“You’ve always had big ideas. People called them unrealistic. You called them yours.”
For many adults diagnosed late in life with ADHD, this sentiment rings true. The world often labels their visionary thinking as grandiosity—a term tinged with pathology and delusion. But what if these so-called “delusions of grandeur” weren’t signs of irrational thinking, but echoes of untapped potential?
What if the real problem isn’t dreaming big, but lacking the support to do big?
This is the provocative insight explored in a growing body of neurodiversity-aligned research and coaching: grandiosity is not delusion—it’s the echo of an unlived life.
The Visionary-Implementation Gap
People with ADHD are idea generators.
They’re powered by divergent thinking, pattern recognition, and rich inner worlds. Research shows that the same default mode network (DMN) that fuels creativity in ADHD also creates trouble when it's not properly “turned off” during focused tasks.
The result? A flood of ideas with nowhere to land.
Add executive dysfunction—difficulties with working memory, planning, and impulse control—and suddenly, grand ideas become overwhelming rather than exciting. The ADHD brain often excels in ideation, but falters in execution.
This mismatch has a name: the visionary-implementation gap.
Unfortunately, when a person can’t follow through, the world doesn’t usually ask “what support do you need?” It says, “you’re lazy,” “unrealistic,” or worse, “delusional.”
These labels can leave deep psychological scars, especially for those diagnosed only in adulthood—after years of internalizing failure, shame, and lost time.
It’s Not a Flaw—It’s a Blocked Capacity
The mainstream view tends to treat grandiosity as inherently irrational. But from a psychoanalytic and existential lens, it’s often a survival mechanism. Adults with ADHD may develop big visions as a form of self-protection—preserving a belief in their own worth against a backdrop of underachievement and misunderstanding.
Jung might call these dreams the voice of the disowned “shadow” self. Frankl might see them as a cry for meaning in a life of missed opportunity. Neuroscientists call it reward-seeking, driven by dopamine-deficient circuits. Whatever the lens, the conclusion is the same: grandiosity is not an excess—it’s a signal.
What it signals is the need for scaffolding—support structures that help transform possibility into reality.
Grounding the Vision: What Actually Works
Instead of shrinking their ambitions, adults with ADHD benefit from reframing and resourcing them. This includes:
Implementation intentions (if X, then I do Y) to pre-wire task engagement
External scaffolding like visual planning tools, timers, and accountability partners
Coaching and cognitive strategies like timeline chunking or behavior activation
Gamification and immediate rewards to make action as stimulating as ideation
One guiding frame to replace the old narrative is this:
“Big ideas aren’t dangerous. Unscaffolded ideas are.”
Rather than pathologizing dreaming, this model seeks to anchor it—with realistic plans, visible steps, and ongoing support.
From Grandiosity to Grounded Greatness
The visionary-implementation gap isn’t a character flaw. It’s a bridgeable space—one that late-diagnosed adults with ADHD can learn to cross with the right tools and insight.
That begins with changing the narrative.
Your big idea isn’t too big. It just hasn’t been scaffolded yet.
