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When You Find Out You Have ADHD Halfway Through Your Adult Life

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  There’s a strange relief in discovering that the chaos has a name. For years, you thought it was character — that your forgetfulness, your scattered focus, your bursts of energy followed by exhaustion were just quirks of personality. You blamed yourself for being inconsistent, for losing track of time, for starting ten projects and finishing two. You learned to hide it, to overcompensate, to stay up late catching up on what others seemed to do effortlessly. Then one day, someone says it: ADHD. And suddenly, the story rearranges itself. The moment of recognition It’s not that the diagnosis changes who you are — it changes how you understand who you’ve been. You look back and see patterns: the missed deadlines, the impulsive decisions, the hyperfocus that made you brilliant and burned you out. You see the relationships strained by distraction, the jobs lost to overwhelm, the creative bursts that never quite found structure. You realize it wasn’t laziness. It was wiring. T...

Why Leaders Fear Servant Leadership

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  Servant leadership sounds noble, but in practice it is disruptive . It redistributes power, demands transparency, and requires leaders to be accountable to the people they lead. That alone is enough to trigger fear—especially in leaders who rely on positional authority rather than relational authority. Below is a candid, psychologically accurate breakdown of why each leader type resists or fears servant leadership. ⭐ 1. Stellar Leaders Fear: Losing efficiency or control of standards These are the rare leaders who are already high‑performing, self-aware, and deeply invested in mission. They don’t fear servant leadership because of ego—they fear it because: They worry that distributing power will slow execution. They fear “decision diffusion” where too many voices dilute clarity. They worry that empowering others means tolerating uneven competence. They fear that listening deeply will reveal systemic issues they don’t yet have the bandwidth to fix. Their fear is functional, not...

When the Story Refuses to Stay Simple: What Blest Atheist Teaches About Grace, Trauma, and Seeing with New Eyes

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  Elizabeth Mahlou’s Blest Atheist unsettles some readers because it refuses to obey the moral binaries that secular storytelling depends on. She recounts childhood experiences that today would trigger immediate CPS removal: physical abuse, emotional cruelty, and sexual violation ignored by the adults who should have protected her. She describes her own resistance — embarrassing her parents publicly, striking back physically, refusing to be cowed. That fierce ego likely saved her life. And then, later in the memoir, after her conversion, she writes a chapter in which she sees her parents not as monsters but as overwhelmed, under-resourced, emotionally limited people raising eight children in poverty. She does not excuse them. She does not soften the truth. But she sees them through a different lens. She names their fear, their incapacity, their brokenness. In essence, she forgives them — though she never uses the word. For many religious readers — Christian, Jewish, Muslim — thi...