Harold Robert Meyer | The ADD Resource Center
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Reviewed 01/21/2026 – Published 01/30/2026
Listen to understand, not just to respond
ADHD shapes how your brain takes in and responds to the world—but it does not define who you are. This article invites you to separate your identity from your neurology, offering a compassionate, empowering way to understand yourself. Instead of shrinking your life to fit a diagnosis, you can build a life that fits you.
If you live with ADHD, you’ve probably bumped into the question: Do you “have ADHD,” or are you “ADHD”?
Because ADHD touches so many parts of life—how you plan, how you love, how you communicate—it can feel like it swallows your entire identity. But there’s a meaningful difference between the way your brain works and the person you are.
Your neurology influences your experience. Your identity is everything you build on top of it.
For years, ADHD was framed around what was “wrong”: not enough focus, not enough calm, not enough control.
When you absorb that deficit-based language, it’s easy to turn symptoms into self-judgments:
| The Symptom | The Internalized Label |
| Difficulty starting tasks | “I’m lazy” |
| Forgetting details | “I’m careless or stupid” |
This is where ADHD becomes a cage instead of a description. When symptoms get mistaken for character, shame steps in—and shame is a terrible narrator.
Think of ADHD as your brain’s operating system. It influences how you process information, how quickly you shift attention, and how easily you get overwhelmed.
But you are the user.
Your ADHD might explain why you lose track of time. It does not explain why you’re the friend who remembers someone’s favorite snack or sends a message at just the right moment.
The symptom is the lateness. The identity is the kindness.
Intent vs. Impact
ADHD can create a gap between what you meant and what actually happened. Maybe you blurt something out too quickly. ADHD explains the impulse—but your apology, your empathy, and your desire to repair the moment? That’s you.
The Flip Side of Traits
Most ADHD traits have a bright side:
Your brain may create friction, but your values guide your choices.
Not wanting ADHD to define you doesn’t mean pretending it isn’t there. Denial only forces you into a life built for someone else’s brain.
Integration is the sweet spot: “This is how my brain works—and I can build a life that works with it.”
It sounds like: “I have a brain that craves dopamine and struggles with linear time. That’s biology. But I’m also a parent, a leader, a creator, a friend. That’s who I am.”
ADHD is part of your story, but it’s not the title. You are defined by your resilience, your creativity, your humor, your heart—by the way you keep going, keep caring, keep trying.
ADHD may shape the lens. You choose the picture.
Harold Meyer founded The A.D.D. Resource Center in 1993 to provide ADHD education, advocacy, and support. He co-founded CHADD of New York, served as CHADD’s national treasurer, and was president of the Institute for the Advancement of ADHD Coaching. A writer and international speaker on ADHD, he has also led school boards and task forces, conducted workshops for educators, worked in advertising and technology consulting, and contributed to early online ADHD forums.
©2026 The Harold R Meyer/ADD Resource Center. All rights reserved.
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Our content is for educational and informational purposes only and is not a substitute for professional advice. While we strive for accuracy, errors or omissions may occur. Content may be generated with artificial intelligence tools, which can produce inaccuracies. Readers are encouraged to verify information independently.
Although Rejection Sensitive Dysphoria (RSD) is recognized and managed by many healthcare providers, especially in ADHD treatment, it is not officially listed as a diagnosis in the DSM. This lack of recognition can lead to different approaches in diagnosis and treatment within the medical and insurance industries.
In the USA and Canada, you can call or text 9-8-8 for free, 24/7 mental health and suicide prevention support. Trained crisis responders provide bilingual, trauma-informed, and culturally appropriate care. The ADD Resource Center is independent from this service and is not liable for any actions taken by you or the 988 service. Many other countries offer similar support services.
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The ADD Resource Center
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Content is for educational purposes only and not a substitute for professional advice.
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