How Sturdy Is Your Trampoline of Self-Belief?

As a Life Coach, I am privileged to meet many wonderful adults with ADHD at an intimate, open level of trust.

Yet I am so often saddened by their lack of belief in themselves.

Self-belief is like a trampoline. It powers us on to create achievable goals, improves our focus, firms up our personal and professional boundaries, strengthens our relationships, increases our resilience, reduces stress and improves our mental health. What a list of wins!

The invisible load

Here's something important to understand first: low self-belief in ADHD is not a personality flaw. It's not weakness. It's the entirely predictable result of years of struggle that most people never had the right framework to understand.

Years of ADHD challenges often leave people carrying an invisible load — confusion, frustration, self-doubt and shame. Many arrive at adulthood with a very harsh internal narrative. Without ever being told they had ADHD, they drew the only logical conclusions available to them:

"I'm lazy." "I'm unreliable." "I just can't get my life together." "Something must be wrong with me."

These beliefs don't stay on the surface but often become deeply ingrained. And they are slackening off the springs of your trampoline.

A new understanding will change everything

ADHD is absolutely not a moral failure, but an issue with regulation. Attention, activity, impulse, emotion, time, sleep, reward — these are the things the ADHD brain regulates differently. Not better or worse. Differently.

Understanding this changes the story you tell yourself. Instead of asking "What is wrong with me?" you start asking "How does my system regulate things differently?" And instead of "I should be able to do this," you can ask "What support does my system need to do this?"

That is not a small shift. That is your trampoline with brand new springs.

The challenges hide our strengths

ADHD carries remarkable adaptive traits: creativity, divergent thinking, hyperfocus, brilliant problem-solving under pressure, deep empathy and sensitivity, and tremendous passion and enthusiasm.

The goal — and this is where coaching comes in — is to manage the challenges while harnessing the strengths. Regulation, as Dr Kustow puts it in How to Thrive with Adult ADHD, is what allows us to access those strengths. Get the regulation working better, and the gifts naturally follow.

Restore your bounce — 4 steps to repair the fabric of self-belief:

  1. Embrace who you are. Be kind to yourself. ADHD is part of who you are, and living with it demonstrates how resilient and capable you are. Treat yourself with the same kindness and understanding you'd offer a dear friend facing similar issues.

  2. Set realistic goals. Break tasks into manageable — tiny! — steps and set achievable goals. More frequent small wins are how confidence gets rebuilt.

  3. Celebrate small wins — and train your brain to notice them. Acknowledge every achievement, no matter how small it seems. Here's a powerful coaching exercise: at the end of each day, note just one thing you did that worked. Your brain has a built-in filtering system called the Reticular Activating System (RAS) — it prioritises whatever you've taught it to look for. As noting your wins becomes a habit, it begins filtering for evidence of your capability rather than your failures. You are literally rewiring the story.

  4. Reaching out is a sign of strength, not weakness. Ask the people who love you how they see you. Listen closely to what they are saying. Surround yourself with people who get you — support groups, communities and lifelong friends so you don't have to explain yourself.

What does thriving actually look like?

Thriving means being on track more often than off track. It means living a life aligned with your values and your strengths — one where your trampoline doesn't need to be perfect, just sturdy enough to keep launching you forward.

That is absolutely possible. And it starts with giving the trampoline back its bounce.


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