Lucy Smith

Speaker, Facilitator, Compare

Inspiring audiences & making a difference

Neurodiversity | Managing Change | Resilience

Life Stories | Social Enterprise

Authentic storytelling that makes a difference

Hi, I am Lucy!

Some people call me the "pocket rocket". I think that is because I have passion and energy to bring out the best in an audience.

I have been working with audiences for almost 25 years in many guises - Lecturer, radio presenter, drama teacher, children's entertainer (I have been a professional fairy) facilitator, compare and speaker.

As a speaker I believe there has to be some substance behind us and I sure have that too. Not being able to settle and always saying "YES" to opportunities has led to a whole lot of experience that informs my work and my presentations.

At my core I am a purpose led social entrepreneur who loves to start a conversation about topics that matter.

I start those conversations with stories some that will surprise and some that will inspire. I talk about some difficult stuff and combine my unique expertise and knowledge.

Relatable, authentic and thought provoking

Lucy x

Neurodiversity

What is your perspective?

I come from a range of different perspectives when I talk about neurodiversity. From pedagogy, organisation development and leadership, research, personal and family and real lived experience. With a a strengths based approach I talk positively and with passion about change and neurodiversity in work, school and community.

I engage audiences to get them thinking and start conversations that will make and does make a lasting difference.

Change Management

Let me meet you at your

bus-stop

In the world of change management, it's not about imposing a new route; it's about understanding where you're starting from.

I have spent a decade working with senior leaders in transformational change where I have learned that change is often an individual journey and we will all join that journey from a different bus-stop.

I combine theory with reality and always have an eye on the future.

Life Stories

The secret change agent

A wealth of stories based on real lived experience with plenty of lessons for the future. Spilling some my secrets on here would be giving away some of my best work which you will want to hear straight from the source.

Oh, okay, let's just say I can talk about resilience, royalty, and some really fun stuff from a career in international law enforcement,

Social Enterprise

Making a difference - the torch that lights the stars

Lighting people up to make sustainable change happen is a big part of what I do. From setting up a community radio station to developing an innovative and groundbreaking conference around digital wellbeing and young people.

I talk the talk and walk the walk when it comes to social enterprise, from grass roots to engagement at the highest levels right up to Downing Street.

What do other people say?

Don't take it from me, here is what others say about working with me.

Work with me

Want to work with me?

Book a call to work directly with me.

Choose from 60 or 30 minutes.

A chance to talk about your challenges, ask questions, work through a problem.

It's your call and your time.

Listen online

Podcasts, interviews and YouTube

Read more

The blog

Promotional blog graphic by Inclusive Change titled "From Brain Fog to Clarity: Why ADHD feels louder in menopause". The bright pink background features two women, one holding a fan, the other smiling. The subtitle reads "Menopause, Brain Fog, and the Neurodivergent Mind," and the word "BLOG" is prominently displayed.

ADHD and Menopause: Why It Feels Louder Now

April 24, 20254 min read

Understanding the ADHD + Menopause Collision - And What You Can Do About It

You’re standing in the kitchen, staring at three open drawers, your tea’s gone cold, and you’ve just opened Instagram for the fourth time in 10 minutes. You wonder, 'Was I always like this, or is it getting worse?'

If you have ADHD and you’re entering perimenopause or menopause, you’re probably noticing that symptoms you once had 'under control' now feel amplified.

You’re not imagining it.

When ADHD and Hormones Collide

ADHD is already a condition that affects attention, motivation, memory, and executive function. Throw in the hormonal chaos of menopause, and you’ve got what many women describe as a cognitive rollercoaster with no seatbelt.

Why? Because hormones and brain chemistry are deeply connected.

Oestrogen helps regulate dopamine, the very neurotransmitter ADHD brains struggle to manage. As oestrogen levels drop during menopause, so does your brain’s ability to manage dopamine. And with it, go your focus, mood, and motivation.

