A pop singer from Bulgaria just won Eurovision with a song called "Bangaranga" - and she got there with an ADHD brain, a therapist, and an album named after her diagnosis.
DARA (Darina Yotova) took the stage in Vienna on May 16, 2026, and delivered what the Associated Press called an "energetic anthem" with "infectious beats and tightly choreographed dance routine". She scored 516 points, winning both the jury and televote by decisive margins. Bulgaria's first Eurovision trophy.
The point is how openly she talked about ADHD before the contest. She built a life around it, and her approach says something about how ADHD and high-level performance actually work together.
Who is DARA?
Darina Yotova, 27, grew up in Varna, Bulgaria, and finished third on Bulgarian X Factor as a teenager. Before Eurovision, she'd built a career as a pop singer, TV personality, and coach on The Voice of Bulgaria. By the time she stepped onto the Eurovision stage, she was already one of the most recognizable names in Bulgarian pop.
Her Eurovision profile described her as having "commanding stage presence" and blending Balkan influences with dance-pop. That combination - high-energy performance, tight choreography, emotional delivery - is part of what made her stand out.
The Eurovision win that made history
Eurovision 2026 in Vienna was the 70th edition of the competition, and the field was stacked. DARA performed "Bangaranga" - a high-energy dance-pop track built around a driving beat, Balkan-inspired melody, and choreography that demanded both precision and explosive energy.
516 points. First in the jury vote. First in the televote. That kind of sweep is rare. It means the performance connected across demographics, languages, and musical tastes. The official Eurovision site called it "a performance that commanded every inch of the stage".
DARA also won the prestigious Marcel Bezençon Artistic Award for the performance, awarded by media and commentators to the most artistically outstanding act of the contest, per Eurovision.
For context on what high-pressure performance demands: ADHD affects prospective memory and executive function - the exact skills most people rely on to manage tight schedules, complex choreography, and live television. DARA didn't sidestep those challenges. She built systems to manage them.
ADHDARA: the album named after a diagnosis
In 2025, a year before Eurovision, DARA released an album called ADHDARA. The title is not subtle. She explained that it was named after her diagnosis with ADHD as an adult, calling it her "most personal album yet" in a British Brief interview.
The album explores themes the British Brief described as "chaos, sensitivity, emotional intensity, contradiction, and self-acceptance." Those words line up closely with how ADHD is experienced internally: the constant shift between hyperfocus and overwhelm, the feeling of being too much and not enough at the same time.
Naming an album after your diagnosis is a statement. It says: this is part of who I am, not something I hid until after I proved myself. DARA released ADHDARA before Eurovision, before the global attention, before anyone knew whether she'd win. She shifted the narrative from "she overcame ADHD" to "she built a creative practice that works with how her brain operates."
This is a useful distinction for anyone managing ADHD alongside ambitious goals. The question isn't how to eliminate ADHD traits. It's how to arrange your life so the traits that cause problems are managed and the traits that help are put to use.
ADHD does not look like one thing
One reason DARA's story matters is that it breaks a stereotype. When people imagine ADHD, they often picture a kid who can't sit still in class or an adult who can't hold down a desk job. But ADHD presents differently across people, across genders, and across contexts.
DARA's public persona is polished, disciplined, and emotionally controlled on stage. That doesn't contradict an ADHD diagnosis. Many adults with ADHD develop strong masking strategies - especially women, who are more likely to be diagnosed later in life because their symptoms present as internal chaos rather than external disruption. DARA was diagnosed as an adult, which is common for women and high-masking individuals.
If your ADHD doesn't look like the stereotype, that doesn't mean it's not real. High achievement and ADHD can coexist. They often do, especially in creative fields where the ability to make unexpected connections, sustain intense focus on engaging work, and bring raw emotional energy to a performance are genuine advantages.
Why some ADHD traits can work in performance
The science on ADHD and creativity is less simple than "ADHD makes you creative." But there is evidence that certain ADHD traits correlate with creative performance.
Research found that adults with ADHD scored higher on measures of divergent thinking - the ability to generate many different ideas from a single starting point. Divergent thinking is central to creative work: songwriting, choreography, stage design, and improvisation all depend on making unexpected connections.
