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60. Perfectly Imperfect: Letting Go of Perfectionism with Angie Nennie
Episode 6019th March 2024 • ADHD Mums • Jane McFadden
00:00:00 00:37:00

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On this episode of The ADHD Mums Podcast, Jane is joined by Ange as they explore the theme of perfectionism and its relationship with ADHD. They share personal experiences, starting with a humorous account of their chaotic mornings, highlighting the imperfect aspects of their lives. Ange, an ADHD coach, reflects on her perfectionist tendencies, rooted in childhood, where she would tear out entire pages if not perfect.

 Ange delves into her ADHD diagnosis at 35, sharing the challenges she faced in transitioning from one-on-one client work to leadership roles. The conversation navigates through various dimensions of perfectionism, discussing its impact on tasks, work, and self-worth. Both Jane and Ange emphasise the connection between perfectionism and shame, exploring how negative feedback and societal expectations contribute to this mindset. They discuss the difficulty of breaking the cycle and the importance of self-compassion, self-discovery, and courage in the recovery process.

 

Ange highlights the need for individuals to recognise their values, strengths, and preferences, encouraging authenticity. Ange shares a coaching example where challenging ingrained beliefs about laundry allowed a client to reclaim her Wednesdays. This episode sheds light on the complexity of perfectionism, its intersection with ADHD, and the steps toward recovery and self-acceptance.

Find out more about Angie here:

⁠https://angenennie.com.au/

Transcripts

Jane:

Hello, and welcome to the next episode of ADHD Bums.

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We have a really anticipated theme

that I have been trying to find the

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right person to do for a long time,

and that is perfectionism and ADHD and

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who could be better than Angie, the

ADHD coach to discuss that with me.

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So welcome to you,

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Ange: Angie.

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Thank you.

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I'm excited.

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So

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Jane: we were saying that we have

gone off to the most imperfect start.

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So basically, as I was trying to

log on and I was also frantically

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eating lunch, Sickbay called from

one of my kids schools and I thought,

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of course, oh my god, Angie's

waiting and I'm going to have to go.

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And then, of course, they let me know

that I had not packed any lunch for

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one of my kids and then I had to give

them credit card details to try and get

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them, I suppose, get my child sorted.

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And the fact that they knew me and knew

my usual process, Was terrifying to me

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that I'd become commonplace call to the

mum and Angie also had a similar morning.

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If you want to share

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Ange: Angie.

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Yeah, absolutely.

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So I had a doctor's appointment at

eight 30 and I decided I had time to

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boil some eggs at about 10 past eight.

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So I was doing that and then needed

to get in the car and book it to the

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doctors and couldn't find my keys.

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So then I was like, that's fine.

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I.

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I had a bit of a rummage

when I couldn't find them.

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I was like, I've got the Tile app, so

I'm just gonna call my keys from my Tile.

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And, sure enough, the battery

had run out on the Tile.

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And so I couldn't find the keys.

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Turned out actually the keys were on

the front seat of the car for anyone

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who wanted to take the car overnight.

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And then, right before I left to come here

to the office to do this podcast with you,

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I lost my phone and I thought That's fine.

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I'll, I've changed the

battery now in the tile.

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I'll call my phone from my tile and found

the phone in the rain outside under the,

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you'll have to excuse my word finding

abilities at the moment, the clothesline.

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That's the word.

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So it's been working for both of us.

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Yeah.

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Yeah.

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It's fine.

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It wasn't heavy rain.

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Thankfully it was just spitting.

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Okay.

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Jane: Okay.

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And then Angie, of course, had

to email me because she hadn't

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sent me the Riverside link.

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Well, I hadn't sent

her the Riverside link.

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And then I said, Oh, Angie, what was

the other episode that we did before?

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We should really talk about that.

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And then neither of us could

remember what the episode was

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about, which is a good one.

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So we've looked that up and

it is called bored and tired.

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And then I said to Angie, funny, I

forgot that because that's actually

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in the top 10 episodes of all time.

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So, the fact that we didn't remember

doesn't reflect poorly on the episode.

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It's actually one of the most

downloaded episodes there is.

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So, there is that there.

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I just realized I haven't

even read your bio yet, Angie.

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This is going to be a ride.

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So, for those of you who haven't listened

to Angie's other episode called Bored

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and Tired, which is so my weekend, by

the way, Angie is a wife, a mom, an ADHD

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coach, and a co founder of the Sunshine

Coast ADHD Professionals Network.

