12/01/2025
This really does work. I've experienced in my own life and I've seen it work with clients! This is why I'm training in Anchoed Relational Model. When I first started learning about this model I thought it seemed a little "out there" but after experiencing it myself, I'm so glad I'm able to offer it to others!
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The Younger Version of You Is Still Waiting for Someone to Understand Them
There is a quiet truth that many people with ADHD carry without ever speaking it out loud. It is the feeling that the things you dislike about yourself, the habits you can’t break, the sensitivity you try to hide, and the struggles you think you should have outgrown by now are not flaws of today. They are echoes of a younger version of you who was overwhelmed, misunderstood, rushed, or punished for being different long before you even knew what ADHD was.
And the hardest part is that no one teaches you how deeply those echoes shape your adult life.
When you look closely, you begin to realize that the traits you criticize in yourself now were once survival patterns. The forgetting, the emotional reactions, the fear of disappointing people, the overthinking, the people-pleasing, the shutting down, the masking, the self-blame—none of it started randomly. It started the first time you were told you were “too much,” “too sensitive,” “too scattered,” “too dramatic,” or “not trying hard enough.”
A younger version of you was doing everything they could to keep up in a world that expected a type of brain you didn’t have. And every time you struggled, you internalized the idea that something was wrong with you, instead of recognizing that the environment around you was simply not built for your wiring.
That younger version of you didn’t need discipline. They needed understanding.
They didn’t need to be corrected. They needed support.
They didn’t need to be told to toughen up. They needed safety.
They didn’t need shame. They needed compassion.
And that is why healing ADHD as an adult often feels like reconnecting with the child you used to be. Because that child is still there, holding onto the exact moments when they felt alone, embarrassed, confused, or overwhelmed. They are still waiting for you to show up in a way no one showed up back then.
The parts of your life that hurt the most today—the emotional storms, the shame after mistakes, the fear of being a burden, the exhaustion that comes from masking—are not signs of failure. They are signs of a younger self asking for help in the only ways they know how. They are reminders that your pain has roots, and those roots deserve attention, not judgment.
When you begin to approach yourself from this perspective, everything shifts. You stop looking at your struggles as weaknesses and start seeing them as messages. You stop attacking yourself and start listening. You stop demanding perfection and start offering patience. And every time you choose compassion over criticism, you move one step closer to the healing that younger version of you has been waiting for.
The reunion with your younger self isn’t dramatic. It is a gradual softening. It is learning to speak to yourself differently. It is understanding your reactions instead of shaming them. It is recognizing that your past shaped your patterns, but it does not have to define your future.
Because the truth is simple and powerful:
You are not broken.
You are not a problem.
You are someone who has carried too much for far too long without the tools you needed.
The moment you turn toward the version of you who was hurting the most is the moment your healing begins. And the moment you choose to treat yourself with the kindness you never received is the moment your present pain starts to shift.
You deserve to meet yourself with gentleness.
You deserve to rescue the parts of you that once felt abandoned.
You deserve to rebuild yourself with understanding instead of shame.
You deserve to feel whole in a way you never knew was possible.
If you are still carrying emotional weight from a time when you didn’t have the language or support to explain your struggles, this is your reminder: it is not too late to rewrite what you believed about yourself. It is not too late to give your younger self what they needed. And it is not too late to become someone you feel safe being.
Your healing will not come from perfection.
It will come from your willingness to return to the places where you once hurt and offer yourself the love that was missing.