Jump to ratings and reviews
Rate this book

The ADHD Awakening: A Woman's Guide to Thriving After Diagnosis

Rate this book
“How did I go my whole life without realizing this was ADHD?”

Much of your life has been spent in silent struggle, sometimes at great personal cost. You have firsthand experience with the frustration, shame, and exhaustion that accompanies unmanaged ADHD. You finally have a name for the invisible obstacle you’ve been living with. But what now?

In The ADHD Awakening, Sara Kelly explores the unique experience of women with late-diagnosed ADHD. Understand how it hides behind coping mechanisms. Learn why it gets mislabeled as anxiety, depression, or a mere personality trait. Discover why you’ve always felt different without knowing why.

Getting an ADHD diagnosis as an adult can bring an avalanche of emotions. The ADHD Awakening addresses your relief, grief, and curiosity about what this means for your future—and reveals how to tap into the power that comes when you stop fighting your brain and start understanding it.

319 pages, Kindle Edition

Published January 13, 2026

Loading...
Loading...

About the author

Sara Kelly

1 book1 follower

Ratings & Reviews

What do you think?
Rate this book

Friends & Following

Create a free account to discover what your friends think of this book!

Community Reviews

5 stars
29 (69%)
4 stars
8 (19%)
3 stars
3 (7%)
2 stars
1 (2%)
1 star
1 (2%)
Displaying 1 - 12 of 12 reviews
Profile Image for Dee Tretiak.
28 reviews
February 14, 2026
Amazing Read & Resource

Thank You Sara Kelly for writing this incredible book! I was recently diagnosed ADHD at 52 years old. This book was like looking in a mirror, words for all the things I was unable to communicate. Finding out it wasn’t just me & that there are so many others was both exciting & devastating in equal measure. Heartbreaking knowing other women are & have been experiencing this devastating diagnosis after so many years of believing you were broken & unworthy 💔. Thank you for sharing your story & your vast wisdom 🙏❤️🥹
Profile Image for Book Reviewer.
5,156 reviews477 followers
Review of advance copy
January 6, 2026
The ADHD Awakening tells the story of a woman piecing together a lifetime of confusion, emotional intensity, and masked struggle into a clearer picture shaped by a late ADHD diagnosis. The book moves from her childhood experiences of impulsivity, shame, and missed signs into the chaos of undiagnosed adulthood, where relationships, parenting, and self-worth tangled together. It blends research with lived stories from many women, creating a guide that feels both personal and universal. The arc of the book shifts from raw memoir to a practical roadmap for self-understanding. It shows how ADHD weaves itself into every corner of life and how clarity can open the door to self-compassion.

The writing lands with this honest, almost disarming warmth, and I kept feeling like I was eavesdropping on someone telling the truth they never had the chance to say aloud. I liked that the author didn’t try to polish her past into something neat. The stories of hiding in plain sight, of dealing with rejection, of feeling intense emotions that others shrugged off hit with real weight. Some chapters made me stop and think for a moment. The moments about growing up in instability and learning to mask emotions resonated with me. They showed how misunderstood ADHD in girls can be and how easily the real story gets buried under labels like “dramatic” or “too sensitive.”

I also appreciated how the book layered science into the narrative without slipping into cold textbook talk. The explanations of executive dysfunction, emotional flooding, time blindness, and dopamine seeking were human and straightforward and strangely comforting. Sometimes I wished the pacing slowed down so that specific ideas could be explored more deeply, but the emotional honesty kept me hooked. There’s a tenderness in the way the author speaks to her younger self and to the reader. It made the book feel less like advice and more like an invitation to stop fighting your own brain.

I’d recommend this book to women who suspect they might have ADHD or who were diagnosed later in life and are now trying to make sense of the past. It’s also a great read for partners, friends, or anyone who wants to understand the emotional world behind the symptoms. If you like books that explain things with real stories instead of stiff jargon, this one will feel like a warm hand on your shoulder. It’s heartfelt, accessible, and practical, and it gives anyone navigating ADHD a sense that they’re not alone.
1 review
January 15, 2026
I received an advance copy of The ADHD Awakening and read the book before release.

The ADHD Awakening by Sara Kelly offers a map for women to not only find their true selves but provides realistic and pragmatic ways to live authentically—loudly and unapologetically.

The book starts off in a powerfully emotional memoir-like fashion where Kelly recalls painful childhood interactions that left her feeling like an outsider from the world around. She speaks to her realization of how ADHD has impacted and disrupted her adult relationships, her approach to employment and daily tasks, and how she viewed herself due to her ADHD-sourced negative core beliefs. Kelly vulnerably shares an exhausting prior existence of presenting herself through masking, and the subsequent imposter syndrome toll that comes with this, as well as the excruciating, ongoing search for external acceptance.

