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PTSD Awareness Month: Increasing Understanding of Trauma and Recovery

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  PTSD Awareness Month matters because trauma is far more common—and far more misunderstood—than most people realize. Trauma is not defined by the event itself but by what happens inside a person when their nervous system is overwhelmed beyond its ability to cope. It is a physiological injury, not a character flaw. And recovery is not about “getting over it,” but about helping the body and brain learn to feel safe again. People often imagine PTSD as flashbacks, nightmares, or dramatic reactions. Those can happen, but the truth is quieter and more complicated. Trauma can look like exhaustion that never lifts. Irritability that feels out of character. Difficulty concentrating. A body that startles too easily. A mind that shuts down under stress. A heart that wants connection but fears it at the same time. And here’s the part we don’t talk about enough: trauma is not a life sentence. The nervous system is built for healing. With the right support—therapy, community, safety, predictabi...

Success in Spite of ADHD — Or Maybe Because of It

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  ADHD is often framed as a barrier. But for many, it’s also the engine that drives creativity, courage, and unconventional success. People with ADHD live in a world that rewards consistency, order, and predictability — three things their brains resist. Yet somehow, they still build careers, raise families, start businesses, and create art that moves people. How? By learning to succeed differently. The Myth of “Try Harder” The world tells people with ADHD that success comes from discipline. But discipline isn’t the same as fit. ADHD brains thrive on novelty, urgency, and interest. When those are missing, effort feels like swimming through glue. When they’re present, focus becomes laser‑sharp and unstoppable. Success comes not from forcing focus, but from designing life around what sparks it. The Real Story of Success Success for someone with ADHD often looks like this: Turning a hyperfocus episode into a breakthrough project Finding creative shortcuts others overlook Building syste...

Finding Joy in Later Years

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  Joy doesn’t fade with age — it ripens. There’s a quiet myth that joy belongs to the young — that it’s tied to novelty, speed, ambition, or the thrill of “firsts.” But joy in later years is something different. It’s steadier. Truer. More deeply earned. It’s the joy of knowing who you are — and who you no longer need to be. The joy of choosing your days instead of chasing them. The joy of small things that somehow feel bigger now: the morning sun on your face, the softness of a cat’s purr, the way a familiar song can open a whole room of memory. Later-life joy isn’t loud. It’s full . It comes from letting go of the unnecessary — the comparisons, the deadlines, the old self-judgments — and making space for what actually matters. It comes from connection: the friend who still makes you laugh, the grandchild who sees you as pure magic, the neighbor who waves every morning. It comes from curiosity: trying something new not to be good at it, but simply because it delights you. It comes ...