Grant Cardone has never been one for subtlety, and his latest hot take might be his boldest yet. The real estate investor and motivational powerhouse is challenging how we think about mental health labels—specifically ADHD and bipolar disorder. According to Cardone, these aren't disorders that need fixing. They're gifts that got mislabeled by people who don't understand them.
Back in November, Cardone dropped a video on his Facebook page with a pretty straightforward caption: "ADHD is just misunderstood genius." In the clip, he doesn't hold back. "ADD, ADHD, bipolar—all these manic kind of people—they've been labeled something negative by some fake doctor," Cardone says during what appears to be an interview.
When the interviewer mentions having ADHD himself, Cardone immediately pushes back: "No. You don't have it. You have gifts from God." He continues, "And the doctor said you have something we can't explain. Yeah—it's genius, punk. That's what that is. I have the ability to be interested and curious about a lot of things. And the fact that you don't get that is your problem—not my problem."
Not His First Time Making This Argument
This isn't some new revelation for Cardone. Back in 2019, he posted a similar message on X (formerly Twitter): "Being labeled OCD, ACD, ADD, ADHD is actually a blessing. There's this big gift sitting there waiting to bubble up, so don't medicate it and don't push it down! Give it a voice, let it be greatness and genius rather than something bad."
That post came with a video featuring nighttime driving footage, blurred city lights, and Cardone's voice overlaid on top. "Look man, I've been labeled OCD, ACD, compulsive obsessive, COD, bipolar!" he says in the clip. "They wanted to put me on lithium, Prozac, all this medication. I mean, real, real like serious drugs."
Cardone recalls how teachers expected him to sit still for 45 minutes listening to lectures he found pointless. "I just wanted to make some money, man," he admits. Eventually, he decided to stop letting what he calls "average" people define him. "I'm gonna take this obsessive-compulsive—whatever this energy is that's been made wrong by society—and I'm not gonna suppress it anymore. I'm gonna use it."
Reframing Labels As Superpowers
His core argument is pretty straightforward: the same traits that get labeled as problems in a classroom might be exactly what makes someone exceptional in business. If you're wired to chase multiple interests simultaneously, think faster than the people around you, or resist traditional structure, maybe that's not a bug—it's a feature. "People being labeled OCD, ADD, ADHD—I think they're geniuses," Cardone says.
From his entrepreneurial perspective, what looks like scattered attention might actually be the ability to spot opportunities others miss. That hyperfocus that drives teachers crazy? It might be what keeps you working on a business problem at 2 a.m. when everyone else has given up. The resistance to sitting still for boring lectures? Maybe that's the same instinct that pushes you to build something instead of just following someone else's playbook.
The Important Disclaimer
Here's the thing: Grant Cardone is a lot of things—investor, author, speaker, self-promoter extraordinaire—but he's not a doctor. And this matters. Many people genuinely benefit from treatment, medication, and professional support for ADHD, bipolar disorder, and other conditions. For some, those interventions make the difference between struggling and thriving. There's absolutely nothing wrong with seeking help or following medical advice.
Cardone isn't telling people to throw away their prescriptions or ignore their diagnoses. What he's offering is a different lens for thinking about your wiring, especially if you're entrepreneurially inclined. The same energy that makes corporate structures feel suffocating might be exactly what fuels you to launch a startup, scale a side hustle, or build something from scratch.
Different Might Be Your Edge
In a world that often tries to standardize everyone into neat categories, Cardone's message cuts through: don't let someone else's limited understanding define your potential. The traits that feel like "too much" in one context might be your competitive advantage in another. That restless energy, that inability to focus on things that bore you, that tendency to jump between interests—maybe those aren't problems to solve. Maybe they're signals pointing toward a different path entirely.
In business, being different often matters more than fitting in. The same qualities that make you a challenging employee might make you an unstoppable entrepreneur. Cardone's point isn't that ADHD doesn't exist or that mental health isn't real. It's that some of what we call disorders might simply be uncommon wiring that thrives under different conditions. And if you've got that wiring, maybe it's time to stop trying to fix it and start figuring out how to use it.