ADHD, Autism, & Overfunctioning: The Quiet Cost of Being the Capable One
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If you’ve spent your whole life being “the capable one”—the reliable friend, the problem-solver at work, the emotional anchor for everyone else—you’re not alone. Many late-diagnosed ADHD and autistic adults are quietly carrying this role, often without ever choosing it. And the cost? Chronic burnout, emotional exhaustion, resentment, and a complete disconnect from your own needs.
In this episode, Dr. Regina unpacks why neurodivergent women so often become “the capable one,” how masking and people-pleasing feed the pattern, and revisits why capability is not the same as capacity. You’ll learn the signs of overfunctioning, the hidden emotional labor that drains your nervous system, and how to start stepping out of this survival role with compassion, boundaries, and sustainable support.
If you’ve ever wondered, “Why am I so tired when I’m doing everything right?” then this episode will give you the language, validation, and tools you’ve been missing.
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About Dr. Regina McMenomy, PhD
Regina is a neurodivergent coach and educator who helps late-diagnosed adults unmask, heal from burnout, and build lives aligned with how their brains work. She founded Divergent Paths Consulting to provide the type of coaching and support to late-diagnosed nerdy neurodivergent folks in educational leadership and tech fields that she needed when she got her late diagnosis.