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  • AuDHD at 40: How I Finally Understood My Own Brain (And Life)
    2026/06/06

    You were the kid who never got the memo.

    Everyone else seemed to know where to stand, what to do with their hands, how to slip into a conversation like it was the most natural thing in the world. You were a half-second behind - studying what to do, taking mental notes, hoping nobody would notice.

    And later, in relationships, you heard it again and again:

    "You're too much."

    "You're too sensitive."

    "You're too emotional."

    "Why can't you just be chill?"

    So you tried to bottle it up. Be cool. Act like nothing was a big deal.... when the truth was, so many things felt like a really big deal.

    This episode is for you if you've spent your life quietly wondering why connection seems to come easily to everyone but you (and blaming yourself for it.)

    Today, I'm doing something I've never done on this show: I'm telling you my own story. The summer camp where no one wanted to pair up with me. The relationships where I felt like too much. And the assessment, at 40, that finally explained who I'd been the whole time: Level 2 autism and severe ADHD.

    I'll walk you through what AuDHD actually is, the relief and the grief that show up together with a late diagnosis, and why understanding your wiring changes everything. Because it was never that you were bad at being a person. You were just doing it with a brain nobody ever explained to you.

    IN THIS EPISODE

    • The summer-camp memory that shaped how I saw myself for decades (and why it still matters)
    • How I went from psychology student to realizing I might be neurodivergent myself
    • What my assessment actually revealed (and why the word "severe" caught me off guard)
    • What AuDHD really is (and why it pulls you in two directions at once)
    • The relief AND the grief that arrive together with a late diagnosis
    • The everyday tools I'd been quietly building since childhood to mask executive dysfunction (spoiler: it was never laziness)
    • The AuDHD strengths I finally stopped apologizing for: pattern recognition, deep empathy, fierce loyalty, justice sensitivity....
    • Why "too much" and "too sensitive" were never flaws to fix (and what they actually are)

    MENTIONED IN THIS EPISODE

    - Free quiz: Is This My Brain or My Relationship?

    LOVED THIS EPISODE?

    Subscribe so you don't miss what's coming, leave a rating wherever you listen, and send this one to the person in your life who's always been told they're "too much" - and is just starting to wonder if there might be another explanation.

    CONNECT

    • Website: JennaDalton.com
    • Instagram: @neurodivergentlovelab
    • Work with Jenna: book a free 15-minute consultation at JennaDalton.com

    A NOTE

    This podcast is for educational purposes and is not a substitute for therapy or mental health care. If you're in crisis, please reach out to a local crisis line or emergency service.

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    29 分
  • How Rejection Sensitivity Hijacks Your Relationship (+ 4 Steps to Slow Its Roll)
    2026/05/30

    Your partner says, "I'm tired. Can we talk later?"

    Neutral words. Maybe even kind ones. But they don't land that way. They land as a personal attack. Criticism. Rejection.

    They don't want to be around me.
    I'm too much.
    I did something wrong.
    They're going to break up with me.


    Within seconds you're spiralling. Chest tight. Throat closing. Tears coming, or rage, or both at the same time. And the worst part? You know your partner simply said they're tired. You can see - with the logical part of your brain that's currently struggling to exist - that this isn't rejection. You're watching yourself spiral and it doesn't help. The story has already been spun.

    Today, I'm going to tell you what's actually happening in your brain when this happens. And it's not what you've been told. It's not you being too sensitive. It's not you choosing to take things personally. It's not something you can talk yourself out of with positive thinking or a sufficiently aggressive self-help podcast. It's a neurological pattern called Rejection Sensitive Dysphoria, and once you understand why this happens, you have something to hold onto while the wave passes.

    I'm also walking you through four practical tools to interrupt the spiral when it happens, plus I'm giving you a free mini-guide to make it all easier in the moment.

    IN THIS EPISODE

    • Why "just don't take it personally" is the worst advice ever given to an RSD brain
    • The neuroscience of why mild criticism can feel physically painful
    • Why RSD hits harder in romantic relationships than anywhere else (spoiler: it's not because something's wrong with the relationship)
    • The "story engine": why the spiral doesn't feel like an emotional reaction, it feels like a sudden moment of clarity (and why that makes it so dangerous)
    • Four tools that actually help interrupt the spiral
    • What to say to your partner during a non-RSD moment so they can help you reality-check when one hits (script included)

    MENTIONED IN THIS EPISODE

    Free RSD in Relationships mini-guide: a one-pager with the four steps you can print, save to your phone, or share with your partner
    Free quiz: Is This My Brain or My Relationship?

