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Hacking Your ADHD

Tearing Down Cement Walls of Shame with Ron Capalbo

Hacking Your ADHD

William Curb

Health & Fitness, Mental Health

4.7781 Ratings

🗓️ 25 May 2026

⏱️ 47 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Hey Team!

Today I'm sitting down with Ron Capalbo, known to many as @adhd_ron on the socials. I've gotten to know Ron at a number of ADHD conferences and had a great time at Neurodiversion talking with him about Dungeon Crawler Carl and figured it was time to have him on the pod.

Ron is an AACC-certified coach through the ADD Coach Academy who specializes in strengths-based development and helping adults navigate the messy "shame cycle" that so often accompanies an ADHD diagnosis. He's spent years building a community focused on honoring unique brain chemistry rather than fighting a losing battle against it.

In today's episode, we explore the "why" behind our perfectionism and how the fear of complacency often keeps us from being proud of our progress. Ron breaks down how to identify your brain's unique operating system, the value of the elevator pitch for self-confidence, and why hitting a seven when you started at a two is actually a massive win, even if your brain is trying to convince you it's a failure.


If you'd life to follow along on the show notes page you can find that at HackingYourADHD.com/297

YouTube: https://tinyurl.com/y835cnrk

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

This Episode's Top Tips

    1. Try out the 2-versus-9 scale for Expectation Management. We often fail to start because we set the entry-level bar at a 9 (like, cooking 7 nights a week), which can often feel impossible. If instead we intentionally lower our aim to something that's more like a 2, we bypass the brain's "frozen" state and create a low-friction path to initiation.
    2. All right, this is a long one, but it's worth it. Many of us with ADHD actively avoid giving ourselves credit because we've been conditioned to fear that if we're satisfied, it will lead to complacency. Mechanically, however, withholding credit creates a narrative vacuum in our operating system - our brain assumes it just didn't happen. It looks at everything left to do, decides we're failing, and triggers a total system freeze, what Ron calls a "cement wall". The fix here isn't forcing toxic positive affirmations your brain knows are fake. It just takes factual data entry. Take a second to acknowledge that you moved from a level one to a level two. You're not throwing yourself a parade; you're just hitting "Save" so your brain has the baseline level to keep moving forward without crashing.
    3. Setbacks are inevitable, but the duration of the setback is determined by your level of self-shame. Implementing a grace period or a mental hug isn't about being soft; it's a strategic tool to reduce the time spent in a frozen state and get back to baseline faster.

 

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

0:13.2

Hey, team, today I'm sitting down with Ron Capalbo, known to many as ADHD Ron on the socials.

0:19.3

I've gotten to know Ron at a number of ADHD conferences recently and had a great time at

0:23.4

neurodversion talking with him about Dungeon Crawler Carl, and I figured it was about time

0:27.9

to have him on the pod.

0:29.9

Ron is an AACC certified coach through the ADD Coach Academy, who specializes in strength-based

0:35.9

development and helping adults navigate the messy

0:38.4

shame cycle that often accompanies an ADHD diagnosis. He's spent years building a community

0:43.9

focused on honoring unique brain chemistry rather than fighting a losing battle against it.

0:48.9

In today's episode, we explore the why behind our perfectionism and how the fear of complacency

0:53.7

often keeps us from

0:54.9

being proud of our progress. Ron breaks down how to identify your brain's unique operating

1:00.5

system, the value of the elevator pitch for self-confidence, and why hitting a seven when you

1:05.1

started out as a two, is actually a massive win, even if your brain is trying to convince you,

1:10.4

it's a failure.

1:11.7

If you'd like to follow along on the show notes page, you can find that at hacking your ADHD.com

1:15.9

slash 297.

1:18.0

All right, keep on listening to find out how to stop shaming yourself for shaming yourself.

1:25.4

I think that's what we can really talk about today, what we're good at, and what we're bad at. Because, I mean, you have your, as we were talking before, like the self-confidence and that kind of thing. And that's, I think, an aspect of both talking about what we're good at and what we're bad at. It's really hard because I think, like, there's something that you're good at, but there's always that yeah, but I, we also, we struggle to kind of talk positive about ourselves.

1:46.5

So you're going to hear someone say things like, you know, oh, yeah, I'm good at sports,

1:51.9

but I am not good enough to do this, or I'm not good enough to play at this level, or I'm

1:57.4

not good enough to do that.

...

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