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with Dr.

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Laura Bennett.

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Angie was diagnosed in October

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was a surprise to no one.

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Angie loves to support ADHDers

to understand their unique brain

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wiring, appreciate their gifts

and create the life they love.

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I truly believe that ADHDers are

uniquely wired to change the world.

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That is a very positive spin on it.

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So if you haven't listened to Angie's

other episode, Bored and Tired, I

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absolutely highly recommend that you do.

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Angie was one of the first, or

probably I think the first guest

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that I ever reached out to because

I really liked her Facebook.

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So give her a follow on Instagram.

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I always have a look at,

I like all your memes too.

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I often re share them.

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I'm like, Angie, that's a good one.

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So today we were talking

about what theme to do.

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And I had said to her that I had

been trying to search for the

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right person to do perfectionism.

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And so I love the irony and the

imperfect start that we have had.

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But we will persist because we are

both hardcore perfectionists, which

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is an interesting jam with ADHD.

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Ange: Absolutely.

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I think, though, it goes hand

in hand, and I'm sure we'll get

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into that a little bit later on.

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But I would say I'm definitely

a recovering perfectionist.

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I'm doing much better than I used to be.

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Okay.

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Jane: Okay.

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Well, that's great.

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I'm still in it.

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So this is going to be excellent

for me to be around somebody who's

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starting to move towards recovery.

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So Angie, for people that don't know you

and haven't listened to your last episode,

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can you give us a bit of an overview about

your diagnosis, journey, medication, and,

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and kind of who you are before we delve

into the specifics of perfectionism?

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Ange: Sure.

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So a lot of girls get missed because they

present more with the inattentive type.

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I got missed and I was the definition

of the hyperactive little boy.

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I had the masking tape square

around my desk at school and

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all sorts of other things.

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So it's just interesting.

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I guess it was the time that I grew

up in was really the factor that

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contributed to me not getting my

diagnosis until:

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So that happened right around the

same time that I returned to work

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after the birth of my second child.

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And.

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I just remember forgetting things

constantly and doing some really strange

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things that made me question myself.

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So I ended up going to the doctor thinking

that I had early onset dementia, which

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eventually after a whole bunch of other,

yeah, eventually I got my diagnosis

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in 2020 after I saw a psychologist

and then later saw a psychiatrist.

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So from there, I Tried lots of different

medications, have landed on Vyvanse,

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but at that time that I got diagnosed,

I'd just taken on a promotion at work

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as well, and I moved from doing the

work that I loved, which was one on

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one client work, into leadership, which

meant that I was doing task oriented

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work, and I realized very quickly

that I had shot myself in the foot.

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And so, In my reading and researching, as

most of us have experienced after we get

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our diagnosis, we go down the rabbit hole.

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I had come across ADHD coaching

and decided to give it a try.

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Unfortunately, I didn't have a great

experience and didn't get a lot out of it.

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So I sort of dismissed it for

a while, but later revisited

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it as a possibility for myself.

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Cause I thought my work in mental

health might translate really

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nicely into ADHD coaching, which

is where I find myself now.

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And so I've been full time in my ADHD

coaching practice since October last year.

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So.

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Just turned one and I started out in June.

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So I've been doing this for about a

year and a half now, close to, yeah.

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Jane: Congrats, I think one

year in your own business.

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It's not for the faint hearted,

especially with ADHD, you've got

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all of the things, all of the jobs,

including all the ones that you hate.

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So congrats.

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That's a big achievement.

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Ange: Thank you.

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Yeah.

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I actually knew from the get go,

if the business was going to fail,

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it would fail on admin or finances.

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So I was really.

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Intentional about getting the

finances and the admin side of things

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sorted before I even got started.

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Jane: Nice, nice.

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Yes.

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Nice.

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Okay.

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So let's jump into perfectionism and ADHD.

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I was wondering, I suppose, straight

up, if you could talk about yourself as.

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An example for perfectionism

and ADHD, and then maybe we

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move into the why afterwards.

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Just so people can kind of hear,

because I didn't really realize I was

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a perfectionist until kind of a year

ago, and I was like, oh wow, I think

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I am actually one of those people.

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Ange: Yeah, I think it's difficult to

see yourself as a perfectionist until

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it becomes a problem, but even looking

back in primary school, I remember

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if I didn't get everything right on

the page, I would tear the entire

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page out, or if I made a mistake.

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With my spelling, I would tear the

entire page out and start from scratch.

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So.