Common ADHD Symptoms That Get Worse in Menopause

You might have always been the 'disorganised but gets-it-done' type, or someone who’s masked their ADHD for years with systems, routines, or sheer willpower.

Then menopause arrives, and suddenly:

•You forget appointments or entire conversations

•You can’t start simple tasks

•Your focus fractures after five minutes

•You feel more impulsive, emotional, or overwhelmed than ever before

•You bounce between anxiety and burnout in the same afternoon

And here’s the kicker: you can’t tell if it’s your ADHD, menopause, or both.

Spoiler alert: it’s both.

What ADHD Looks Like in Menopausal Women - Hint: It’s Not Always What You Think

If you’re imagining the hyperactive schoolboy stereotype, think again. ADHD in adult women, especially those in menopause, often shows up as:

•Brain fog that feels more like mental static

•Sensory overload that wasn’t there before

•A complete intolerance for multitasking

•Emotional intensity or shutdowns

•Paralysis in the face of simple decisions

It’s a neurological pressure cooker. And you’re still expected to work, parent, clean, care, plan, and 'just get on with it'.

The Mental Load Is Now a Mental Landslide

For many neurodivergent women, menopause is when the wheels finally fall off the invisible cart we’ve been dragging behind us.

The mental load, already sky-high from years of masking and managing ADHD, now feels unbearable. And because so few people talk about how menopause affects neurodivergent brains, many women internalise the struggle.

They think:

“I’m failing.”

“I can’t keep up.”

“I used to be better than this.”

The truth is: your brain hasn’t failed you. It’s signalling that it needs different support now, not more pressure.

What Can Help?

7 Tools That Actually Make a Difference

No fluff. Just things that work (and are realistic when your brain is foggy, your body is tired, and your emotions are doing the hokey pokey).

1. Simplify routines

Keep your systems visible, minimal, and repeatable. Morning routines, meal planning, even outfits, make them as predictable as possible.

2. Time-block your day

Use short blocks (15–30 minutes) for focus time, and buffer zones between tasks. Include breaks by default, not as an afterthought.

3. Set external cues

Your brain might not 'hold' tasks like it used to. Use phone alarms, sticky notes, or even talking timers to prompt action.

4. Move your body gently

You don’t need intense workouts. Just movement, walking, stretching, dancing, helps regulate dopamine and reduce overwhelm.

5. Speak your overwhelm out loud

Whether it’s to a coach, a friend, or into your voice notes, naming what’s hard defuses its power.

6. Honour your sensory needs

Avoid noise where possible, dim the lights, wear comfy clothes. Menopause can crank your sensory dials, so adjust your environment accordingly.

7. Adjust your expectations

You’re not a machine. Rest is not a luxury. Capacity shifts daily. What you can do today is enough.

“It’s Like I’m Meeting My Brain for the First Time”

That’s what one woman in our community said recently. And it’s true, menopause forces many neurodivergent women to confront the ways we’ve been over-functioning, over-masking, and over-explaining for decades.

It’s disorienting, but it can also be empowering.

Because for the first time, you might start making choices based on what you actually need. Not what looks good. Not what keeps you performing. But what helps you feel safe, supported, and like yourself again.

You’re Not Lazy. You’re Recalibrating.

The world wasn’t built for neurodivergent women in midlife. But you’re building your own way forward, and you’re not doing it alone.

If this post spoke to something deep in your bones (or your brain), it’s because we see you. And that’s exactly why we created the From Brain Fog to Clarity workshop.

It’s a 90-minute, zero-fluff, neurodivergent-safe space where we unpack what’s happening in your brain and body, and give you real, doable ways to move through it.

Join us here:

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


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  • Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet consecetuer lorem ipsum

  •  Organically grow the holistic world view of disruptive innovation

  •  At the end of the day, going forward, a new normal that has evolved

Column Header

  • Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet consecetuer lorem ipsum

  •  Organically grow the holistic world view of disruptive innovation

  •  At the end of the day, going forward, a new normal that has evolved