For ADHD brains, the edge isn't just a danger zone — it's where we activate. It's where things get defined, where focus finally shows up, where we can feel most alive. The problem is that living permanently on the edge of our cognitive and emotional limits is also the fastest route to burnout.
This week Cameron explores why ADHD makes us so vulnerable to burnout — and so drawn to the very conditions that cause it. He pulls in the research of burnout specialist Nick Petrie, whose work reveals something counterintuitive: rest alone doesn't break the burnout cycle. The people who truly recover don't just change how long they rest. They change how they work, who they are, and what they believe about themselves.
Cameron also introduces David Rock's SCARF model — status, certainty, autonomy, relatedness, fairness — as a quiet checklist for what's eroding when stress starts climbing, and why role clarity might be one of the most underrated tools for keeping burnout at bay.
Plus: the difference between feeling alive and feeling stimulated, why they're not the same thing, and why that distinction matters more than it sounds.