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When the Brain Shuts Down: Understanding ADHD Energy Collapses

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Manage episode 481991479 series 3473613
Content provided by Where the chaos of ADHD meets self-acceptance, growth, and a whole lot of authenticity, Where the chaos of ADHD meets self-acceptance, and A whole lot of authenticity. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Where the chaos of ADHD meets self-acceptance, growth, and a whole lot of authenticity, Where the chaos of ADHD meets self-acceptance, and A whole lot of authenticity or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://podcastplayer.com/legal.

Ever felt like someone pulled your battery out mid-sentence?

One minute you’re go-go-go, and the next—you’re a human puddle on the couch, brain offline, soul buffering.

That, my friend, is an

ADHD energy shutdown

a deeply misunderstood, very real experience where our nervous system essentially throws up the "Closed for Business" sign.

🎧 Segment 1: What Is an Energy Shutdown in ADHD?

Welcome back to Authentically ADHD! I’m your host, Carmen, and today we’re digging into something that hits so close to home, it might as well be wearing your favorite hoodie and lying face down on your couch—yep, we’re talking about ADHD energy shutdowns.

So what exactly is an energy shutdown? Well, it’s not just being “tired” like neurotypical tired. This is the full-system neuro-funk, where your brain and body essentially go: “We’re done here.” It’s like someone pulled your internal plug while you were mid-task.

You might feel:

* Mental fog (what’s your name again?)

* Emotional numbness or sensory overwhelm

* Physical heaviness, like trying to walk through molasses

* Inertia so strong that even brushing your teeth feels like a boss battle

This can look like:

* Doom-scrolling with no end

* Zoning out during conversations

* Staring at the ceiling, unable to move

* Full-blown dissociation or sensory withdrawal

This isn’t laziness. It’s a neurological shutdown. And guess what? There’s solid science explaining why this happens.

🧠 Segment 2: The Neuroscience of Shutdowns

Let’s pop the hood and check what’s happening in the ADHD brain during a shutdown, shall we?

🔬 1. Executive Overload

The prefrontal cortex—the part responsible for planning, focus, regulation—works harder and less efficiently in ADHD brains. When overloaded, it can’t process tasks properly and eventually hits a point of collapse. Think of it as a CPU that overheats without a cooling fan.

🧪 2. Dopamine Deficiency

Dopamine is like the brain’s fuel for motivation and sustained effort. ADHDers have lower dopamine activity in key regions like the striatum and prefrontal cortex. Without dopamine, your “go system” has no gas—and the engine stalls.

🌡️ 3. Autonomic Nervous System Flip

We often live in “fight, flight, or fawn” mode thanks to chronic hyperarousal. Over time, this leads to nervous system fatigue and a drop into the parasympathetic “freeze” state—shutdown.

📉 4. Interoception Confusion

Research shows many ADHDers struggle with interoception—that’s your ability to sense what’s happening inside your body. This means we don’t notice we’re exhausted or stressed until our body has already short-circuited.

🧠 5. Emotional Labor & Masking

If you’re constantly masking symptoms, pretending you’re fine, or navigating neurotypical spaces, that drains cognitive and emotional resources. Boom—shutdown.

🚨 Segment 3: What Triggers an ADHD Shutdown?

Alright, so what’s pulling the plug on our energy?

🧠 1. Decision Fatigue

ADHD means more micro-decisions daily—what to eat, where to start, how to prioritize. Every tiny choice eats executive fuel.

🌪️ 2. Task Switching + Mental Clutter

Jumping between tabs, emails, and conversations creates context switching overload. That’s exhausting for the neurotypical brain—now imagine ours.

📣 3. Sensory Overwhelm

Noises, lights, textures, smells. ADHD often overlaps with sensory processing differences, and overstimulation can fast-track a full shutdown.

🙃 4. Rejection & Emotional Spirals

One misunderstood text or a tone from your boss? BOOM. Emotional dysregulation + rejection sensitivity = “Why even try?”

🎭 5. Hyperfocus Hangovers

Yes, we can hyperfocus. But it’s often unregulated, and once the dopamine high crashes—so do we.

🧰 Segment 4: Five Research-Backed Coping Strategies

Let’s get practical—because while energy shutdowns are real, they’re not unbeatable.

Here are five science-backed ways to cope, before, during, and after:

🔄 1. Practice “Pre-Loading” with Transitions

Before moving to a new task, give yourself intentional pause: 5 minutes to close tabs, breathe, or stretch. It allows your brain to reset instead of crashing between tasks.

🧠 Backed by research on cognitive offloading and task switching fatigue (Monsell, 2003).