    LOVED THIS EPISODE? Subscribe so you don't miss what's coming, leave a rating wherever you listen, and send this one to a partner, friend, or loved one who has ever spiralled over a perfectly neutral text and didn't know why.

    CONNECT WITH ME

    - Website: JennaDalton.com
    - Instagram: @neurodivergentlovelab
    - Work with Jenna: book a free 15-minute consultation at JennaDalton.com

    A NOTE

    This podcast is for educational purposes and is not a substitute for therapy or mental health care. If you're in crisis, please reach out to a local crisis line or emergency service.

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    20 分
  • The Uncomfortable Truth: Most Couples Therapy Wasn't Built for You
    2026/05/23

    Can I be honest?

    Couples therapy may actually make your relationship worse.

    Not because the therapist isn't empathetic or skilled. Not because your partner isn't trying. But because every exercise you're given was likely designed without your unique brain in mind.

    "Maintain eye contact when your partner is talking."

    "Use 'I feel' statements in the moment."

    "When you go silent during a fight, that's stonewalling and it means your relationship is in a downward spiral unless you do something about it."

    "Assume positive intent - whenever your partner does something hurtful, assume they didn't intend to hurt you."

    These research-backed strategies can work incredibly well.... for neurotypical brains.

    If you've been in couples therapy before and left feeling like you were the problem. If you were given strategies that you tried to use and they felt like they didn't work the way they were expected to and you assumed it was your fault. This episode is for you.

    Today, I'm going to show you that it was never your fault. The tools just weren't built for your brain. Some of the most common couples therapy techniques quietly backfire on neurodivergent brains, and once you understand why, you can stop blaming yourself for "failing" at couples therapy.

    I'm also not just going to tell you what doesn't work, I'm going to share tips to help you shift common couples therapy approaches to actually work for your neurodivergent brain.

    IN THIS EPISODE

    • Why some of the most common couples therapy techniques quietly fail neurodivergent couples (and what to do instead)
    • Why eye contact is a sensory load, not a measure of love or attention
    • What's actually happening when you can't produce an "I feel" statement on the spot (spoiler: it's not avoidance)
    • Why "assume positive intent" can create more harm than good for neurodivergent people who have spent a lifetime doubting their own perceptions.
    • How neurodivergent shutdown gets misdiagnosed as stonewalling, and what that label does to neurodivergent clients
    • How to adjust the Five Love Languages to work for your sensory needs, executive function challenges, and fluctuating capacity
    • Why the Imago dialogue can lead to more disconnection than connection for neurodivergent and mixed-neurotype couples, and how to adapt it to work with your wiring
    • The exact questions to ask a potential couples therapist before you book the first session to ensure they are neurodivergent-affirming

    MENTIONED IN THIS EPISODE

    • Free quiz: Is This My Brain or My Relationship? JennaDalton.com/quiz
    • Instagram: DM me with your questions @neurodivergentlovelab

    LOVED THIS EPISODE?

    Subscribe so you don't miss what's coming, leave a rating wherever you listen, and send this one to the friend or partner who has walked out of a couples therapy session feeling smaller than when they walked in.

    CONNECT

    • Website: JennaDalton.com
    • Instagram: @neurodivergentlovelab
    • Work with Jenna (Alberta-based): book a free 15-minute consultation at JennaDalton.com

    A NOTE

    This podcast is for educational purposes and is not a substitute for therapy or mental health care. If you're in crisis, please reach out to a local crisis line or emergency service.

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    30 分
  • Why You Shut Down In Fights (And What to Do About It)
    2026/05/16

    You're in the middle of an argument, and then... you just go blank.

    The words are gone. Your thoughts won't line up. Your partner is still talking, still waiting, still looking at you for a response. And you're just… sitting there. Offline. You haven't left. You haven't stopped caring. But you can't move, and you can't explain that, and the longer the silence stretches the worse it looks.

    Later — an hour, a few hours, a day — the words finally come back. But by then your partner has already decided what your silence meant. They think you checked out. They think you don't care. And you couldn't care more.

    Today, I'm going to tell you exactly what happened in your brain during that moment. And it's not what you've been told. It's not stonewalling. It's not avoidance. It's not proof that you're bad at relationships. It's a nervous system doing exactly what it's wired to do under stress.

    And here's the part most couples therapists miss: ADHD shutdown and autistic shutdown look almost identical from the outside — but inside, they're two completely different processes. Once you can tell them apart, conflict stops feeling like it's entirely your fault and you will actually have a plan to navigate it in a way that supports your natural wiring.

