About
Meet Linda Roggli
Helping Women Understand ADHD and Reclaim Their Lives
For years, an ADDiva was hiding in plain sight.
I was diagnosed with ADHD as an adult in the mid-1990s. At first there was relief. Then denial. Then grief. And eventually something much better: understanding.
Like many women with ADHD, I spent years wondering why life felt harder than it seemed for everyone else. I built a full life and career, but inside I was often overcompensating, pushing through overwhelm, and trying to prove I was “together.”
Then menopause arrived and everything changed. My ADHD symptoms intensified, and suddenly the coping strategies that had worked for decades stopped working. That experience set me on a new path.
Today, I help women with ADHD reclaim their confidence, energy, and sense of self.
What I Do
Support for Women with ADHD: Clarity, Confidence, and a New Way Forward
I’m the author of the award-winning book Confessions of an ADDiva and the founder of the Women’s ADHD Palooza, a global event that has helped thousands of women better understand their ADHD and their brilliance.
Through coaching, retreats, and community, I help women:
Understand how ADHD shows up in their lives
Release years of shame and self-criticism
Reconnect with their strengths and creativity
Build lives that actually work for their brains
Women with ADHD are often sensitive, intuitive, creative, and deeply thoughtful. When they stop trying to fit someone else’s mold, incredible things happen.
A LITTLE MORE ABOUT ME
A Life of Curiosity, Creativity, and Reinvention
Before focusing my work on ADHD, I had many careers. Among them:
- TV and radio reporter and anchor
- Newspaper journalist and film critic
- Founder of an advertising agency
- Nonprofit development director
- Author and retreat facilitator
I’ve also piloted an airplane, floated over treetops in a hot air balloon, eaten too much frozen custard, loved deeply, lost beloved pets, grown big gardens, and learned that life is far richer when we allow ourselves to be exactly who we are.
These days, I live in North Carolina with my husband Victor. I love hummingbirds, gardens, meaningful conversations, and giving lots of hugs.
And I believe this wholeheartedly: When women with ADHD finally understand themselves, everything changes.
Women with ADHD are often sensitive, intuitive, creative, and deeply thoughtful. When they stop trying to fit someone else’s mold, incredible things happen.
Start Creating Real, Lasting Change
If you’re ready to turn insight into action with personalized support, structure, and guidance that works with your ADHD, we’d love to connect and explore what coaching could look like for you.