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The beginnings of my perfectionism were

there already when I was nine, 10 years

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old, and it only got worse from there.

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And so I remember many times

missing events because I didn't

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look the way that I wanted to look.

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I had a vision of how I

wanted to look for the event.

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And if I didn't match that

image, then I just wouldn't go.

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And there was nothing that anyone

could do to convince me otherwise.

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And I mean, there was some other,

there was an eating disorder in there

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and probably some body dysmorphia as

well, which as we know, often go along

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with ADHD, but that perfectionism was

always there driving that as well.

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And then, Oh, and I actually nearly

missed meeting my husband or getting

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to spend time with my husband for the

first time, because I had one of those

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situations where I didn't look the part.

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The way that I wanted to look, I

didn't like how I looked, so I wasn't

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going to go to this big dinner that

we were all supposed to go to, and in

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the end I went, I felt horrible about

myself, I was in a foul mood, but

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they sat me next to my now husband,

and we got to know each other, and he

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later became a big part of my story.

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Oh that's so

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Jane: funny, because you

would have looked perfect

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Ange: to him.

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Well, yeah, he says so, and

then I used to tell him his

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standards weren't high enough.

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Yeah.

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Oh, . That's funny.

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Oh yeah, sorry.

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We regress.

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You continue.

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Sorry.

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And then more recently, . More recently

I, and when I say recently, probably

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going back to the time of my diagnosis, I

started seeing a therapist and the thing

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that I took to therapy most often was.

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My inability to invite anybody over

to the house because my standard for

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cleanliness was so high and not in the

sense that there was any OCD, but the

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thought of inviting somebody over when

the house wasn't showroom perfect was.

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debilitating for me.

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And so I would take this

to therapy all the time.

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And I remember I had started to

allow people in just gradually.

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And my son has a friend

who lives down the street.

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Her dad came to pick her up one

day and I thought, Oh, he's a guy.

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He won't care.

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I'm just going to sort of test the waters,

a little bit of graded exposure therapy.

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And I invited him in.

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And he sat down, my husband had

been cooking this, these Dutch

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doughnuts and so he sat and

chatted with us and had doughnuts.

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And not too long later, we had a lot of

people over for a Halloween gig, we love

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to do the Jekyll Lanterns, so everyone was

coming over to carve the Jekyll Lanterns.

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Anyway, when he got to the door,

he was the first one to arrive

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and his wife was behind him.

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And he said, Oh!

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What's happened here?

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And I said, what do you mean?

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And he goes, it's clean and I nearly died.

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I wanted to sink into the floor.

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And you were thinking, this is why,

this is why I don't invite people

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over because of that comment.

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Yeah.

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And I don't think it was even really

that bad because my house usually wasn't.

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It's, he has one child, I have two, so.

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It's obviously going to be easier for

them to keep the place clean, but I don't

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think it was terrible on the day that

he came in, there was probably a lot of

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dishes from my husband's cooking, but.

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Nothing crazy, but I would

have the whole family.

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I had my son doing skirting boards.

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Exactly, right?

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Shut up and be grateful.

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Exactly.

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Jane: So did you say you had

your son doing skirting boards?

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Ange: Yeah, before people would

come over, I'd have my son

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cleaning the skirting boards.

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I'd have my husband doing the fans.

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I'd be doing all the windows.

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It was a whole operation.

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And that's part of the reason

that I didn't want to have people

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over too, was way too stressful

and took way too much effort.

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But the thing I realized

was that my values are

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connection, growth, and courage.

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And so it was really getting in the way

of me being able to connect with people

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in the way that I wanted and really

getting in the way of me being able

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to live out my values, which was why I

took it to therapy in the first place.

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Wow.

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Okay.

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Jane: Okay.

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So having to look yourself and your

house look perfect, what, was that

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your main area or was there other areas

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Ange: too?

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I would say mainly the

house and family life.

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I wanted that to look perfect, even

though you could make jokes about

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things being a mess, but you didn't

want it to actually be a mess.

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My work, I loved my work.

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I don't know if I would have

considered myself perfect.

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A perfectionist, but

definitely a workaholic.

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So perhaps there was some perfectionism

happening there too, that caused me to

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be at work longer than I needed to be.

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Yeah.

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Cause

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Jane: for me, I find perfectionism, like

it's hard for me to just leave things.

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And I'm just wondering if

that's the same for you.

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It's like I have to have

to respond to everybody.

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I have to respond to the emails.

