Why ADHD hobby cycling happens, why you get obsessed then bored, and how to build hobbies that last without killing the fun.
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ADHD hobby cycling is that weirdly familiar pattern where you get fully possessed by a new interest, go all-in for a bit, then suddenly feel nothing. Not “a little less excited.” More like the hobby evaporated overnight.
And honestly? It’s not laziness. It’s not being flaky. It’s your brain doing the thing it does best — chasing novelty like it owes it money.
I’ve done this so many times it’s embarrassing. I once spent ₹8,000 on art supplies after watching exactly 4 watercolor videos. Used them for 10 days. Then they sat in a drawer for 9 months while I learned enough about sourdough to become deeply annoying at dinner.
ADHD brains often crave novelty, intensity, and fast feedback. A new hobby delivers all three.
The beginning of a hobby is basically a dopamine jackpot:
That early stage feels electric because your brain loves the challenge and the mystery. You’re not just learning the hobby — you’re learning what kind of person you could become.
But then comes the middle part. The boring part. The “I’m not instantly good at this anymore” part.
And that’s where a lot of ADHD interest collapses. The excitement drops, friction rises, and your brain goes, “Cool. What’s next?”
This is the part people miss.
When you drop a hobby, it usually doesn’t mean you stopped liking it. It means you hit the plateau — that annoying stretch where progress slows down and the task stops being shiny.
Early on, you improve fast. You can tell yourself, “Look at me, I’m making progress!”
Then suddenly the gains get tiny. The first 2 weeks feel like fireworks. The next 2 months feel like brushing your teeth while someone judges you.
That’s when ADHD brains tend to wander. Not because the hobby is bad. But because the reward becomes less immediate, and your brain starts scanning for a fresher hit.
And here’s the ugly little bonus: once you drop a hobby, guilt moves in.
You start thinking:
Nope. Stop that.
You don’t have a character flaw. You have a brain that is extremely responsive to interest and extremely allergic to stale repetition. That’s a real pattern, and once you name it, it gets less scary.
I’ve found that the shame is often worse than the hobby cycling itself. Dropping a hobby is normal. Hating yourself for it is optional — and I strongly recommend skipping that part.
You do not need to become a monk and ban all new hobbies forever. That’s unrealistic, and honestly, boring.
But you do need guardrails. Because ADHD + impulse spending + a “this is my personality now” mood can turn into a very expensive closet full of abandoned dreams.
Try these rules:
1. Use the 7-day curiosity rule Wait 7 days before buying anything over a set amount — maybe ₹500, ₹1,000, or ₹2,000 depending on your budget.
If you still want it after a week, great. If not, congrats, you just saved money and storage space.
2. Borrow before you buy Test the hobby with secondhand gear, a friend’s setup, a library class, or beginner tools.
I learned this the hard way after buying “serious” supplies for hobbies I had not yet seriously met.
3. Cap the starter kit Decide in advance what your maximum entry cost is. For example:
This keeps the excitement without letting it eat your bank account.
The goal isn’t to force yourself to love the same thing forever. That’s not how many ADHD brains work.
The goal is to make hobbies easy to return to after the obsession phase fades.
Here’s what helps:
1. Lower the “restart tax” Keep your stuff visible and ready. If it takes 20 minutes to set up, your brain will say no before you even start.
For me, this means leaving my notebook open, my cycling shoes by the door, and anything “creative” out in the open instead of buried in a cupboard like evidence.
2. Make the hobby stupidly easy to begin Don’t aim for 2 hours. Aim for 5 minutes.
Want to sketch? Draw one object. Want to cycle? Ride for 10 minutes around the block. Want to bake? Make one small thing, not a full Pinterest masterpiece that ruins your entire kitchen.
The easier the start, the less your brain has to negotiate with itself.
3. Define a minimum version This one’s gold. Decide what counts as “keeping the hobby alive.”
Examples:
The minimum isn’t meant to impress anyone. It’s meant to preserve the identity and the habit.
ADHD brains love fantasy. We picture the future version of ourselves who wakes up at 5 a.m., trains daily, and becomes a legend before lunch.
But the real win is consistency, not fantasy.
Track what you actually do.
That’s why tools like Trider (myhabits.in) can be genuinely useful — not because tracking fixes ADHD, but because it gives your brain a visible record of “I did the thing.” That matters more than people think.
A simple streak or weekly check-in can turn vague guilt into actual data. And data is way less dramatic than your brain’s mood swings.
Try tracking:
That last one is sneaky important. Sometimes a hobby feels like a dead interest until you do it for 10 minutes and remember, “Oh right, this makes me feel human.”
Here’s my spicy opinion: the obsession phase isn’t the problem. It can actually be super useful.
When you’re obsessed, use that energy to:
Basically, future-proof the hobby while your brain is still in love with it.
For example, if you’re into cycling:
That way, when the interest drops, you’re not starting from zero. You’ve already built a low-friction path back in.
This part matters.
Not every hobby has to become a lifestyle. Some hobbies are seasonal, and that’s okay.
Maybe you do 4 months of cycling, 2 months of baking, 6 weeks of photography, and then circle back later. That doesn’t mean you’re inconsistent. It means you’re a person with a changing nervous system and a brain that likes variety.
I think we put way too much pressure on hobbies to prove something. They don’t need to become careers. They don’t need to become identities. Sometimes they’re just a fun way to spend a phase of your life.
And that’s enough.
If you want fewer crashes, try this:
Step 1: Pick 1 active hobby and 1 “backup” hobby Don’t juggle 6. One main hobby, one low-pressure fallback.
Step 2: Set a tiny weekly target Make it so small you can’t dramatically fail. For example, 1 ride or 1 sketch session per week.
Step 3: Track it for 30 days Keep it simple. Don’t turn tracking into another hobby you abandon.
Step 4: Review your pattern Ask:
Step 5: Adjust, don’t shame If your routine is too intense, shrink it. If the hobby is too expensive, simplify it. If the setup is annoying, remove steps.
That’s the whole game.
ADHD hobby cycling doesn’t mean you can’t enjoy hobbies. It means you need a system that respects how your brain actually works — not how some productivity guru thinks it should work.
So yeah, chase the excitement. But build for the after-party too.
And if you want an easy way to keep tabs on your hobbies without making it a whole project, try Trider (myhabits.in) and see if a little tracking helps you stick around long enough to enjoy the ride.