Becca Burke

Speaker

Empowering Neurodiversity in the workplace

Hi, I am Becca!

I'm Becca, a passionate advocate for neurodiversity and understanding ADHD in the workplace. Living with ADHD (combined presentation) myself, I bring a unique blend of professional experiences and personal insights to the conversation about creating inclusive, productive work environments. Equity in the workplace is especially important for us as neurodiverse folk; if given the adjustments and support we need, we can not only survive, but thrive at work.

My professional journey


My career path has been varied, in true ADHD style! From my early days in customer relations to roles in sales and account management, I've always excelled in building relationships and understanding people's needs. My time at a FTSE 100 bank gave me a solid foundation for navigating large organisations and the politics of the office environment, and I then had to adapt quickly to the drastic changes of the Covid-19 Pandemic Lockdown. It was during this time, recognising the disruption to my routine, hyperfocusing on work outside of my core hours, and my inability to finish any tasks to completion, that I realised something wasn’t working for my brain.

Throughout my career, I’ve recognised that I was struggling, but never quite understood why. I saw so much of my own journey in the struggles I heard from other neurodiverse people, and I wanted to find a way that I could tangibly make a difference. After my own diagnosis in early 2024, I was inspired to become an ADHD Coach with Leanne Maskell's ADHD Works, and led to me being headhunted for Inclusive Change Ltd as Support Specialist.

My Areas of Expertise

- ADHD awareness and management strategies

- Education and training around ADHD for businesses

- Job coaching neurodivergent clients at work

- Rejection Sensitive Dysphoria awareness/training

- Business process improvement for neurodiverse workforce support

- Working with clients as a neurodiversity educated Virtual Assistant

- Neurodivergent talent recruitment and retention

- ADHD Works Level 1 Coach

Popular Discussion Topics

- Rejection Sensitive Dysphoria (RSD) & ADHD

- ADHD and the menopause

- ADHD screening in prisons

- ADHD and neurodiversity co-occuring traits

- ADHD celebrities

- Current research development

Living with ADHD


- Physiological difference in the brain

- ADHD facts and figures

- Common misconceptions

- Lived experience

- Interactive Q&A

ADHD in the Workplace


- Common challenges and strategies

- Strengths ADHDers bring to the workplace

- Challenges for us in the workplace

- Helpful strategies

- Reasonable Adjustments

- Equality Act 2010 protection

My Speaking Style


I pride myself on being engaging, insightful, and empathetic. My presentations blend personal anecdotes, research-based strategies, and interactive elements that leave audiences both informed and inspired. I like making complex topics accessible, and providing concrete, implementable solutions to common workplace challenges.

Why Choose Me?


At Inclusive Change, we understand your ‘Why,’ and meet you where you are on your journey as a business. Whether you're looking to educate your HR or leadership teams, or provide valuable insights to your entire organisation, I can help. I don’t believe that we as neurodivergent people need to change who we are to succeed; with the right support, education and awareness, we can be ourselves without compromise.

Work with me

Ready to transform your understanding of ADHD in the workplace?

Would you like me to run a workshop for you?

Get in touch using my calendar below.

Read my blog here: https://inclusivechange.co.uk/blog/b/adhd-and-me

Read more

The blog

Inclusive Change blog cover image titled “From Brain Fog to Clarity: Emotional Whiplash at Work?  It Might Be Menopause” The graphic features a bright pink background with two women, one holding a fan and the other smiling. The subtitle reads “Menopause, Brain Fog, and the Neurodivergent Mind."

Emotional Whiplash at Work? It Might Be Menopause

May 02, 20252 min read

Let’s get honest about something many of us are afraid to admit: it’s getting harder to regulate emotions at work.

Tears in the loo. Snapping at a colleague. Feeling numb in a meeting, then overwhelmed 10 minutes later. The emotional whiplash is real, and you’re not imagining it.

For women going through menopause, especially those who are neurodivergent, emotional regulation becomes an uphill climb.

What’s Actually Happening?

Your hormones are in flux. Estrogen and progesterone, which both help regulate mood and emotions, begin to dip. This affects everything from your impulse control to how long you stay emotionally flooded after a stressful moment.

If you have ADHD or are autistic, you may already have a more sensitive nervous system. Your baseline for emotional regulation may already be stretched thin. Now, menopause adds another layer.

Why Work Makes It Worse

Workplaces are full of unspoken rules - tone, pace, politeness, urgency. But they’re not built for fluctuating hormones or sensory systems on high alert.

Maybe you:

•Freeze when put on the spot in a meeting

•Tear up over feedback you’d normally handle

•Lose hours to emotional recovery after one awkward moment

•Feel chronically irritable but don’t know how to explain it

This isn’t immaturity. It’s not being 'too emotional'. It’s your body and brain trying to regulate while navigating a world that doesn’t recognise what’s happening inside you.

What Can You Do?

You don’t need to hide. But you do need to understand your emotional patterns and start creating safer internal and external spaces.

1. Name what’s happening

The simple act of acknowledging 'this is hormone-related' can soften shame.

2. Create recovery time

If you’re emotionally flooded, don’t expect to carry on as normal. Take 5 minutes. Walk. Breathe. Step outside.

3. Communicate needs proactively

If you’re in a place to share, let colleagues know you may need a pause after tough conversations. Keep it simple and honest.

4. Use sensory strategies

Noise, temperature, textures - sensory discomfort often adds fuel to emotional dysregulation. Make small changes where you can.

5. Seek coaching or peer support

You’re not meant to navigate this alone. Working with someone who understands the overlap between neurodivergence and menopause can help you create real strategies that work.

You’re Not Overreacting. You’re Overloaded.

You don’t have to be a master of Zen or pretend everything’s fine. You just need to honour what’s real, reduce shame, and build a way of working that actually works for you.

That’s why we created the From Brain Fog to Clarity workshop, and why our coaching programme supports you beyond just 'getting through it'.

Join us here:

https://inclusivechange.co.uk/brain-fog-to-clarity-workshop

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