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I have to have it done.

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And if there's a question on family

or self care or food and then

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getting back to everybody, I would

100 percent get back to everybody.

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Even though those people in a

year's time might not even be

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working in that company anymore.

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I would still feel the need to not

miss anybody, and if other people

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could just get up and leave and not

finish, I just couldn't understand

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how they could possibly even

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Ange: walk out.

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Yeah, I think that's a really common

struggle, especially with ADHD.

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I know that I often felt as though I put

external people's needs before the needs

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of my family, because you have acceptance

from your family, where you're trying

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to control other people's perceptions

of you when you're dealing with people

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outside of the family or people through

work or sort of anyone on the outside.

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And perfectionism ultimately is

about controlling perceptions.

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Jane: Yeah.

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Which is, as you said, is already,

you already have that there with

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your husband and kids potentially.

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So.

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You're less likely to be, like, although

I think there's also a lot of pressure

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on ADHD mums to be the perfect mum

and to be the perfect wife and have

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the perfect amount of therapy and the

perfect amount of extracurriculars,

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and there's a constant adjusting.

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For me, anyway, that's definitely a focus

of mine, and then I never feel like I've

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done enough, been enough, the kids have

enough, or then do they have too much?

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Should you then give them less?

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And then I'm in a whole spin around

what is the perfect recipe for a

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Ange: childhood.

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Yeah, absolutely.

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And you can go on and on and on with that.

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And I think what I see a lot of times

with my ADHD is is like, when it comes

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to tasks, for instance, there's, I've got

a few different thoughts going on here.

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But when it comes to tasks, we might put

everything on a huge long to do list.

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And then even looking at that list

is overwhelming, but we delude

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ourselves into thinking we can

rest when we get through it all.

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But the nature of tasks is that

most of them are cyclical, so

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they keep coming back and we

never get to the end of that list.

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So a lot of times when I'm working

with clients, it's about providing

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containers for those lists.

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Because we can't possibly.

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Get it all done.

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There's not enough time

in the day to do this.

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If you're living, if you're

living it, you know it well.

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And it feels as though we can never

rest when we're in that cycle.

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Jane: Yeah, and I think my

psychologist really led me to that.

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I think it was the one

after he diagnosed me.

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And I said to him, I really want to

stop living from this list on my phone.

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And he goes, Oh, why don't

you show me if it's okay?

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And I was like, yeah,

yeah, let me show you.

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So I'm like, so like

intense about my list.

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I showed him, I had 560 notes.

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All of them were pages long, then

they were categorized, and then

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they were in today's, and then there

was critical lists, non critical

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lists, and all these other lists.

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And he said to me, I have never

seen a more complex system.

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And I said to him, I need to know

how to stop living like this.

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And he's like, just stop adding to it.

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And my whole head exploded.

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I was like, what do you mean?

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That's my purpose is to add to my list.

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And not like, and he's like,

let's just delete them.

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And I was like, no fucking way.

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Ange: Yeah.

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Yeah.

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Because we become dependent on it.

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And I think a lot of us to have like our

self worth is tied to our productivity.

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Maybe we've learned that

I was as we grew up.

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And so then we don't feel.

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As though we can ever rest because

productivity equals worth equals value.

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And so we just keep on that hamster

wheel running, running, running.

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Go, go, go, go, go.

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Jane: Yeah.

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And I wonder if perfectionism

is actually an addiction.

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Because if you think about like alcohol

and food, for example, it's like something

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to do to get away from yourself in my

personal view, like I'm feeling stressed.

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I'm feeling like kids are doing this.

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I'm going to have a glass of wine.

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I'm going to eat some food.

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And it can be for some people

a real problem for them.

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And sometimes I wonder with

perfectionism, whether it's like

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productivity addiction, where for

me, I'm like, is this perfectionism

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where I keep playing with things and

I can't stop touching everything.

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even though it's done, that

I want to make it better.

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Is it just because I'm not

wanting to sit with myself?

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And I was wondering what your

thoughts would be on that.

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Ange: Well, I think Brene

Brown said it when she said,

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we're all wired for connection.

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And so, when perfectionism shows

up, usually, shame is underneath it.

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And shame being, as Brene defines

it, that fear that we're not worthy.

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of love and belonging.

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And so then, when we do feel that

fear, we tend to try to hide, or

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we pretend like everything's fine,

or we try to control things, or

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numb things, or we perfect them.

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And so it's often shame that

drives that perfectionism, and it's

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shame that often drives addiction.