🍽️ 2. Fuel Your Body & Brain

Eat protein + complex carbs every 3–4 hours. Low blood sugar mimics burnout and triggers shutdowns.

💡 ADHD brains burn more glucose (Haacke et al., 2015) especially when trying to regulate executive function.

🪫 3. Build “Low-Demand Recovery Time” Into Your Day

Schedule blank time—not productivity time—just nothing. Think quiet walks, music, or a nap. This supports parasympathetic nervous system regulation and prevents sensory overload.

🌿 Polyvagal Theory (Porges, 2011) shows us how necessary “safety signals” are for nervous system recovery.

🧩 4. Name & Track Your Shutdown Patterns

Use a journal or app to track when shutdowns happen. What were the sensory, social, and emotional conditions that day? Patterns = power.

📊 This taps into metacognitive awareness—essential for adaptive planning in ADHD.

🤝 5. Connect Instead of Criticize

Shame fuels more shutdowns. So instead of going “Ugh, why can’t I just DO things?” try:

“Something in me needed a break. What support am I missing?”

🧠 Self-compassion is linked to lower emotional dysregulation and burnout (Neff et al., 2007).

💬 Segment 5: Closing Thoughts – You’re Not Broken. You’re Burnt Out.

Energy shutdowns don’t mean you’re lazy, broken, or incapable. They mean your brain has limits—and it’s screaming for rest, regulation, and recovery.

Think of it like a circuit breaker. When too much demand is placed on the system, it doesn’t mean the house is broken—it means the system needs a reset. Your job isn’t to push harder. It’s to learn where the overloads happen—and create environments that support your nervous system.

So here’s your permission slip: Rest is productive. Listening to your brain’s needs is a strength, not a weakness.

You’re doing better than you think. And now? You have tools to ride the shutdown wave—not drown in it. Until next time, stay authentic and we will talk soon.

In Summary

What Is an Energy Shutdown in ADHD?

An energy shutdown is not just being tired. It’s a full-system override that can happen when you’ve pushed through too many executive function demands, social stimuli, or sensory inputs. It often feels like:

* Mental fog (you know there's a to-do list, but can't remember your own name)

* Emotional numbness or overwhelm

* Physical fatigue (as if your limbs are filled with wet sand)

* Sudden inertia (even standing up feels monumental)

It can look like zoning out, doom-scrolling, lying in bed unable to move, or straight-up dissociating—whatever your nervous system’s version of the “eject button” looks like.

Why Does This Happen?

Let’s go brain-deep for a second:

* Executive Dysfunction BurnoutOur brains are constantly battling to organize, plan, regulate emotions, remember, and switch tasks. That’s a lot of behind-the-scenes work. When we power through without enough rest or structure, the mental CPU overheats and shuts down.

* Dopamine DroughtADHD brains have lower dopamine availability. Dopamine helps with motivation, focus, and reward. When you’re running on empty, your brain just… stops asking.

* Autonomic Nervous System OverloadADHD brains often swing between hyperarousal (go-mode, urgency, RSD panic) and collapse (shutdown, freeze). Think of it like a faulty thermostat flipping between “furnace” and “fridge” with no in-between.

* Masking FatigueEspecially common in AuDHD (ADHD + Autism), where you spend hours pretending to be “on,” reading social cues, hiding stims, or being the office sunshine—until you’re done.

What Triggers It?

* Decision fatigue

* Multitasking beyond your limit

* Social overload

* Rejection or shame spiral

* Sensory overwhelm

* Skipping meals, rest, or hydration (hello, basic needs!)

How to Cope or Recover

1. Pre-shutdown strategies:

* Build in micro-breaks every hour

* Chunk tasks into manageable steps

* Use body cues (tight chest? zoning out?) as early warning signs

2. During a shutdown:

* Don’t fight it. Gentle, low-stim environments help.

* Sensory comfort items (weighted blankets, dim lighting) can regulate you faster.

* Hydrate, breathe, and snack—seriously. Sometimes it’s just a blood sugar hostage situation.

3. Afterward:

* Reflect without shame. You didn’t “fail.” You hit a neurological pause.

* Adjust expectations. You may need a lower-demand day next time.

* Tell trusted people what your shutdowns look like. Connection helps reduce the spiral of shame.

Final Thought

An energy shutdown isn’t you being lazy, dramatic, or antisocial—it’s your brain slamming the brakes to protect itself. And once we start treating shutdowns as neurological red flags instead of moral failures, we unlock the door to real compassion and smarter support systems.

