.