
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or
If you like this show, consider making a donation this holiday season. 100% of your donation will go towards helping us create more podcasts (like this one!). Click here to make a gift today.
Growing up as a Black girl with undiagnosed ADHD, Kayla Sanders learned very early that getting into trouble was not an option. Kayla was imaginative, playful, and extremely bright. She was also hyperactive, which was occasionally mistaken for disobedience.
One incident in particular in the first grade left a lasting mark on Kayla. From then on out, Kayla did everything she could to avoid causing trouble for her hard-working, loving mom. She pushed down her hyperactivity and masked her symptoms for years. Then, during the pandemic, Kayla was finally diagnosed with ADHD.
Join Kayla and host Laura Key’s chat on ADHD and masking, and the added pressure that comes from racial bias.
Related resources
Timestamps
(01:10) Kayla’s pandemic ADHD diagnosis story
(06:53) Kayla’s childhood behavior
(09:45) The pressure to mask ADHD as a Black woman
(13:56) Covering up “mistakes” in the classroom
(15:35) Kayla’s relationship with her mom
(20:11) Cultural masking, and the intersection of ADHD and race
To get a transcript of this show and check out more episodes, visit the ADHD Aha! podcast page at Understood.
Want to share your “aha” moment? We love hearing from our listeners. Email us at [email protected].
Understood.org is a nonprofit organization dedicated to empowering people with learning and thinking differences, like ADHD and dyslexia. If you want to help us continue this work, donate at understood.org/give
4.9
135135 ratings
If you like this show, consider making a donation this holiday season. 100% of your donation will go towards helping us create more podcasts (like this one!). Click here to make a gift today.
Growing up as a Black girl with undiagnosed ADHD, Kayla Sanders learned very early that getting into trouble was not an option. Kayla was imaginative, playful, and extremely bright. She was also hyperactive, which was occasionally mistaken for disobedience.
One incident in particular in the first grade left a lasting mark on Kayla. From then on out, Kayla did everything she could to avoid causing trouble for her hard-working, loving mom. She pushed down her hyperactivity and masked her symptoms for years. Then, during the pandemic, Kayla was finally diagnosed with ADHD.
Join Kayla and host Laura Key’s chat on ADHD and masking, and the added pressure that comes from racial bias.
Related resources
Timestamps
(01:10) Kayla’s pandemic ADHD diagnosis story
(06:53) Kayla’s childhood behavior
(09:45) The pressure to mask ADHD as a Black woman
(13:56) Covering up “mistakes” in the classroom
(15:35) Kayla’s relationship with her mom
(20:11) Cultural masking, and the intersection of ADHD and race
To get a transcript of this show and check out more episodes, visit the ADHD Aha! podcast page at Understood.
Want to share your “aha” moment? We love hearing from our listeners. Email us at [email protected].
Understood.org is a nonprofit organization dedicated to empowering people with learning and thinking differences, like ADHD and dyslexia. If you want to help us continue this work, donate at understood.org/give
446 Listeners
1,299 Listeners
917 Listeners
104 Listeners
112 Listeners
1,500 Listeners
2,847 Listeners
245 Listeners
699 Listeners
611 Listeners
19 Listeners
27 Listeners
175 Listeners
68 Listeners
20 Listeners
71 Listeners
8 Listeners
2 Listeners
37 Listeners
48 Listeners
19 Listeners
358 Listeners
2 Listeners