    IN THIS EPISODE

    • Why your brain goes offline mid-argument — and what's actually happening when it does
    • The key differences between ADHD shutdown and autistic shutdown in conflict
    • Why mixed-neurotype couples so often talk past each other without realizing it
    • Why "just communicate better" sets so many neurodivergent people up to fail
    • How to explain your unique shutdown to your partner so they hear love, not disconnection
    • What actually helps both people feel safe enough to come back to the conversation

    MENTIONED IN THIS EPISODE

    • Free quiz: Is This My Brain or My Relationship? JennaDalton.com/quiz

    LOVED THIS EPISODE? Subscribe so you don't miss what's coming, leave a rating wherever you listen, and send this one to the partner, friend, or person who has shut down in a fight and never had the words to explain why.

    CONNECT

    • Website: JennaDalton.com
    • Instagram: @neurodivergentlovelab
    • Work with Jenna: book a free 15-minute consultation at JennaDalton.com

    A NOTE This podcast is for educational purposes and is not a substitute for therapy or mental health care. If you're in crisis, please reach out to a local crisis line or emergency service.

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    19 分
  • “Too Much and Not Enough”: The Story of Your ND Life
    2026/05/09

    "You're too sensitive."

    "Why can't you just relax?"

    "You never pay attention."

    "You care too much about the wrong things."

    Too much. Not enough. At the same time. Sometimes in the same sentence.

    If that feeling hits home - this episode is for you.

    In Episode 4, Jenna goes to the heart of the neurodivergent relationship experience: the painful, exhausting, lifelong message that you're simultaneously overwhelming and inadequate. This isn't just a pattern. It's a wound. And most of us have been carrying it so long we forgot it was there - we just thought it was who we were.

    This episode is a little different than the first three. Less science-heavy. More personal. The one that might land on a tender spot you didn't know was still tender.

    Jenna walks through the four sources of the "too much/not enough" message. Why your brain isn't broken, why the system is rigged against you, and the specific neurological and social reasons this story sticks so deep for ADHD, autistic, and AuDHD adults. Then she gives you three things you can actually do with it.


    IN THIS EPISODE

    • Why "too much and not enough" isn't a personality flaw - it's a wound built by accumulation
    • The basketball-and-the-rim metaphor: how you've been measured on a scale that wasn't built for your brain
    • The masking paradox - why the version of you that "worked" eventually exhausts you, and why your partner falls in love with the mask
    • How Rejection Sensitive Dysphoria (RSD) magnifies a sigh into a verdict on your worth
    • The accumulation effect: why one comment can hit like a thousand
    • Three practical tools to start loosening the grip of this story - including how to separate feedback from identity, name your needs without apologizing, and build a counter-evidence file your brain can't argue with
    • A note for partners listening - what to actually do when this episode hits your person hard


    MENTIONED IN THIS EPISODE

    • Free quiz: "Is This My Brain or My Relationship?": JennaDalton.com/quiz
    • Send Jenna a DM on Instagram: @neurodivergentlovelab


    CONNECT WITH JENNA

    • Instagram: @neurodivergentlovelab
    • Website: JennaDalton.com


    LOVED THIS EPISODE?

    Subscribe so you don't miss what's coming, leave a rating wherever you listen, and send this one to the partner, friend, or person who has experienced this and never known what to do with it.


    CONNECT

    • Website: JennaDalton.com
    • Instagram: @neurodivergentlovelab
    • Work with Jenna: book a free 15-minute consultation at JennaDalton.com


    A NOTE

    This podcast is for educational purposes and is not a substitute for therapy or mental health care. If you're in crisis, please reach out to a local crisis line or emergency service.

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    22 分
  • The Neuroscience Of Why You Fall Hard and Then Pull Away
    2026/05/03

    You remember the beginning.

    You couldn't stop thinking about them. You checked your phone constantly and texted back instantly. You stayed up until 3 AM talking even though you had work at 7. You planned elaborate dates. You wrote little love notes. You were completely, fully, intoxicatingly in deep.

    And then something shifted. The intensity faded. You went from all-in to .… somewhere else. Your partner noticed. You noticed. And the worst part? You couldn't explain it. Not to them, not to yourself.

    Today, Jenna is going to tell you exactly what happened. And - promise - it's not what you think. It's not a character flaw. It's not proof that you're incapable of lasting love. It's chemistry. Literal brain chemistry. And once you understand it, your entire relationship history is going to make sense in a different way.