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So in that way, they're, they're similar.

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They're symptoms of Shame.

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Jane: Yeah.

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And then it's kind of like, I'm

not enough, like if you're a

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child, I'm not enough to be me.

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I'm enough.

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If I do all of these things and I

achieve all of these things, if I'm

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not doing that, I won't be loved.

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Is that the way you're going with that?

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Ange: Yeah, I think so.

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And I mean, if you consider with

ADHD, most of us as kids have grown up

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hearing negative feedback or corrective

feedback about ourselves all our lives.

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And it's constantly reinforced by

different authority figures in our lives.

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And usually those people who are in

positions of authority when we're

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younger, it's their voices that

become our inner voice in adulthood.

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And so then we develop these

harsh inner critics that are

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like taskmasters, slave drivers.

376

:

They keep us.

377

:

It's working for our, our worth,

hustling for our worth, as Brene

378

:

puts it, love a bit of Brene.

379

:

Jane: Oh, me too.

380

:

Me too.

381

:

So why do you think it's so

difficult to break the cycle?

382

:

Because I thought being medicated

now, I thought it would be easier

383

:

and I'm still finding myself in that

cycle, even though I think the drive

384

:

has probably backed off a little bit.

385

:

but yet I'm still actually

doing the same things.

386

:

Ange: Well, I think when it comes to

finding the antidote, like again, going

387

:

back to Brene, worthiness is that belief

that you're worthy of love and belonging.

388

:

And so a lot of the work that has to

happen in order To prevent us from

389

:

defaulting to perfectionism, if that's

been our default, is that we have to

390

:

start developing self compassion and

we have to start the work of unmasking

391

:

and finding those people who love

us regardless of our imperfections.

392

:

And we need to start experimenting

with doing things our way.

393

:

It takes a lot of courage

and a lot of vulnerability.

394

:

And I think for many of us.

395

:

We're so afraid, we're still scared

because we've been told all our lives

396

:

that we're too much or not enough.

397

:

And that obviously has a huge impact.

398

:

When we're wired for belonging,

we desperately want belonging.

399

:

We feel already like there's

something wrong with us.

400

:

And so it can be two biggest step.

401

:

Sometimes it can feel like two

biggest step, but ultimately that's

402

:

where we find freedom is that self

compassion and the self acceptance

403

:

and unmasking, but it's not easy.

404

:

No, and that

405

:

Jane: can be really hard.

406

:

Like as a child, as you talk

about the negative messaging.

407

:

Because if you're getting, and we know the

research shows that ADHD kids get a lot

408

:

more negative messages than other kids.

409

:

So if our kids are receiving that

negative response more often at school,

410

:

if they come home and we are, uh, maybe

preoccupied with our task list or what

411

:

we did and didn't get to do that day in

what we deemed as important and we're not

412

:

really connected with them or we're not

on their side in whatever they are dealing

413

:

with at that time, then I'm trying to

imagine how that would then be for them.

414

:

And that's what drives me to try and

stop at times to break the cycle is

415

:

because I'm like, well, how can I

really be present in this situation?

416

:

Someone ate my kids pretzels

from his lunchbox and that's

417

:

a really big upset for him.

418

:

If I'm actually just thinking about

returning the toaster to the good guys

419

:

and when really no one's going to have

toast in the morning, it's not a big

420

:

deal, but I want to take it off my list.

421

:

Where is the priorities?

422

:

Because when you get more self

aware, I think I've seen myself as

423

:

the level of productivity has become

less important, even though I still

424

:

do it, but I can catch myself going,

actually, I'm still doing this action,

425

:

but this is actually not important.

426

:

Ange: Yeah.

427

:

And I think that's what's really important

about the self discovery that has to

428

:

happen and usually happens in adulthood.

429

:

Like, it's really important to know

what you value and that helps to guide

430

:

what you prioritize in your life.

431

:

And so when you have those moments

where you might be defaulting to

432

:

perfectionism, you can catch yourself and

return to your values and go, Actually,

433

:

what is most important to me here?

434

:

Mm.

435

:

Jane: Mm.

436

:

Absolutely.

437

:

So, when you said you're a recovering

perfectionist, I'm very curious.

438

:

What do you think the steps

are in recovery if we think

439

:

about Perfectionism Anonymous?

440

:

If we were running that, what

would, I mean, God, I'd love to

441

:

attend one of those meetings.

442

:

What would be some of the

steps that, you know, you think

443

:

would be important in that?

