For years, no matter how hard I tried, I couldn’t hold on to anything,
and I’m not just talking about my belongings.
Jobs slipped through my fingers.
Relationships faded.
Money disappeared faster than I could make it.
So I ran, around the world, trying to be everything and everyone:
the party girl, the housewife, the rebel, the addict, the yogi,
in the hope that something, anything, would finally fix me.
But none of it worked.
Because I wasn’t broken.
I just didn’t understand my brain.
Welcome to ADHD Untangled, the podcast where we stop trying to fit into boxes that were never made for us.
This is your space to understand your ADHD, untangle the chaos, and start living in a way that finally feels like you.
I’m Rosie Turner, ADHD coach, trainer, yoga and Pilates instructor, and founder of The ADHD Movement.
Getting diagnosed later in life helped me see that my so-called flaws were never the problem. I just needed the right tools and understanding.
Now, I help others do the same.
Each week, you’ll hear powerful stories, real conversations, and expert insights to help you turn your struggles into strengths and your self-doubt into self-belief.
Because when you understand your brain, everything changes.
So, if you’re ready to drop the mask and live unapologetically,
let’s get untangled and show the world what we’re made of. 🧡
https://www.untangledco.com/coaching
https://www.untangledco.com/adhd-movement-academy
For years, no matter how hard I tried, I couldn’t hold on to anything,
and I’m not just talking about my belongings.
Jobs slipped through my fingers.
Relationships faded.
Money disappeared faster than I could make it.
So I ran, around the world, trying to be everything and everyone:
the party girl, the housewife, the rebel, the addict, the yogi,
in the hope that something, anything, would finally fix me.
But none of it worked.
Because I wasn’t broken.
I just didn’t understand my brain.
Welcome to ADHD Untangled, the podcast where we stop trying to fit into boxes that were never made for us.
This is your space to understand your ADHD, untangle the chaos, and start living in a way that finally feels like you.
I’m Rosie Turner, ADHD coach, trainer, yoga and Pilates instructor, and founder of The ADHD Movement.
Getting diagnosed later in life helped me see that my so-called flaws were never the problem. I just needed the right tools and understanding.
Now, I help others do the same.
Each week, you’ll hear powerful stories, real conversations, and expert insights to help you turn your struggles into strengths and your self-doubt into self-belief.
Because when you understand your brain, everything changes.
So, if you’re ready to drop the mask and live unapologetically,
let’s get untangled and show the world what we’re made of. 🧡
https://www.untangledco.com/coaching
https://www.untangledco.com/adhd-movement-academy

✨ If your brain moves faster than the world around you, if you’re tired of trying to fix yourself instead of understanding yourself, or if you just want to feel seen, understood, and a little less alone you’re exactly where you’re meant to be.
Welcome back to Season 6 of the ADHD Untangled Podcast 🧡
In this first episode, Rosie swaps the host seat for the hot seat as her friend (and fellow Untangler) Shareefa takes the mic. Together, they talk openly about the messy, beautiful truth behind ADHD Untangled addiction, recovery, relationships, shame, and how movement became Rosie’s anchor when everything else fell apart.
It’s honest, funny, and full of those moments that make you feel seen.
🧠 What we’re Untangling:
✨ The chaos before diagnosis💬 Shame, impulsivity and self-sabotage🧘 Movement as medicine❤️ ADHD & relationships💡 Why sharing your story heals more than self-help ever could
💫 Why listen:
Because this episode is a reminder that you were never broken — you just needed to understand your brain and see yourself differently.
Join the free Untangled Community → click here
ADHD Coach Training → click here
Retreats → click here
Follow us → @adhd_untangled
Let’s get untangled and show the world what we’re made of.
Lots of love & strength,
Rosie