This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit carmenauthenticallyadhd.substack.com/subscribe

  continue reading

210 episodes

Artwork
iconShare
 
Manage episode 481991479 series 3473613
Content provided by Where the chaos of ADHD meets self-acceptance, growth, and a whole lot of authenticity, Where the chaos of ADHD meets self-acceptance, and A whole lot of authenticity. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Where the chaos of ADHD meets self-acceptance, growth, and a whole lot of authenticity, Where the chaos of ADHD meets self-acceptance, and A whole lot of authenticity or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://podcastplayer.com/legal.

Ever felt like someone pulled your battery out mid-sentence?

One minute you’re go-go-go, and the next—you’re a human puddle on the couch, brain offline, soul buffering.

That, my friend, is an

ADHD energy shutdown

a deeply misunderstood, very real experience where our nervous system essentially throws up the "Closed for Business" sign.

🎧 Segment 1: What Is an Energy Shutdown in ADHD?

Welcome back to Authentically ADHD! I’m your host, Carmen, and today we’re digging into something that hits so close to home, it might as well be wearing your favorite hoodie and lying face down on your couch—yep, we’re talking about ADHD energy shutdowns.

So what exactly is an energy shutdown? Well, it’s not just being “tired” like neurotypical tired. This is the full-system neuro-funk, where your brain and body essentially go: “We’re done here.” It’s like someone pulled your internal plug while you were mid-task.

You might feel:

* Mental fog (what’s your name again?)

* Emotional numbness or sensory overwhelm

* Physical heaviness, like trying to walk through molasses

* Inertia so strong that even brushing your teeth feels like a boss battle

This can look like:

* Doom-scrolling with no end

* Zoning out during conversations

* Staring at the ceiling, unable to move

* Full-blown dissociation or sensory withdrawal

This isn’t laziness. It’s a neurological shutdown. And guess what? There’s solid science explaining why this happens.

🧠 Segment 2: The Neuroscience of Shutdowns

Let’s pop the hood and check what’s happening in the ADHD brain during a shutdown, shall we?

🔬 1. Executive Overload

The prefrontal cortex—the part responsible for planning, focus, regulation—works harder and less efficiently in ADHD brains. When overloaded, it can’t process tasks properly and eventually hits a point of collapse. Think of it as a CPU that overheats without a cooling fan.

🧪 2. Dopamine Deficiency

Dopamine is like the brain’s fuel for motivation and sustained effort. ADHDers have lower dopamine activity in key regions like the striatum and prefrontal cortex. Without dopamine, your “go system” has no gas—and the engine stalls.

🌡️ 3. Autonomic Nervous System Flip

We often live in “fight, flight, or fawn” mode thanks to chronic hyperarousal. Over time, this leads to nervous system fatigue and a drop into the parasympathetic “freeze” state—shutdown.

📉 4. Interoception Confusion

Research shows many ADHDers struggle with interoception—that’s your ability to sense what’s happening inside your body. This means we don’t notice we’re exhausted or stressed until our body has already short-circuited.

🧠 5. Emotional Labor & Masking

If you’re constantly masking symptoms, pretending you’re fine, or navigating neurotypical spaces, that drains cognitive and emotional resources. Boom—shutdown.

🚨 Segment 3: What Triggers an ADHD Shutdown?

Alright, so what’s pulling the plug on our energy?

🧠 1. Decision Fatigue

ADHD means more micro-decisions daily—what to eat, where to start, how to prioritize. Every tiny choice eats executive fuel.

🌪️ 2. Task Switching + Mental Clutter

Jumping between tabs, emails, and conversations creates context switching overload. That’s exhausting for the neurotypical brain—now imagine ours.

📣 3. Sensory Overwhelm

Noises, lights, textures, smells. ADHD often overlaps with sensory processing differences, and overstimulation can fast-track a full shutdown.

🙃 4. Rejection & Emotional Spirals

One misunderstood text or a tone from your boss? BOOM. Emotional dysregulation + rejection sensitivity = “Why even try?”

🎭 5. Hyperfocus Hangovers

Yes, we can hyperfocus. But it’s often unregulated, and once the dopamine high crashes—so do we.

🧰 Segment 4: Five Research-Backed Coping Strategies

Let’s get practical—because while energy shutdowns are real, they’re not unbeatable.

Here are five science-backed ways to cope, before, during, and after:

🔄 1. Practice “Pre-Loading” with Transitions

Before moving to a new task, give yourself intentional pause: 5 minutes to close tabs, breathe, or stretch. It allows your brain to reset instead of crashing between tasks.

🧠 Backed by research on cognitive offloading and task switching fatigue (Monsell, 2003).