444

:

Ange: Well, I think self compassion is

key because it precedes self acceptance.

445

:

We need to be able to treat

ourselves in the same way that we

446

:

would treat a good friend, or our

child, or someone who we value.

447

:

Because, usually, if we visited our

friends, and they were stressed out,

448

:

and things, We're all over the place.

449

:

Usually we're really

compassionate towards them.

450

:

We're not beating them over the head

with a stick, telling them to clean

451

:

it all up and what's wrong with

you and everyone else can do this.

452

:

Why can't you?

453

:

But we're really harsh on ourselves.

454

:

So self compassion is key and

it's something that takes time

455

:

and practice to cultivate.

456

:

Then I think we really need

to get into self-discovery.

457

:

So we need to understand what we

value, what are our strengths?

458

:

What are we actually

bringing to the table?

459

:

Because most of us focus on our

weaknesses at the expense of

460

:

acknowledging our strengths.

461

:

What do I actually prefer?

462

:

What are my standards?

463

:

Because oftentimes we find

that we're, we're living.

464

:

up to the expectations of the culture,

or we're living up to the expectations

465

:

of our family unit, or we're not

living a life that's authentic to us.

466

:

And so we need some like real

time in self reflection and

467

:

introspection to figure out.

468

:

What we care about and how we

can orient our lives around that.

469

:

And then we need the courage to

be able to do things differently.

470

:

I mean, I remember working with a

girl who she was supposed to work a

471

:

four day week and have Wednesdays off.

472

:

But what was happening for her was that

she would spend all Wednesday cleaning

473

:

and she wouldn't actually have any rest

time, which was why she was working

474

:

a four day week in the first place.

475

:

And so when we got into it, what

was actually the sticking point

476

:

was the laundry and specifically

the folding of the laundry.

477

:

And she realized that she was waiting all

day, like putting it off and putting it

478

:

off because she hated the job so much.

479

:

And then finally she would do it at

the end of the day, but then the day's

480

:

gone and she hadn't managed to actually

relax because anytime that she was

481

:

sitting down, she couldn't truly rest

or relax because she had that pressure

482

:

hanging over her of the laundry.

483

:

And I asked the question in the

coaching session, is it necessary?

484

:

And it's a simple question.

485

:

But for her, all these lightbulbs started

going off, and she realized, actually,

486

:

most of my clothes don't require ironing.

487

:

They're not the kind of things

that are going to crease too much,

488

:

or look bad if they are creased.

489

:

I don't have to do that at all.

490

:

And one time actually, I was living at

my mom's place and she divided all of

491

:

my clothes up into these clear plastic

tubs and just threw them in there

492

:

and it made things so much easier.

493

:

So maybe what I need to do

is just get another chest of

494

:

drawers and then I'm sorted.

495

:

So now she just throws all the laundry

in the drawers and calls it a day

496

:

and she's got her Wednesdays back.

497

:

And so it took though her giving

herself permission to do things

498

:

differently than might be expected.

499

:

in order to do that for herself and

in order to keep her life functional.

500

:

Jane: Yet it's sometimes that

rigid thinking too, isn't it?

501

:

Where it's like, it has to be this way.

502

:

But when you actually have someone

ask questions like what you're

503

:

saying, they start to go, why

does it have to be that way?

504

:

I have no idea.

505

:

And then they've probably been

living with this thing with these

506

:

Wednesdays in the laundries for so

long, never questioning the why.

507

:

I think that's such a great.

508

:

analogy because then she had her

Wednesdays off to rest because she

509

:

wasn't consumed by this one job.

510

:

Ange: But that, sometimes it's

511

:

Jane: like that with ADHD because

it's like you can't problem solve.

512

:

You can, but sometimes when it's your

own self and it's a small problem,

513

:

but a large issue, it's like you

can't see hill for the trees with it.

514

:

I find that all the time.

515

:

I'm like, how did I not think of that?

516

:

Then it comes to you and you're

like, yeah, that was really

517

:

Ange: stressing me out.

518

:

Yeah.

519

:

And it's such a simple

fix a lot of the time.

520

:

I think also one of the things I didn't

say was that it's really important to

521

:

connect with people who love you, no

matter what they accept you, regardless

522

:

of your imperfections, you've got to

find your tribe and that takes some time.

523

:

Oftentimes we.

524

:

Don't, we haven't naturally

formed those groups.

