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Hacking Your ADHD

ADHD-Friendly Mindfulness with Beverly Atkins

Hacking Your ADHD

William Curb

Mental Health, Health & Fitness

4.8702 Ratings

🗓️ 15 September 2025

⏱️ 49 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Hey Team!

This week I’m chatting with Beverly Atkins, founder of Pauseture, an audio-based mindful movement platform grounded in the Feldenkrais Method. It’s actually kind of funny, despite Feldenkrais not being particularly well known, this isn’t the first time I’ve discussed it on a podcast, although the last time was on my old ultimate frisbee podcast nearly a decade ago.

Anyway, in our conversation today, we discuss how Beverly spent decades unknowingly managing her ADHD by overachieving at work and ignoring her body. But we all know this story and how we all eventually hit a breaking point. Fortunately for Beverly, she stumbled her way into the Feldenkrais method.

In the podcast, we dive into how these seemingly simple movements helped Beverly calm her nervous system, get better sleep, regulate her sound sensitivity, and develop an entirely new relationship with her attention. We get into how movement can rewire attention, why novelty is so important for ADHD regulation, and how she took her training and built an app that looks to specifically accommodate neurodivergent needs. I loved this episode; there's a lot of wisdom here about self-awareness, regulation, and finding what works for your unique ADHD flavor.


If you'd life to follow along on the show notes page you can find that at HackingYourADHD.com/244

YouTube: https://tinyurl.com/y835cnrk

Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/HackingYourADHD

This Episode's Top Tips

1. Novelty can help drive engagement and attention, especially when it comes to something repetitive like a daily practice. It's not about needing something stimulating in the flashy sense, but rather something that’s engaging. Engagement can come in many forms, such as unpredictability, exploration, and just enough challenge to keep us curious.

2. That ability to move your attention on purpose is a skill, one that’s often underdeveloped in ADHD brains. While it’s easy to think of movement-based practices as purely physical, it’s how you’re paying attention during the movements that matters; strengthening your ability to shift and direct your attention.

3. Many mindfulness practices involve some level of stillness that doesn’t always sit right with some ADHD brains. It’s important to listen to what actually works for your body, rather than just what “should” work. If you find the stillness aspect of mindfulness makes you too agitated and restless, try something that has some kind of active aspect to it.

 

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

Welcome to Hacking Your ADHD. I'm your host, William Kerb, and I have ADHD. On this podcast,

0:10.2

I dig into the tools, tactics, and best practices to help you work with your ADHD brain.

0:15.6

Hey, team, this week I'm chatting with Beverly Atkins, founder of Pawscher, an audio-based mindfulness movement platform

0:22.3

grounded in the Feldenchrist method.

0:24.2

It's actually kind of funny.

0:25.5

Despite Feldenchrist not being particularly well known, this isn't the first time I've

0:29.3

discussed it on a podcast, although the last time was on my old Ultimate Frisbee podcast nearly

0:34.0

a decade ago.

0:35.3

Anyway, in our conversation today, we discuss how Beverly spent

0:38.7

decades unknowingly managing her ADHD by overachieving at work and ignoring how that made

0:44.6

her body feel. But we all know this story and how we eventually will hit a breaking point.

0:50.5

Fortunately for Beverly, she stumbled her way into what worked for her, the Feldenchrist method.

0:55.0

In the podcast, we dive into how these seemingly simple movements help Beverly calm her nervous system,

1:00.0

get better sleep, regulate her sound sensitivity, and develop an entirely new relationship with her attention.

1:06.0

We get into how movement can rewire our attention, why novelty is so important for ADHD regulation,

1:11.4

and how she took her training to build an app that looks to specifically accommodate

1:15.3

neurodivergent needs. I really love this episode. There's a lot of wisdom here about self-awareness,

1:20.4

regulation, and finding out what works for your unique flavor of ADHD. If you'd like to follow

1:26.3

along on the show notes page, you can find that at Hacking Your ADHD.com slash 244. Also, before we get started, I just wanted to let everyone know again that we're going to be starting to play around with trying out some mid-roll ads. These are going to be dynamically inserted, so they aren't going to be in every episode, but it does mean that we're going to be working on sticking in some of these mid-roll breaks into the episodes.

1:47.6

We'll have a sound that plays just like this, so that you know when an ad is coming up.

1:54.0

So just wanted to let you know that's something we're working on, and give you all a heads

1:57.1

up.

...

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