🍽️ 2. Fuel Your Body & Brain

Eat protein + complex carbs every 3–4 hours. Low blood sugar mimics burnout and triggers shutdowns.

💡 ADHD brains burn more glucose (Haacke et al., 2015) especially when trying to regulate executive function.

🪫 3. Build “Low-Demand Recovery Time” Into Your Day

Schedule blank time—not productivity time—just nothing. Think quiet walks, music, or a nap. This supports parasympathetic nervous system regulation and prevents sensory overload.

🌿 Polyvagal Theory (Porges, 2011) shows us how necessary “safety signals” are for nervous system recovery.

🧩 4. Name & Track Your Shutdown Patterns

Use a journal or app to track when shutdowns happen. What were the sensory, social, and emotional conditions that day? Patterns = power.

📊 This taps into metacognitive awareness—essential for adaptive planning in ADHD.

🤝 5. Connect Instead of Criticize

Shame fuels more shutdowns. So instead of going “Ugh, why can’t I just DO things?” try:

“Something in me needed a break. What support am I missing?”

🧠 Self-compassion is linked to lower emotional dysregulation and burnout (Neff et al., 2007).

💬 Segment 5: Closing Thoughts – You’re Not Broken. You’re Burnt Out.

Energy shutdowns don’t mean you’re lazy, broken, or incapable. They mean your brain has limits—and it’s screaming for rest, regulation, and recovery.

Think of it like a circuit breaker. When too much demand is placed on the system, it doesn’t mean the house is broken—it means the system needs a reset. Your job isn’t to push harder. It’s to learn where the overloads happen—and create environments that support your nervous system.

So here’s your permission slip: Rest is productive. Listening to your brain’s needs is a strength, not a weakness.

You’re doing better than you think. And now? You have tools to ride the shutdown wave—not drown in it. Until next time, stay authentic and we will talk soon.

In Summary

What Is an Energy Shutdown in ADHD?

An energy shutdown is not just being tired. It’s a full-system override that can happen when you’ve pushed through too many executive function demands, social stimuli, or sensory inputs. It often feels like:

* Mental fog (you know there's a to-do list, but can't remember your own name)

* Emotional numbness or overwhelm

* Physical fatigue (as if your limbs are filled with wet sand)

* Sudden inertia (even standing up feels monumental)

It can look like zoning out, doom-scrolling, lying in bed unable to move, or straight-up dissociating—whatever your nervous system’s version of the “eject button” looks like.

Why Does This Happen?

Let’s go brain-deep for a second:

* Executive Dysfunction BurnoutOur brains are constantly battling to organize, plan, regulate emotions, remember, and switch tasks. That’s a lot of behind-the-scenes work. When we power through without enough rest or structure, the mental CPU overheats and shuts down.

* Dopamine DroughtADHD brains have lower dopamine availability. Dopamine helps with motivation, focus, and reward. When you’re running on empty, your brain just… stops asking.

* Autonomic Nervous System OverloadADHD brains often swing between hyperarousal (go-mode, urgency, RSD panic) and collapse (shutdown, freeze). Think of it like a faulty thermostat flipping between “furnace” and “fridge” with no in-between.

* Masking FatigueEspecially common in AuDHD (ADHD + Autism), where you spend hours pretending to be “on,” reading social cues, hiding stims, or being the office sunshine—until you’re done.

What Triggers It?

* Decision fatigue

* Multitasking beyond your limit

* Social overload

* Rejection or shame spiral

* Sensory overwhelm

* Skipping meals, rest, or hydration (hello, basic needs!)

How to Cope or Recover

1. Pre-shutdown strategies:

* Build in micro-breaks every hour

* Chunk tasks into manageable steps

* Use body cues (tight chest? zoning out?) as early warning signs

2. During a shutdown:

* Don’t fight it. Gentle, low-stim environments help.

* Sensory comfort items (weighted blankets, dim lighting) can regulate you faster.

* Hydrate, breathe, and snack—seriously. Sometimes it’s just a blood sugar hostage situation.

3. Afterward:

* Reflect without shame. You didn’t “fail.” You hit a neurological pause.

* Adjust expectations. You may need a lower-demand day next time.

* Tell trusted people what your shutdowns look like. Connection helps reduce the spiral of shame.

Final Thought

An energy shutdown isn’t you being lazy, dramatic, or antisocial—it’s your brain slamming the brakes to protect itself. And once we start treating shutdowns as neurological red flags instead of moral failures, we unlock the door to real compassion and smarter support systems.

This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit carmenauthenticallyadhd.substack.com/subscribe

  continue reading

210 episodes

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