525

:

Often times we, without meaning

to, have gravitated towards

526

:

other neurodivergent folk.

527

:

But, some of us don't have that.

528

:

But I think it's really

important to find that.

529

:

Because even in my own life, it

was really finding a workplace

530

:

that valued my contribution.

531

:

Was willing to overlook some of my

challenges or laugh them off with me.

532

:

Which is another, another thing

that I've done that's really

533

:

worked, I think, in my favour.

534

:

I laugh these things off and

it's disarming for people.

535

:

They are, I don't know, I guess more

likely to laugh it off with you and

536

:

find it endearing or funny as opposed

to annoying if you're able to see the

537

:

humor in it and own your mistakes.

538

:

But getting back to finding

your tribe, it can't be.

539

:

understated how important that is because

you can really only be vulnerable and be

540

:

courageous enough to be your authentic

self in an environment where you have

541

:

safety and you're not going to be

ridiculed, criticized for being yourself

542

:

because it takes a huge amount of courage

when you've spent your whole life masking

543

:

to gradually start taking that mask off.

544

:

Yeah

545

:

Jane: and I think with ADHD you can

impulsively Share too, and you want

546

:

to make sure that if you are going to

be vulnerable, you're with the right

547

:

people because you don't want to start

getting vulnerable or attempting to

548

:

laugh a few things off and you're

actually not in a safe environment.

549

:

Same as if you get diagnosed, I probably

wouldn't start with people that you're

550

:

not sure about or maybe siblings.

551

:

If you've got a history of them not being

supportive, I wouldn't call them first.

552

:

Probably not a

553

:

Ange: great place to start.

554

:

A hundred percent.

555

:

And I think most of us naturally

start to find our tribe online.

556

:

We start to relate to other people

when we first get diagnosed and we go

557

:

down the rabbit hole and we realize in

these Facebook groups or whatever that

558

:

there's so many people out there like us.

559

:

And then gradually, That gives

us permission to be ourselves.

560

:

And the more ourselves we are when

we're out there in the world, the more

561

:

likely it is that we're going to attract

people like us and who will accept us.

562

:

Jane: Yeah, absolutely.

563

:

So with your recovery in perfectionism,

what do you think has been the largest

564

:

tool, so you've obviously the community

and also using humor, if there's anyone

565

:

else listening, that's wanting to.

566

:

Start on the road to recovery

and they want to at least

567

:

try and make some changes.

568

:

What would be some good kind

of ways to get started at

569

:

Ange: least?

570

:

I mean, I think, so Kristen

Neff's website, selfcompassion.

571

:

org, so it's self compassion.

572

:

org, has tons of self compassion

practices, even the one that I mentioned

573

:

earlier, how would you treat a friend?

574

:

That's one of the exercises

she has listed on her website

575

:

and one that I've used a lot.

576

:

For myself and with other people.

577

:

As well as that, I think it's If you can

do some values work to understand what

578

:

it is, that's most important to you.

579

:

And usually in my coaching sessions, at

some point in time, we're going to do

580

:

work around values and narrow it down

to your top three so that it's really

581

:

easy to recall them in the moment and

filter your decisions through them more.

582

:

When you feel like things are a

little bit off in your life, you can

583

:

call on your values and view your

life through that lens and go, okay.

584

:

Where am I misaligned here?

585

:

What's going on and pull your life

back into alignment with your values.

586

:

Cause anytime we're operating

outside of our values, it's

587

:

going to be unsustainable.

588

:

And then, yeah, I think, as I said

before, finding your tribe, if you can

589

:

try to find a support group in your

local area, or try to connect some way

590

:

with some other ADHD is in your life,

that's always really helpful, or even

591

:

just neuro divergent folk in general.

592

:

Because we all have that shared

experience of feeling like we're

593

:

different somehow, like maybe

there's something wrong with us.

594

:

And so you can connect that way.

595

:

But yeah, I mean, ultimately it

comes down to self acceptance and

596

:

part of that is the unmasking.

597

:

And that just takes time,

gradual shedding and gradual like

598

:

steps of, of courage towards.

599

:

Unmasking.

600

:

Jane: Yeah.

601

:

And that's it.

602

:

I mean, that might be a lifelong

lesson for some of us, myself included,

603

:

which I suppose then again, goes back

to self compassion in that you can't

604

:

decide that you are going to no longer

behave this way when this is how you've

605

:

always been, and this is the positive

reinforcement that you've received.

606

:

And then suddenly you're going to just.

