Lucy
Talk
Talk Practice · 2026

Public Speaking Practice with ADHD

ADHD creates specific speaking challenges: difficulty staying on a linear structure, over-elaborating on tangents, time management during delivery, and maintaining focus during long rehearsals. These challenges have specific solutions and many people with ADHD become compelling and energetic speakers once they find their approach.

WHAT TO LOOK FOR

The three things that actually matter

1

Structure as a speaking anchor

ADHD speakers tend to lose their place within complex structure. Simplify to three main points maximum and know them by heart as a recovery anchor. When you have gone on a tangent, knowing your three points means you always have a clear place to return to.

2

Short focused rehearsal bursts

Long rehearsal sessions often do not work well for ADHD. Practise in 10 to 15-minute bursts with a specific focus for each burst. One burst on the opening, one on each main section, one on the closing. Short focused sessions are more productive than long unfocused ones.

3

Use movement in practice

Many people with ADHD think and speak better when moving. Practise your presentation while walking. Standing practice tends to produce more energy and better recall than seated practice for ADHD speakers.

TLDR:Lucy works well as a practice partner for ADHD speakers because you can stop and restart, explore tangents and return to structure, and practise in short focused bursts rather than demanding sustained long-form rehearsal. Work with your natural rhythm rather than against it.

Why Lucy OS1

Structure as a speaking anchor

ADHD speakers tend to lose their place within complex structure. Simplify to three main points maximum and know them by heart as a recovery anchor. When you have gone on a tangent, knowing your three points means you always have a clear place to return to.

Short focused rehearsal bursts

Long rehearsal sessions often do not work well for ADHD. Practise in 10 to 15-minute bursts with a specific focus for each burst. One burst on the opening, one on each main section, one on the closing. Short focused sessions are more productive than long unfocused ones.

Use movement in practice

Many people with ADHD think and speak better when moving. Practise your presentation while walking. Standing practice tends to produce more energy and better recall than seated practice for ADHD speakers.

Time signals in delivery

Time management in live speaking is a common challenge with ADHD. Use timed sections in rehearsal and have a visible timer in delivery. Knowing you have used four of your allocated five minutes for a section provides the external regulation that keeps delivery on track.

QUICK COMPARISON

Lucy OS1 vs most AI tools

Capability Lucy OS1 Most AI tools
Memory across sessions ✓ Permanent, never resets ✗ Resets after every session
Voice quality ✓ Lucy OS1 Natural Voice (best-in-class) ✗ Basic STT, struggles with noise
Calendar awareness ✓ Reads Google Calendar in real time ✗ No calendar access
Available 24/7 Always on, any device Available but stateless each time
Gets personal over time ✓ Builds your context continuously ✗ Starts from zero every session

Try Lucy OS1, setup takes 30 seconds

Voice-first AI with memory and calendar integration. Free to try.

Start Talking

Free tier available. No credit card required.

GET STARTED

How to use Lucy OS1

1

Create your free account

No credit card required. Sign in with your Google account and you're inside in under a minute.

2

Connect your Google Calendar

Lucy reads your upcoming events before every conversation, so it already knows your day before you say a word.

3

Start talking about public speaking practice with adhd

Speak naturally. Lucy listens, responds by voice, and begins building context from your very first exchange. The more you use it, the better it gets.

Start for free → Free tier available. No credit card.

Frequently Asked Questions

Do ADHD speakers have any advantages over neurotypical speakers?
Often yes. ADHD speakers are frequently more energetic, more spontaneous, and more capable of genuine enthusiasm that audiences find compelling. The challenge is channelling this energy into a structure that serves the audience. When this balance works, ADHD speakers are often the most memorable in the room.
How do I stop going off on tangents when I am speaking?
Know your three main points by heart and make returning to them automatic: 'Coming back to my second point.' Practise the return manoeuvre explicitly until it is instinctive. The tangent itself is often fine, the problem is getting back on track, and this is a trainable skill.
Is there a best presentation format for ADHD speakers?
Interactive formats tend to work better than monologue formats. Being able to respond to questions, invite audience participation, and vary the energy keeps ADHD speakers more engaged in the delivery. Structure-free improv is harder to manage than structured interaction.
How do I manage pre-presentation hyperactivity that interferes with clear thinking?
Physical discharge before speaking: walk quickly, do jumping jacks, move. Physical activity metabolises the excess energy and often leads to clearer, calmer thinking in the minutes that follow. This is more effective than trying to sit still and calm down.

MORE IN THIS CATEGORY

→ How to Warm Up Your Voice Before a Presentation → Voice Warm-Up Exercises for Speaking → Breathing Exercises Before Speaking → How to Prepare Your Voice for a Speech → How to Practice Your Presentation Out Loud → What to Do the Day Before a Presentation → How to Stop Stuttering When Nervous → How to Calm Nerves Before a Presentation → See all

COMPARE LUCY OS1

Lucy OS1 vs Siri → Lucy OS1 vs ChatGPT → Lucy OS1 vs Google Gemini → Lucy OS1 vs Google Assistant → Lucy OS1 vs Amazon Alexa → See all comparisons →

Welcome