Home
Book a call
About
Coaching
Blog insights
Resources
Contact

3. Don’t focus on weakness

3. Don’t focus on weakness
Home
Book a call
About
Coaching
Blog insights
Resources
Contact

3. Don’t focus on weakness

ADHD Coaching

Access to Work
Disability funding for 4 months in UK
Business expertise
20 years coaching: 20 years in business
2/3 calls month
50min - time to plan and focus
Admin support
Payments, dates and admin
Voice is best
Landline or WhatsApp work best
Automatic payments
Set up once, monthly debit, no effort

We need to be engaged to succeed

Interview with David Giwerc, President ADD Coaching Academy

Andrew: We can handle our challenges by figuring out new ADHD-friendly ways to do things and to do them our way. Basically to forget the usual way of getting stuff done. But we can also decide that we really don’t have to have to do things, to feel obligated to do them at all!

David: Andrew, that’s such a good point. I never quite thought of it that way, but you’re absolutely right. We live in a world that is so focused on a pervasive belief that if we make their weaknesses stronger, they’ll somehow climb up the ladder of success academically and professionally. And it’s never worked. It never will work.

We need to focus on what people do well and focus on how they can do it even better.

If you start the day with an ADHD kid’s area of weakness in school, in his worst subject, let’s say it is math that he knows he is a poor performer and his teacher has told him: “If you get better at math, you’ll be a star academically”.

Trying hard to pay attention

He will want to do well but that is not what will happen. He will go to his first math class of the day and try very hard to pay attention. The harder he tries the more his brain will completely shut down and even immobilize him from the self-induced pressure he is placing on himself. It is not that he does not want to. It is because he can’t.

The harder he tries to focus his attention on the math lecture or assignment the more his brain will shut down! If he starts his day with his worst class, he will gain no momentum or focus for all the other class he must attend.

This all occurs because the school and the teachers have little or no knowledge of what boredom and weakness does to the ADHD brain. This weakness philosophy is, so pervasive around the world. We live in a world focused on problems and pathology. We don’t have a framework for different approaches.

Figure out how you do things

I’m so sad when I have to say to a person with ADHD “Now that I’ve heard everything you can’t do, please tell me what you can do?” and they can’t tell me. We need to create a new global paradigm shift to strengths not weaknesses, possibilities not problems.

It is sad, but this can change very quickly with a good, well trained ADHD coach like you, Andrew, who can say “There’s nothing wrong with you! You’re perfectly okay. We just have to figure out how you do things.” As you said, “let’s find out what you don’t need to start your day off with and let’s find out what you do need to start your day off with”. Very powerful, yes

READ 4. WHAT ARE MY STRENGTHS?
Andrew Lewis, ADHD Coach UK

Andrew Lewis

Andrew Lewis is an Adult ADHD Coach, writer and founder of SimplyWellbeing. He has over 16,000 hours of experience in coaching over 600 adults with ADHD, including many ADHD business professionals and ADHD creatives. Andrew ran a major ADHD support group and even an ADHD diagnostic clinic for a while. Andrew is an adult ADHD Coach backed with business expertise from a twenty years career in software, from roles in programming, through marketing, sales and to running a few software start-ups. 

ADHD at work
We are what we eat. Choose the foods that boost your brain
ADHD at work
Genetically programmed to fight the system
ADHD at work
Simple planning without a diary or to-do list
ADHD at work
As self-critical, problem solvers our ADHD focus tends towards faults and problems. Recognise your successes.
ADHD at work
Find something else, something more practical to rebel against than time itself...
ADHD at work
Travel is peak stimulation for my novelty seeking mind
ADHD at work
Here are twenty simple tips to better manager your ADHD at work.
ADHD at work
Start you day with a pleasant, low stress trip to the coffee shop.
ADHD at work
Differences in brain hemispheres are dismissed as pop-science, yet current research shows otherwise
ADHD at work
Jonathan Mooney discusses the how education focuses on the wrong skills
ADHD at work
A tale of two procrastinators, Douglas Adams and Leonardo himself
SimplyWellbeing logo
Copyright © 2025 SimplyWellbeing
Website designed, written and created by Andrew Lewis, using Wordpress and Oxygen
49 Station Road, Polegate, East Sussex, BN26 6EA
linkedin facebook pinterest youtube rss twitter instagram facebook-blank rss-blank linkedin-blank pinterest youtube twitter instagram