The book incorporates candid snippets and anecdotal information from several interviewed women blended with user-friendly practical tools to finally stop the seemingly endless cycle of shame and self-doubt. Kelly steers clear from a textbook-style barrage of formal data and literature. Instead, she gently and compassionately lays the foundation for a brighter future through clear and succinct research-based reframing methods, learning exercises, and suggestions.

I would recommend this book to all women diagnosed with ADHD, especially women diagnosed later in life who have been struggling to navigate the neurotypical landscape around them.

As a non-ADHD woman, this book has provided me with a wealth of insight into how I can better support, not only friends and family with ADHD, but how, as an employer, I can sensitively motivate and assist neurodivergent employees.

The ADHD Awakening emphatically teaches readers that they are not alone in their journey and aims to change the narrative that the ADHD brain is broken and requires fixing. This book paves a path for self-acceptance and self-embrace to allow ADHD women to thrive.
1 review
January 13, 2026
The ADHD Awakening: A Woman's Guide to Thriving After Diagnosis is a fantastic guide for a partner supporting someone who’s been late diagnosed as ADHD. This book clearly identifies feelings and questions that the diagnosed partner has been questioning their entire life. It helps both the diagnosed partner and the supporting partner providing a clear understanding of what ADHD is and how it affects a relationship. It clearly defines what  a supportive partner can do to support a partner late diagnosed with ADHD. I will be forever grateful that Sara Kelly took the time to write this book and share the stories and experiences of women who have ADHD. Upon reading this book I am no longer lost questioning why my partners reactions to situations are confusing for me to process. I can help by asking the right questions to understand there experience to the situation and know how to support them through these emotions.
Profile Image for Anna.
172 reviews
May 17, 2026
I started recommending this book to others before I was a third of the way through it was so helpful. Now I've finished it I still heartily agree.
It's layout is in short pithy sections with clear headings which will help ADHDers engage. I read the kindle version so highlighted things in different colours as they spoke to me.
I see it's on audible which is great for those who prefer that medium.
It's such a practical book that whether you are diagnosed, pending or suspect a diagnosis yourself or in someone you know, there's so much you'll get out if.
If you want further reading or evidence there's plenty of referenced material as well as the author's own experience and those she's worked with.
If you're not directly affected by ADHD, read this anyway. You're bound to help someone close to you thrive if you do.
Profile Image for Reed K.
46 reviews
February 22, 2026
As someone who supervises people, I’ve probably misunderstood ADHD behaviors in the workplace. This book gave me a clearer picture of how focus, deadlines, and organization can feel completely different for someone with ADHD. It’s not about laziness or lack of care. It’s about wiring. I found myself rethinking how I give feedback and structure tasks. This should honestly be required reading for leaders.
Profile Image for Alexander S.
41 reviews
February 22, 2026
I’ll be honest, I didn’t fully understand ADHD before reading this. I thought it was mostly about hyperactivity or distraction. This book completely changed that for me. Sara Kelly explains how deeply ADHD affects emotions, motivation, and daily life in ways I had never considered. It helped me see the struggles with more empathy instead of frustration. I walked away realizing how much I didn’t know.
Profile Image for Walter S.
48 reviews1 follower
February 22, 2026
I picked this up because someone close to me has ADHD, and I wanted to understand them better. I didn’t expect to feel this humbled. The book breaks down the internal experience in a way that makes everything make more sense. Things I used to see as irresponsibility now feel more complex and neurological. It gave me language for conversations we’ve struggled to have. I’m grateful I read it.
Profile Image for Cathy S.
47 reviews
February 22, 2026
I always thought ADHD was mostly about attention. I didn’t realize how much shame, frustration, and self-doubt can come with it. The emotional side really stood out to me. It made me more patient and less reactive in my own relationships. The author writes in a way that’s informative but also deeply human. I feel more equipped to support instead of criticize.
Profile Image for Emily Rose.
46 reviews
February 22, 2026
Sometimes when you don’t experience something yourself, it’s hard to grasp it. This book acted like a translator for me. It explains not just what ADHD looks like externally, but what it feels like internally. That perspective shift changed everything. I now catch myself pausing before making assumptions. It’s a powerful reminder that behavior usually has deeper roots.
Profile Image for Gabi Y.
47 reviews
February 22, 2026
I picked this up just to educate myself, but it became much more personal than that. It challenged a lot of stereotypes I didn’t even realize I held. The tone isn’t defensive or accusatory, which made it easier to stay open. By the end, I felt more compassionate and informed. I wouldn’t say I fully “get” ADHD now, but I definitely understand it far better than before.
9 reviews3 followers
May 14, 2026
Nailed it!

Sara speaks truth to those of us who have wondered why we weren't like other people for years! Offering research. Education, stories, suggestions, support and challenge, Sara helps us see ourselves in a new way.
Displaying 1 - 12 of 12 reviews