ADHD-friendly self-care that actually works: sensory resets, body doubling, low-friction routines, and tiny habits that don’t feel like homework.
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Get it on Play StoreI used to think self-care meant I had to become a candle person.
You know the vibe — drink water, journal, meditate, sleep early, become a calm little productivity monk. Cute in theory. Totally useless on the days my brain is doing parkour.
If you have ADHD, self-care usually fails for one annoying reason: it asks you to do boring things with a brain that hates boring things. So instead of “be more disciplined,” we need stuff that actually fits how our brains work — messy, sensory, urgent, visual, a little weird.
And yes, this is the kind of self-care that can happen when you’re overstimulated, distracted, behind on emails, and emotionally one bad notification away from quitting society.
I’m going to be blunt — if your self-care plan feels like another task you can fail, it’s not self-care. It’s guilt with better branding.
ADHD-friendly self-care should do one of these things:
That’s the whole game.
So instead of asking, “What should I do every day?” ask, “What helps me recover when my brain is fried?”
That question is way more useful.
Meditation works for some people. For others, sitting still with your thoughts is basically a haunted house experience.
Try sensory resets instead. These are fast, physical, and easier to actually do.
I swear by the “go stand in the kitchen and hold something cold” method. It’s ridiculous and it works.
The point isn’t to become zen. The point is to tell your nervous system, “We are not on fire right now.”
Body doubling saved me from so many shame spirals it should honestly have a trophy.
If you don’t know it, body doubling means doing a task while another person is nearby — in person, on a call, even silently in the same room. It helps because your brain gets just enough social presence to stay online.
And no, it doesn’t have to be fancy. A friend on FaceTime, a study-with-me video, or a silent coworking room online all count.
Action step: Pick one task you’ve been avoiding and schedule a 20-minute body double session this week. Text someone: “Can you stay on call while I clean my desk?” That’s it.
ADHD brains often don’t need the whole habit. They need the first 30 seconds.
So instead of saying, “I will do a 30-minute evening routine,” try making a starter step that’s so small it’s hard to refuse.
I’m obsessed with this idea because it removes the “launch sequence.” And launch sequence is where most of my good intentions go to die.
You don’t need more motivation. You need fewer steps between you and the thing.
Some ADHD brains don’t rest by doing nothing. They rest by doing something low-stakes and repetitive.
That’s not laziness. That’s regulation.
I have absolutely had “rest” that involved reorganizing a shelf. And honestly? My brain felt better after that than after trying to sit cross-legged and breathe deeply for 10 minutes while hating myself.
So if stillness makes you twitchy, stop forcing it.
Rest should recover you — not punish you.
ADHD brains love novelty. Fight me.
If the same self-care routine bores you to tears, you’re not broken. Your brain is just begging for some stimulation.
So rotate things.
Even tiny novelty helps. Same task, different wrapper.
And yes, this is why I’ve historically been more consistent with self-care when it feels slightly silly. A fancy water bottle? Weirdly motivating. A cute timer? Weirdly motivating. Human brains are annoying like that.
When you’re dysregulated, you will not remember your best coping skills. That’s not a character flaw. That’s a brain thing.
So make a comfort menu ahead of time.
Write down 10 things that help when you’re overwhelmed, tired, or spiraling.
Put that list in your notes app or on your wall. Because on a bad day, your brain will act like it has never received help before.
And if you need an emergency version, make it even smaller: drink something, eat something, change the lighting, reduce noise.
Let’s be real — sometimes ADHD self-care is not “gentle healing.” Sometimes it’s “fix the environment so your life stops feeling like a trap.”
That means:
I have strong opinions about this: your home should not require heroic effort to function.
If you keep losing essentials, you don’t need to become more organized in a moral sense. You need fewer hidden objects.
Make life obvious. Make it visible. Make it stupidly easy.
Micro-care is tiny self-care done consistently enough to matter.
It’s the opposite of those dramatic reset plans that last 18 hours and then collapse because you got tired.
Small counts. Small counts a lot.
And the best part is, small wins don’t trigger the shame spiral as hard. That matters. Shame kills consistency faster than laziness ever will.
Tracking can help ADHD brains because it adds visibility and dopamine — but only if it’s not another complicated system you abandon in a week.
Keep it simple.
I like the idea of tracking just 3 self-care anchors:
For example:
That’s enough.
If you want structure without the overwhelm, an app like Trider (myhabits.in) can help you keep things visible without turning your life into a spreadsheet cult. The trick is to track habits that are actually sustainable, not aspirational nonsense.
“Take care of myself” is too vague. ADHD brains need instructions with edges.
So instead of:
Try:
Specificity is kindness.
Because if your self-care plan depends on you being in a great mood, rested, focused, and spiritually aligned, it’s already dead.
ADHD-friendly self-care is not glamorous. It’s not perfectly lit baths and matching pajamas and a five-step routine that makes you feel like a better person.
Sometimes it’s cold water, body doubling, one clean surface, loud music, a snack, and leaving the house for 7 minutes before your brain starts yelling.
And honestly? That counts.
Start with one thing from this list. Not all of it. Just one. Make it tiny, obvious, and easy to repeat.
And if you want a little help building habits that don’t feel impossible, try Trider at myhabits.in — your future self might actually thank you.