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Ever found yourself unable to make the simplest decision or making impulsive choices you later regret at the end of a long day? You're not lazy—you're depleted.
Understanding ADHD strengths and struggles means recognizing that our executive function ADHD capacity is finite—and knowing how to manage it strategically.
This episode of ADHD-ish dives into the science and lived reality of ego depletion—the phenomenon where self-control and decision-making get harder the more you use them—and why it hits brains with ADHD so much harder than most people realize.
What is Ego Depletion?
Ego depletion is the idea that self-control is a limited resource—every tough decision, every time you push through discomfort, you draw down the tank a bit more. And for those of us with ADHD, that tank starts out smaller and empties faster.
ADHD brains work harder to stay focused, resist distractions, and mask our real struggles behind a “put-together” exterior. All of that is invisible work—work that drains our resources and directly impacts executive function ADHD capacity.
Why Does This Matter for Entrepreneurs?
If you run your own business, chances are, you’re making choices all day long. Decision fatigue hits fast when your working memory is taxed, and the emotional labor, rejection sensitivity, ambiguity, and hyperfocusing can all leave you running on fumes.
And when the tank runs dry? That’s when the late-day impulsive emails, knee-jerk “yeses” to bad projects, and pricing compromises hit. It’s not poor judgment—it’s overdrawn capacity. This is one of the core ADHD strengths and struggles we navigate as entrepreneurs.
About the host, Diann Wingert
Diann Wingert is a business strategist, coach, serial entrepreneur, former psychotherapist, and passionate thought leader at the intersection of ADHD and entrepreneurship.
Through practical neuroscience and accessible storytelling, Diann empowers others to understand their brains, manage their energy, and show compassion to themselves as they navigate the demands of running a business with an ADHD brain.
Five Triggers That Drain Your Brain
Practical Strategies: Refilling the Tank
Knowledge is useless without practice. Here’s what’s working for my clients and me:
Protect the Peak Window - Notice when focus comes more naturally. Schedule your highest-value and most “expensive” mental work then. Don’t let admin or reactive tasks steal your best hours.
Ruthless Pre-Decision - I now audit decisions weekly: What can I automate? Which choices can be made in advance? This includes everything from client policies to what I eat for breakfast. I have a breakfast rotation now that saves me about 10 minutes every morning—energy I use elsewhere.
Don’t Skip the Refueling - Eating on a schedule is non-negotiable. I use an alarm for lunch because, without external cues, I’ll work straight through and crash later. Treat meals and breaks with the same gravity you would an important meeting.
Schedule Intentional Resets - Real mental breaks matter. Laughter, small pleasures, or even a quick walk create real returns. I log two restorative breaks in my calendar daily—not as a luxury, but as mental maintenance.
Prioritize Sleep as a Business Tool - Nothing refills the willpower account like rest. Chronically starting the day depleted only feeds the self-doubt loop. Honoring my natural sleep needs—even if it means leaning into night-owl tendencies strategically—made a profound difference.
Resources mentioned in this episode:
Ready for more?
Subscribe to the podcast - Visit my website - Follow me on LinkedIn
© 2026 ADHD-ish Podcast. Intro music by Ishan Dincer / Melody Loops / Outro music by Vladimir / Bobi Music / All rights reserved.
By Diann Wingert4.9
1616 ratings
Ever found yourself unable to make the simplest decision or making impulsive choices you later regret at the end of a long day? You're not lazy—you're depleted.
Understanding ADHD strengths and struggles means recognizing that our executive function ADHD capacity is finite—and knowing how to manage it strategically.
This episode of ADHD-ish dives into the science and lived reality of ego depletion—the phenomenon where self-control and decision-making get harder the more you use them—and why it hits brains with ADHD so much harder than most people realize.
What is Ego Depletion?
Ego depletion is the idea that self-control is a limited resource—every tough decision, every time you push through discomfort, you draw down the tank a bit more. And for those of us with ADHD, that tank starts out smaller and empties faster.
ADHD brains work harder to stay focused, resist distractions, and mask our real struggles behind a “put-together” exterior. All of that is invisible work—work that drains our resources and directly impacts executive function ADHD capacity.
Why Does This Matter for Entrepreneurs?
If you run your own business, chances are, you’re making choices all day long. Decision fatigue hits fast when your working memory is taxed, and the emotional labor, rejection sensitivity, ambiguity, and hyperfocusing can all leave you running on fumes.
And when the tank runs dry? That’s when the late-day impulsive emails, knee-jerk “yeses” to bad projects, and pricing compromises hit. It’s not poor judgment—it’s overdrawn capacity. This is one of the core ADHD strengths and struggles we navigate as entrepreneurs.
About the host, Diann Wingert
Diann Wingert is a business strategist, coach, serial entrepreneur, former psychotherapist, and passionate thought leader at the intersection of ADHD and entrepreneurship.
Through practical neuroscience and accessible storytelling, Diann empowers others to understand their brains, manage their energy, and show compassion to themselves as they navigate the demands of running a business with an ADHD brain.
Five Triggers That Drain Your Brain
Practical Strategies: Refilling the Tank
Knowledge is useless without practice. Here’s what’s working for my clients and me:
Protect the Peak Window - Notice when focus comes more naturally. Schedule your highest-value and most “expensive” mental work then. Don’t let admin or reactive tasks steal your best hours.
Ruthless Pre-Decision - I now audit decisions weekly: What can I automate? Which choices can be made in advance? This includes everything from client policies to what I eat for breakfast. I have a breakfast rotation now that saves me about 10 minutes every morning—energy I use elsewhere.
Don’t Skip the Refueling - Eating on a schedule is non-negotiable. I use an alarm for lunch because, without external cues, I’ll work straight through and crash later. Treat meals and breaks with the same gravity you would an important meeting.
Schedule Intentional Resets - Real mental breaks matter. Laughter, small pleasures, or even a quick walk create real returns. I log two restorative breaks in my calendar daily—not as a luxury, but as mental maintenance.
Prioritize Sleep as a Business Tool - Nothing refills the willpower account like rest. Chronically starting the day depleted only feeds the self-doubt loop. Honoring my natural sleep needs—even if it means leaning into night-owl tendencies strategically—made a profound difference.
Resources mentioned in this episode:
Ready for more?
Subscribe to the podcast - Visit my website - Follow me on LinkedIn
© 2026 ADHD-ish Podcast. Intro music by Ishan Dincer / Melody Loops / Outro music by Vladimir / Bobi Music / All rights reserved.

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