Hannah Ramsey always felt like multiple radio stations were playing in her head at once. By the time she finished her first year of college, the noise had become impossible to ignore. So she did what any young person with a health-related question now does: She hopped on the internet.

She soon found herself down a very busy rabbit hole. On Reddit, in a channel with more than 366,000 members called ADHD Women, Hannah read post after post that resonated deeply with her. On YouTube, she watched videos from cultural commentators she admires—the experiences they described, the symptoms they mentioned, so many of them mirrored her own. (TikTok wasn’t Hannah’s personal go-to, but it, too, hosts lots of similar content, including 66 million videos with the term “ADHD women late diagnosis.”)

Hann

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