Then there's hyperfocus. Many ADHD experts describe the ADHD brain as having an interest-based nervous system rather than a simple attention deficit. When a task is novel, stimulating, or emotionally meaningful, people with ADHD can sustain attention at levels that exceed neurotypical peers, as research on hyperfocus has documented. The problem is getting started on tasks that aren't interesting - not an inability to focus overall.
Eurovision preparation is the kind of high-stakes, multi-sensory, time-pressured environment that can trigger productive hyperfocus. Choreography rehearsals, vocal coaching, staging decisions, press interviews - the variety and intensity may suit an ADHD brain better than a routine desk job. That doesn't make Eurovision "easier" with ADHD. But it does mean the fit between person and environment matters enormously, and that mismatch - not the condition itself - is often what creates the most struggle.
At the same time, research on why most medication apps fail ADHD brains shows that when the tool doesn't match the neurology, the outcome is predictable: dropout, frustration, and self-blame. The same principle applies to careers and creative work.
The part people miss: therapy, routines, and recovery
Here's what doesn't make the highlight reel. In an interview with The Press Junction after her win, DARA described doing "a lot of therapy" during the Eurovision period. She talked about journaling, breathing exercises, running, meditation, and yoga. The official Eurovision profile noted her lavender-based bedtime routine and strict daily structures.
The narrative of the "tortured artist" - where creative success comes from chaos and suffering - is romantic but largely false. What actually enables high performance over time is the unglamorous work of building recovery into your life. For someone with ADHD, that means creating external structures that compensate for the executive functions that ADHD impairs.
This is where the medication management conversation connects. ADHD often undermines the ability to stick with routines - including taking medication consistently. The irony DARA didn't have to navigate publicly is that many ADHD adults struggle to maintain the very habits (therapy attendance, medication timing, sleep schedules) that make high performance sustainable.
The same principle applies to medication management. Tools that reduce cognitive load - persistent reminders, habit stacking, trackers that work without demanding executive function - don't replace therapy or medical care. But they free up mental energy for the work that matters.
Why DARA's win resonated with ADHD audiences
In the days after the final, Eurovision fan communities lit up with reactions from ADHD viewers. Reddit threads used phrases like "our ADHD queen," "she's been an inspiration to me," and "it feels like a small victory for those of us who have ADHD."
But they point to something real: visibility matters. A 2025 study found that nearly 48% of creative industry professionals identify as neurodivergent - nearly one in two. When someone who shares your neurotype achieves something extraordinary on a global stage, it changes what you believe is possible for yourself. That effect is hard to measure but easy to recognize if you've felt it.
DARA didn't set out to be an ADHD role model. She set out to make music and win Eurovision. But by being open about her diagnosis - naming her album after it, talking about therapy, describing her routines - she created a model for what success can look like when it's not built on pretending to be neurotypical.
Success with ADHD doesn't have to look "normal"
DARA's story is permission to stop measuring yourself against neurotypical standards of success. The nine-to-five schedule and the linear career path work well for some brains and poorly for others.
DARA's path involved years of building a music career, a late-in-life diagnosis, an album named after that diagnosis, therapy, strict routines, and a performance style that channels high energy into controlled output. That is not a story about overcoming limitations. It's a story about arranging conditions so the natural traits of an ADHD brain - intensity, creativity, the capacity for deep focus on compelling work - can function without being undermined by the parts of the condition that create real problems.
If you're managing ADHD alongside medication routines, the principles are similar. The most effective tools are the ones that reduce the need for executive function rather than demanding more of it. Persistent reminders, habit stacking, and keeping your data secure on your own device instead of someone else's server all follow the same logic: work with your brain, not against it.
DARA won Eurovision with ADHD. That doesn't mean everyone with ADHD can or should try to win Eurovision. It means the ceiling isn't where you might think it is - and that the path to high achievement doesn't have to involve pretending your brain works the way everyone else's does.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice. Consult your healthcare provider regarding ADHD diagnosis, treatment, or medication management.