Even with perfectly intact executive function, parenting young kids without help is hard. Now layer ADHD on top of that. The mental load alone—tracking everyone’s schedules, needs, and emotional lives—would break anyone. With ADHD, it’s crushing. So when a woman tells me she can’t keep track of anything, that she feels like she’s failing, that she doesn’t recognize herself anymore, what am I actually looking at? Is that ADHD, or is that the entirely reasonable response to an impossible situation?
Usually, it’s both.
The estrogen connection nobody talks about
Reproductive transitions amplify everything. Estrogen plays a critical role in regulating dopamine, the neurotransmitter central to attention, memory, and motivation. When estrogen fluctuates wildly postpartum or during perimenopause, ADHD symptoms often get dramatically worse. Studies show that up to 70% of women report a significant worsening of ADHD symptoms during perimenopause, yet almost none of them were told this would happen.
The cruel part is the timing. These are also the exact moments when women need the most support and have the least. New motherhood is isolating. Perimenopause hits when you’ve advanced in your career, often sandwiched between aging parents and teenagers, managing more than ever. Hormonal chaos collides with maximum responsibility and minimum infrastructure, and what used to be manageable becomes debilitating.
The systems that worked, the hyperfocus, the last-minute panic productivity, the ability to juggle it all, suddenly stop working. And because most women don’t know about the estrogen-dopamine connection, and most doctors don’t either, the crash feels inexplicable and deeply personal. Women think they’re falling apart. In reality, their brain is responding exactly as it should to impossible circumstances, made worse by a hormone shift no one warned them about.
How the medical system failed them
One of the cruelest parts of all this is how thoroughly the medical system has let these women down. Girls who daydream or are “too chatty” get brushed off. Women who are anxious, overwhelmed, or emotionally reactive get labeled as depressed or hormonal. Studies show women with ADHD are significantly more likely to receive an antidepressant or anxiety diagnosis before anyone considers ADHD. Even when women do seek help, they’re often met with dismissiveness. “You’re just stressed.” “It’s mom brain.” “You’re doing too much.”
