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Attention Magazine June 2026

Minds in Motion

Mark Katz, PhD

PROMISING PRACTICES




When Friendship Gets Stuck

Caroline Maguire, MEd, ACCG, PCC

CONNECTION MATTERS




Social Camouflaging Among Adults with ADHD

Yuanyuan Jiang, PhD, CPsych

RESEARCH BRIEFS




A Sensory Survival Guide for Summer

Kristine Moran, COTA

Does your child struggle with rising temperatures, transitions between feeling dry and wet, sticky sunscreen, and changes in routines? When you understand these challenges through a sensory-informed lens, you can shift from reacting to surface-level behaviors to proactively supporting a dysregulated nervous system.




Rethinking Emotion Regulation: Why Traditional Coping Skills Fall Short for ADHD Kids

Carrie Jackson, PhD

Here’s how to address the real issue if your child knows exactly what to do to manage their big emotions but still can’t seem to do it when it matters most.




When ADHD Evaluations Reveal Something More

Lauren Goldstein, PhD

For some children, defiance is a signal of a distressed nervous system, not a behavior problem. With thorough testing, we can look far beyond surface behavior to determine how best to support the child.




Thriving in Leadership Roles for Your Child’s Activities

Carey Heller, PsyD

Do you avoid taking on such responsibilities because of your ADHD? Not only can you lead, but you can do it well.




Two Sisters on ADHD, Shame, and Self-Discovery

While revisiting their shared childhood, what emerges is a story not just of struggle, but of resilience, connection, and radical self-acceptance.




Stages of Change: Support for Effective Action

Micah Saviet, LCSW-C, NBC-HWC, and Elizabeth Ahmann, ScD, RN, PCC, NBC-HWC

What do you need to know so you can focus on the tasks that will help you move forward and progress toward your goals?




Adding Method to “Madness” as ADHD Writers

Gilly Kahn, PhD

How do you work with your beautiful brain instead of working against it to develop compelling pieces of writing? By enhancing your strengths and accommodating your challenges.




Exercise, Interoceptive Awareness, and Neurodiversity

Cynthia Romanzo, PT, ACC, CAS

Physical activity is a powerful way to enhance interoception, and thus an invaluable tool for people with ADHD and ASD, who often struggle with self-regulation and awareness.