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EP. 135: ADHD, Suicide Prevention and Audio Journaling with Grace L’Orange

EP. 135: ADHD, Suicide Prevention and Audio Journaling with Grace L’Orange

FromADHD for Smart Ass Women with Tracy Otsuka


EP. 135: ADHD, Suicide Prevention and Audio Journaling with Grace L’Orange

FromADHD for Smart Ass Women with Tracy Otsuka

ratings:
Length:
72 minutes
Released:
Aug 4, 2021
Format:
Podcast episode

Description

This week Tracy welcomes Grace L’Orange to episode #135 of ADHD for Smart Ass Women. Grace is a school psychologist, behavior specialist, and suicide prevention coordinator working in public education with a B.S. in Psychology and an advanced Education Specialist degree in School Psychology. Grace is passionate about equity, inclusion, and advocacy for all students, especially those with disabilities and other differences. In addition to her direct work with students, she collaborates with and educates other adults to better understand and address the specific impacts these differences have on daily life.   Grace recently implemented systemic changes in her district by developing updated policies and procedures for special education and suicide prevention/intervention focusing on equity and best practice. She serves as Director-At-Large on the board for her state school psychologist association. She also collaborates with the broader community through the Suicide Prevention Coalition in her county. Initially drawn to school psychology due to the school struggles of her brother with ADHD, little did Grace know that she would be diagnosed much later at the age of 32. Since then, Grace has been integrating this new ADHD facet of her life in the context of being an educator working with students with disabilities and behavior challenges.   In this episode Grace shares:  The circumstances surrounding her ADHD diagnosis What has changed since she was diagnosed  How learning about her ADHD shifted her understanding of how ADHD presents in girls and helped her better notice symptoms that are often overlooked in female students Information surrounding the alarming number of ADHD women who have attempted suicide and the societal factors that may contribute to these high rates Signs of suicidal ideation to look out for and ways you can responsibly help someone who may be at risk (resources listed down below) How she uses audio journaling to move past perfectionism, externalize her thoughts in order to process them, and speak more kindly to herself  Her key to living successfully with ADHD   Resources:    National Suicide Prevention Lifeline | 1-800-273-8255 https://suicidepreventionlifeline.org/help-someone-else/ Mental Health Crisis Response Program: 1-888-989-9990 (for parents of children through age 17) Trevor Lifeline: 1-866-488-7386 (for LGBTQ youth) Question. Persuade. Refer. (QPR) online training for anyone: https://qprinstitute.com/ Hopesquad Prevention: https://hopesquad.com/prevention/ A Radical Guide for Women with ADHD by Sari Solden, MS and Michelle Frank, PsyD (book mentioned)
Released:
Aug 4, 2021
Format:
Podcast episode

Titles in the series (100)

I have NEVER met an ADHD woman who wasn't truly brilliant at something! * * This podcast with over 3 million downloads is for smart, high-ability ADD/ADHD (diagnosed or suspecting) women who see their symptoms as more positive than negative. If you want to fall in love with your ADHD brain and discover where your brilliance lies, this podcast is for you! * * ADHD for Smart Ass Women is globally ranked in the top one-half percent of all podcasts in the world on any subject. It's streamed in more than 160 countries and is downloaded by more than 150,000 listeners every month. * * I’m Tracy Otsuka your host. I'm a lawyer, not a doctor, a life-long learner and a certified ADHD coach. I’m committed to changing the conversation around ADHD. * * When I was diagnosed eight months after my son, my entire life suddenly made perfect sense but all I heard and read about was everything that my ADHD brain SHOULD be struggling with when in fact I would come to learn that my ADHD is responsible for some of my greatest superpowers. * * One other thing, we constantly hear about all the successful ADHD men, but no one talks about the women. This podcast is here to change that dynamic. ADHD women are my people, and I’m here to acknowledge, support and cheer them on. * * *THE CONTENT IN THIS PODCAST IS NOT INTENDED TO BE A SUBSTITUTE FOR PROFESSIONAL MEDICAL ADVICE, DIAGNOSIS OR TREATMENT AND DOES NOT CONSTITUTE MEDICAL OR PROFESSIONAL ADVICE. NEVER DISREGARD PROFESSIONAL MEDICAL ADVICE OR DELAY IN SEEKING IT BECAUSE OF ANYTHING YOU HAVE SEEN OR HEARD FROM TRACY OTSUKA OR THIS PODCAST.