607

:

shift because you're now going to

perfectly be on the path to recovery

608

:

because that's also the pressure, right?

609

:

Because now you're like, I

know now I'm a perfectionist.

610

:

I will perfectly recover quickly and

seamlessly and then I will teach others

611

:

and inspire and lead because that's the

type of perfectionist brain that we have.

612

:

Ange: Yeah, and inevitably we'll end

up failing and then we've got to use

613

:

self compassion and the more we use

that, it's like a muscle, the more

614

:

we use self compassion The better we

become at using self compassion and

615

:

retraining that voice in our head to be

in instinctively more self compassionate.

616

:

Yeah, absolutely.

617

:

Jane: Have you heard

of the latest research?

618

:

They're saying that I think

they're starting it in the US.

619

:

I don't know if they're doing it

here yet, that in the eating disorder

620

:

clinics, they're starting to do

ADHD testing when people arrive.

621

:

Have you heard

622

:

Ange: that?

623

:

Yeah, I have.

624

:

I don't know a ton about it, but

it makes a huge amount of sense.

625

:

Absolutely,

626

:

Jane: because I was trying to figure

out, I was like, wow, well if a lot of

627

:

us are 35 plus when we get diagnosed,

imagine turning up to an eating disorder

628

:

clinic at 13, 14, whatever you are, and

actually getting diagnosed then and there.

629

:

And, I mean, what a life changing.

630

:

And the same with juvenile detention and

some of those particular places that are

631

:

being set up or alcohol and drug rehab, if

they start to test for ADHD there, because

632

:

I do wonder if you have an ADHD brain

and an eating disorder, and I know we're

633

:

going off track slightly, to give those

particular girls or women or men, whoever

634

:

they are, these strategies, ADHD brain.

635

:

And then there's a sense of failure.

636

:

That doesn't go well with

a perfectionist brain.

637

:

Ange: Yeah, yeah, yeah, exactly.

638

:

I think a lot of those populations

are massively underserved and

639

:

unrecognized as having ADHD.

640

:

So the more that we can do to make sure

that people are assessed earlier in their

641

:

lives and given the support that they

need earlier, the less People are going

642

:

to have to struggle with perfectionism

later in life or addiction or workaholism

643

:

or the controlling and the hiding and the

pretending and the numbing and all the

644

:

other things that we talked about earlier.

645

:

Jane: Yeah, absolutely.

646

:

Absolutely.

647

:

Now, Angie, I think we have

hit the head nail on the head

648

:

pretty quickly with that one.

649

:

What I think would be really great

is I'm going to put the show notes

650

:

in for Kristen Neff because that

sounds like a really good resource.

651

:

Perfectionism.

652

:

Thank you so much for your time.

653

:

Is there anything extra that

you want to share before we go?

654

:

Any final.

655

:

Passing notes to any ADHD recovering

656

:

Ange: perfectionists.

657

:

Look, I think ultimately the antidote

to perfectionism is self compassion.

658

:

And so I would direct people to have

a look at Kristen Neff's website.

659

:

Again, that is Kristen, K R I S

T I N dash Neff, N E F F dot org.

660

:

And she has so many

great resources on there.

661

:

She's got a couple of

books, a workbook even.

662

:

And.

663

:

I think that's such a great place to

start and from there you can work towards

664

:

self acceptance, unmasking all the

other good things, but self compassion

665

:

is where it all starts ultimately.

666

:

Jane: Okay, well I will be going

on a website straight after this

667

:

which is going to be a ride for me.

668

:

Thank you, you've taught me a lot.

669

:

I really, really appreciate your

time and I think there'll be a lot

670

:

of perfectionist listening that will.

671

:

Hopefully at least know where

to start because I think with

672

:

perfectionism sometimes we can't

get started until it's perfect.

673

:

What's the perfect path forward?

674

:

So many questions.

675

:

So I think it's great to have a path

forward and to at least get started

676

:

rather than sitting where I am and

go, I know I'm a perfectionist.

677

:

I can't stop doing it.

678

:

That there it's, at some point it

becomes an excuse and you know, you

679

:

really need to challenge yourself.

680

:

So I really appreciate your time.

681

:

If anyone would like to

work with Angie further.

682

:

I'm going to put her website in the show

notes and give her a follow on Instagram.

683

:

Instagram.

684

:

But thank you so much

for your time, Angie.

685

:

It's been

686

:

Ange: great.

687

:

Absolute pleasure.

688

:

It's always fun.

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