A Late Diagnosis That Changed Everything

Francesca Finch-Andrews, 57, recently shared her powerful story in The Guardian: for most of her life, she struggled with depression and profoundly low self-esteem without understanding why. After finally receiving insights about her attention patterns in her fifties, everything reframed. “If I had been diagnosed at an early age, I would hopefully have understood myself better,” she shared. The diagnosis didn’t change who she was—it simply provided a framework for understanding why she’d always felt different.

This isn’t an uncommon story. Thousands of adults are now seeking evaluation for attention pattern differences, driven by a desire to understand themselves rather than to obtain a label. What makes Finch-Andrews’ account particularly significant is how she frames the diagnosis: not as a medical condition requiring treatment, but as a key that unlocked decades of self-blame and misunderstanding.