“”

Women's Health, Your Way

February 24, 2026

Ask & Search With Clara

Welcome to a new standard for women’s health answers.

GIRLHOOD / Living to Eat (and Finally Learning to Cook with ADHD)

Living to Eat (and Finally Learning to Cook with ADHD)

Living to Eat (and Finally Learning to Cook with ADHD)

They say some people eat to live, and others live to eat. As a second-generation Italian-American girl from Queens, I have always, proudly, lived to eat. Food is how we say "I love you" without actually saying it. It’s Sunday sauce simmering for hours, it’s too much bread on the table, it’s arguing about whose meatballs are better.  

“Nothing tastes as good as skinny feels” has, quite frankly, never once resonated with me. Carbs are a personality trait where I’m from.

But here’s the part that might surprise you: for most of my adult life, I didn’t love to cook. I loved eating, I loved restaurants, I loved being cooked for, but the actual act of planning, prepping, and executing dinner on a random Wednesday felt… exhausting.

Part of it is my ADHD. If you’ve ever tried to follow an online recipe while your brain is pinging in twelve different directions, you know. I do not need a five-paragraph origin story about your grandmother’s garden before you tell me the oven temperature, because by the time I scroll to the ingredients, I’ve checked my email, ordered socks, and forgotten why I opened the page in the first place.

And then, honestly, ChatGPT changed the game.

Now I type in what’s in my fridge ("salmon, cherry tomatoes, half a lemon, feta”), and I get a straightforward, no-frills recipe in seconds. No life story, no ads, just clarity, which removes the friction and means I actually cook.

And here’s what I didn’t expect: I love what happens while I’m cooking. Not the chaotic, multitasking version, but the steadier one: audiobook in my ears (hi, Wild Reverence), hands moving, knife hitting the cutting board in a rhythm that somehow settles my nervous system. I don’t even particularly love chopping, but I love how it quiets my brain while I’m doing something useful, something that ends with everyone gathered around the table.

For me, this isn’t about being a trad wife or optimizing protein. It’s about reconnecting to something that’s always been part of my identity — food as joy, food as love — in a way that works with my brain instead of against it. And realizing that maybe in your late 30s, you just become the nonna whether you planned to or not.

More from GIRLHOOD

They say death comes in threes, but lately it feels less like superstition and more like a pattern I can’t unsee. And the cause, in so many of these losses,... Read more
I did not have “Bridgerton teaches us about the pleasure gap” on my 2026 bingo card, and yet… here we are. Just when we’d all quietly filed Francesca away as... Read more

Are We Done… or Just Tired?

People don’t talk enough about how hard it is to know you’re “done” having kids after years of infertility. Mostly because “done” implies a level of certainty that infertility never... Read more

Is Fiber the New Protein?

If 2025 was peak protein, I was fully on board. I tracked it, prioritized it, and mentally calculated grams while ordering lunch. For a while, it felt empowering, like we... Read more
I am not, and never have been, a haircare girly. I didn’t grow up knowing the difference between a mask and a conditioner. I’ve never instinctively understood which shampoo was... Read more
Like everyone else at the peak of COVID, my husband and I bought a Peloton bike with the purest of intentions. We’d ride every day from the comfort of our... Read more
I’ve spent more time than I care to admit staring at patient portals, waiting for test results to populate. Fertility labs. Hormone panels. Bloodwork that’s supposed to explain why something... Read more
The best thing that happened to me this most recent postpartum wasn’t a supplement, a system, or a “game-changing” routine I would later forget to keep up with. It was... Read more
On Rescripted’s weekly standup this morning, we acknowledged what everyone’s been feeling: things are heavy right now. With everything happening in Minnesota, layered on top of the general state of... Read more
As someone who has spent the better part of the past 22 days away from social media (thank you, Opal app), I picked a truly chaotic week to check back in. I opened... Read more