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Hacking Your ADHD

Breaking Down Tasks and Big Feelings with Vanessa Gorelkin

Hacking Your ADHD

William Curb

Mental Health, Health & Fitness

4.8702 Ratings

🗓️ 17 March 2025

⏱️ 51 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Hey Team!

This week I’m talking with Vanessa Gorelkin, a seasoned occupational therapist and ADHD coach who’s been working in the field for nearly 30 years. She holds a Bachelor of Arts degree from Brandeis (Bran-Dice) University and a Master's degree in Occupational Therapy from New York University. She specializes in executive function strategies, emotional regulation, and anxiety management, and she brings a unique perspective to helping adults with ADHD navigate the day-to-day.

In this episode, we talk about why people with ADHD struggle with even the things they want to do, how anxiety and executive dysfunction team up to make life extra frustrating, and why strategies that work for a while inevitably stop working. We also dig into emotional regulation, how to break down tasks so they actually feel doable, and why giving yourself a crisis plan before you need it can make a huge difference.

If you'd life to follow along on the show notes page you can find that at HackingYourADHD.com/215

This Episode's Top Tips

1. If something feels overwhelming, try breaking it down into micro-steps. Even something like getting out of bed can be broken into “sit up,” “put feet on the floor,” and “stand up.” In more practical ways, we could think of this as starting out as just opening the document you need to work on, adding the formatting, and starting your first sentence. The idea is you want to build momentum and go with the flow.

2. Be mindful of language; words like "just" and "should" can be damaging. Instead of “I should just wash the dishes,” you can reframe it as “I could wash the dishes,” and then also if you need a little bit more asking yourself, “What’s making this difficult, and how can I work with it?”

3. It’s important to have a crisis plan ready before you need it. When emotional overwhelm hits, it’s hard to think through what you need. You can pre-plan strategies like a weighted blanket, a favorite show, or calling a friend so you don’t have to figure it out at the moment.

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

Welcome to Hacking Your ADHD.

0:06.3

I'm your host, William Kerb, and I have ADHD.

0:09.6

On this podcast, I dig into the tools, tactics, and best practices to help you work with your ADHD brain.

0:15.7

Hey team, this week I'm talking with Vanessa Gorlkin, a seasoned occupational therapist and ADHD coach who's been working in the field for nearly 30 years.

0:23.5

She holds a Bachelor of Arts degree from Brandeis University and a master's degree in occupational therapy from New York University.

0:29.8

She specializes in executive function strategies, emotional regulation, and anxiety management.

0:34.8

And she brings a unique perspective to helping adults with ADHD navigate

0:38.3

their day-to-day lives.

0:40.3

In this episode, we talk about why people with ADHD struggle with even the things that they

0:44.3

want to do, how anxiety and executive dysfunction team up to make life extra frustrating, and

0:49.3

why strategies that work for a while can end up stopping to work.

0:52.3

We also dig into emotional regulation, how to break down tasks so they actually feel doable,

0:57.3

and why giving yourself a crisis plan before you need it can make such a huge difference.

1:02.0

If you'd like to follow along on the show notes page, you can find that at hacking your ADHD.com

1:06.7

slash 215.

1:08.8

All right, keep on listening to find out how occupational therapy can work with your ADHD.

1:18.9

All right.

1:19.9

Well, it's a pleasure to have you on the podcast, and I was kind of thinking one of the best

1:24.4

places start here would be kind of talking about what occupational therapy is, because a lot of people, I imagine, don't have a great idea of what

1:32.1

occupational therapy is. They kind of hear that and they go, that's work therapy and that's

1:36.3

clearly not what it is. So occupational therapy really has an unfortunate name, kind of like

1:43.7

ADHD, which is poorlyly named, because ADHD oftentimes

...

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