ADHD in the Courtroom
Practicing Law with ADHD
The legal profession measures competence through visible behavior: deadlines met, emails returned, performance sustained. What it rarely accounts for is the invisible cognitive labor required to produce those outcomes-and how quickly that invisibility turns difference into misjudgment.
ADHD in the Courtroom is not a self-help book, a productivity guide, or a collection of coping strategies. It is a clear-eyed examination of how ADHD functions inside legal practice, and why capable lawyers are so often misread when their work is evaluated without context.
Drawing on experience in criminal defense and legal education, Michael L. Freeman explores how ADHD shapes attention, time perception, emotional regulation, and performance under pressure. He shows how ordinary professional behaviors-delayed responses, uneven administrative output, compressed work cycles-are routinely interpreted as carelessness or unreliability, long before accurate explanations are even possible.
This book explains why those explanations often arrive too late to matter.
Rather than treating ADHD as a personal management problem, ADHD in the Courtroom examines the structural mismatch between neurological reality and professional systems built to reward visible consistency while ignoring the cost of achieving it. The result is a profession that mistakes depletion for indifference and cognitive strain for character failure.
Written for practicing attorneys, judges, legal educators, and professionals in regulated fields, ADHD in the Courtroom offers a more accurate framework for understanding competence, responsibility, and performance-before narrative hardens into judgment.
This book is for you if:
You are a lawyer with ADHD navigating professional scrutinyYou work in a high-pressure, deadline-driven professionYou have watched capable professionals misjudged by surface behaviorYou want explanation, not optimizationThis book is not:
A productivity manualA motivational guideA checklist of ADHD "hacks"