    IN THIS EPISODE

    • Why this might be the single most destructive (and misunderstood) pattern in neurodivergent relationships
    • What the hyperfocus-to-withdrawal cycle looks like from both sides - yours and your partner's
    • The dopamine science: what's actually happening in an ND brain at the start of a relationship vs. six months in
    • How this pattern shows up differently in ADHD, autistic, and AuDHD brains
    • Why hyperfocus intensity is not the same as love bombing (and why that distinction matters)
    • Four practical tools to help you navigate this tricky situation


    MENTIONED IN THIS EPISODE

    • Love the Way You're Wired — Jenna's relationship workbook for neurodivergent adults: JennaDalton.com/wired
    • Free quiz — Is This My Brain or My Relationship?: JennaDalton.com/quiz


    LOVED THIS EPISODE?

    Subscribe so you don't miss what's coming, leave a rating wherever you listen, and send this one to the partner, friend, or person who has lived inside this cycle and never had the words for it.


    CONNECT

    • Website: JennaDalton.com
    • Instagram: @neurodivergentlovelab
    • Work with Jenna: book a free 15-minute consultation at JennaDalton.com


    A NOTE

    This podcast is for educational purposes and is not a substitute for therapy or mental health care. If you're in crisis, please reach out to a local crisis line or emergency service.

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    27 分
  • The One Where Your Relationship History Suddenly Makes Sense
    2026/05/03

    There's a moment that almost every late-diagnosed neurodivergent person describes the same way.

    It's like someone handed them a pair of glasses they didn't know they needed and suddenly every relationship they've squinted at for years snaps into focus. Every fight that didn't make sense. Every time they were called "too much." Every pattern they couldn't break.

    "It makes so much more sense now."

    If you've said that sentence - or you're thinking it could be true for you right now - this episode is for you.

    In Episode 2, Jenna walks through what's actually happening in your nervous system and your story when a late ADHD, autism, or AuDHD diagnosis lands. The relief. The grief. The rewriting of your relationship history. And what comes next once the dust settles.


    IN THIS EPISODE

    • The "before and after" pattern Jenna sees constantly in late-diagnosed clients
    • Why a late diagnosis is both a relief and a grief - and why both are valid
    • How ND brains experience conflict, intimacy, and communication differently (and why generic advice keeps falling flat)
    • Reframing the relationship history you've been blaming yourself for
    • Where to actually start once the diagnosis clicks


    MENTIONED IN THIS EPISODE

    • Free quiz — Is This My Brain or My Relationship?: JennaDalton.com/quiz


    LOVED THIS EPISODE?

    Subscribe, leave a rating, and forward it to the friend whose recent diagnosis is reshaping how they see everything. Sharing this show and leaving a rating is the single most generous thing you can do to help support it.


    CONNECT

    • Website: JennaDalton.com
    • Instagram: @neurodivergentlovelab
    • Work with Jenna: book a free 15-minute consultation at JennaDalton.com


    A NOTE

    This podcast is for educational purposes and is not a substitute for therapy or mental health care. If you're in crisis, please reach out to a local crisis line or emergency service.

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    21 分
  • Welcome to The Neurodivergent Love Lab
    2026/05/03

    Have you ever sat across from a therapist, a partner, a friend - someone who was genuinely trying to help - and thought… they don't get it?

    Not because they weren't smart. Not because they didn't care. But because the advice they were giving you was built for a brain that isn't yours.

    If you've ever tried to "just communicate better" or "meet in the middle" and felt yourself failing at something everyone else seemed to find easy - this episode is for you.

    In Episode 1, Registered Provisional Psychologist, Jenna Dalton, introduces The Neurodivergent Love Lab: what it is, who it's for, and the core belief that drives every single episode that follows.


    IN THIS EPISODE

    • Why so much relationship advice fails neurodivergent people (and why that's not your fault)
    • What "neurodivergent" actually means when we're talking about love (not the textbook version, the lived one)
    • How ADHD, autism, and AuDHD show up in conflict, communication, intimacy, and connection
    • The reframe that changes everything
    • What to expect from the show going forward


    MENTIONED IN THIS EPISODE

    • Follow along on Instagram: @neurodivergentlovelab


    LOVED THIS EPISODE?

    Subscribe so you don't miss what's next, leave a quick rating wherever you listen (it genuinely helps the show reach the people who need it), and send this episode to the friend who keeps saying "I think I might be neurodivergent."


    CONNECT

    • Website: JennaDalton.com
    • Instagram: @neurodivergentlovelab
    • Work with Jenna: book a free 15-minute consultation at JennaDalton.com


    A NOTE

    This podcast is for educational purposes and is not a substitute for therapy or mental health care. If you're in crisis, please reach out to a local crisis line or emergency service.

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    15 分