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ADHD and Money: Why You’re Not Irresponsible & Why Finances Become So Hard: ADHD & Me, #3
Indigo
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ADHD and Money: Why You’re Not Irresponsible & Why Finances Become So Hard: ADHD & Me, #3
By None
Current price: $5.99


By None
ADHD and Money: Why You’re Not Irresponsible & Why Finances Become So Hard: ADHD & Me, #3
Current price: $5.99
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Size: Kobo eBook
*Product information may vary - to confirm product availability, pricing, shipping and return information please contact Indigo
You understand money.
You know bills have due dates.
You know late fees add up.
You know paying on time would make life easier.
So why does it keep going wrong?
If you've ever missed a payment you fully intended to make, avoided opening a statement you knew you needed to read, or watched a small financial problem grow into a major one, you may have blamed yourself. Many adults quietly believe their financial struggles come from irresponsibility, lack of discipline, or poor choices.
This book offers a different explanation.
ADHD and Money: Why You're Not Irresponsible — and Why Finances Become So Hard explains how attention regulation, timing, working memory, and emotional pressure affect financial behavior. The issue is often not understanding money — it is starting the right action at the right moment.
Inside this book you'll discover:
• why due dates don't create urgency until it's too late
• why missed payments often happen even when you remembered earlier
• why unopened mail and account notices are so common
• why budgeting systems work briefly and then collapse
• why income instability often comes before spending problems
• why impulsive spending can be about mental relief, not material desire
• why guilt and pressure make financial tasks harder to approach
This is not a budgeting guide and it is not financial advice. Instead, it explains the real-life patterns many adults with ADHD experience but struggle to describe. When the behavior finally makes sense, the shame around it begins to lift — and practical change becomes possible.
If you've ever thought:
"Why do I keep doing this when I know better?"
"Why are simple financial tasks so hard for me?"
"Why does everything fall behind at once?"
"Am I just bad with money?"
You may not be dealing with irresponsibility at all.
You may be dealing with timing, activation, and a brain that responds to immediacy instead of schedules.
This book helps you understand why — and shows you how to move forward without self-blame.
You understand money.
You know bills have due dates.
You know late fees add up.
You know paying on time would make life easier.
So why does it keep going wrong?
If you've ever missed a payment you fully intended to make, avoided opening a statement you knew you needed to read, or watched a small financial problem grow into a major one, you may have blamed yourself. Many adults quietly believe their financial struggles come from irresponsibility, lack of discipline, or poor choices.
This book offers a different explanation.
ADHD and Money: Why You're Not Irresponsible — and Why Finances Become So Hard explains how attention regulation, timing, working memory, and emotional pressure affect financial behavior. The issue is often not understanding money — it is starting the right action at the right moment.
Inside this book you'll discover:
• why due dates don't create urgency until it's too late
• why missed payments often happen even when you remembered earlier
• why unopened mail and account notices are so common
• why budgeting systems work briefly and then collapse
• why income instability often comes before spending problems
• why impulsive spending can be about mental relief, not material desire
• why guilt and pressure make financial tasks harder to approach
This is not a budgeting guide and it is not financial advice. Instead, it explains the real-life patterns many adults with ADHD experience but struggle to describe. When the behavior finally makes sense, the shame around it begins to lift — and practical change becomes possible.
If you've ever thought:
"Why do I keep doing this when I know better?"
"Why are simple financial tasks so hard for me?"
"Why does everything fall behind at once?"
"Am I just bad with money?"
You may not be dealing with irresponsibility at all.
You may be dealing with timing, activation, and a brain that responds to immediacy instead of schedules.
This book helps you understand why — and shows you how to move forward without self-blame.


















