ADHD in adults: when to seek help and what a neuropsychological assessment is for
You do what you have to do. You try. You organize, you adjust, you compensate. And yet, something remains difficult. Concentration slips away. Organization requires constant effort. Lists grow longer, oversights accumulate, and energy seems to run out faster at the end of the day. You wonder if it's just the stress, the pace, the mental load. If you should be more disciplined, do things better, try a little harder. And yet, deep down, the doubt persists: what if it's not just a question of willpower? This is often where the question of ADHD in adulthood comes up. Not as a certainty, nor as a label to be quickly applied, but as a possibility to be explored in order to give meaning to what is experienced on a daily basis.