Blog
Why People With ADHD Chase Dopamine — And How They Can Find Healthier Ways to Regulate Their Minds
People with ADHD aren’t “weak,” “impulsive,” or “undisciplined.” They are dopamine‑deficient, and their brains are constantly trying to correct that imbalance. When you understand this, the entire pattern of ADHD behaviour suddenly makes sense: the restlessness, the impulsivity, the hyperfocus, the boredom intolerance, the thrill‑seeking, the late‑night scrolling, the addictions.
ADHD isn’t a character flaw.
It’s a neurochemical hunger.
And when dopamine is low, the brain will look for it anywhere it can find it.
Dopamine, Glutamate, and the Bondage of Addiction: Understanding the Cycle and Finding Freedom
Addiction is not a failure of character. It is not a lack of willpower. It is a brain‑based condition driven by two powerful chemicals: dopamine and glutamate. These two neurotransmitters—normally responsible for motivation, learning, and survival—become hijacked in addiction, creating a cycle that feels impossible to escape.
Dopamine Traps: How Abundance Can Heal You—or Hijack You
Modern life offers more abundance than any generation before us. We have endless entertainment, instant communication, food delivered to our door, and a constant stream of stimulation available 24/7. On the surface, this looks like progress. But for many people—especially those wired for addiction—this abundance becomes a minefield of dopamine traps.