A ADHD‑focused habit coach that mixes quick check‑off and Pomodoro timers, streak‑freezing, color‑coded cues, journal reflections, squad accountability, smart reminders, micro‑wins and analytics into a cockpit‑style dashboard—giving you flexible, low‑stress consistency in just a glance.
Pick the right habit type
If a task feels like a “just‑do‑it” item, set it up as a check‑off habit. A quick tap on the habit card tells your brain it’s done, and the streak badge gives a tiny dopamine hit. When the activity needs focus—say a 25‑minute study block—use a timer habit. The built‑in Pomodoro timer forces you to start, work, and finish before the habit marks itself complete.
Start small, protect the streak
Your brain craves consistency, but ADHD also loves a break. The app lets you “freeze” a day. I freeze on days when I’m exhausted; the streak stays intact, and the pressure disappears. Freeze uses are limited, so I reserve them for real burnout, not for laziness.
Build a visual cue system
Colors aren’t just pretty; they’re memory anchors. I assign bright teal to health habits, amber to work tasks, and soft violet to mindfulness. The dashboard becomes a map, and a glance tells me where to focus. Custom categories let you expand the palette as life changes.
Leverage the journal for reflection
Every evening I open the journal icon on the dashboard. I jot a sentence about how the day felt, pick a mood emoji, and answer the AI’s prompt “What tiny win did you notice?” The entry gets auto‑tagged—so later I can search “energy” and see patterns. Those “On This Day” memories remind me that progress isn’t linear, and that’s okay.
Use the squad for accountability
I created a small squad of two friends and a coworker. Each morning we glance at each other’s completion percentages. The chat is a place for quick pep talks, not long essays. When we all hit a low‑energy day, we launch a “raid”: a shared micro‑challenge like “drink one glass of water before 10 am.” The collective goal feels less intimidating than solo pressure.
Set reminders that actually work
Push notifications are only useful if they’re timed right. In the habit settings, I set a 9 am reminder for my morning stretch and a 2 pm nudge for a 5‑minute breathing break. The app won’t send them for you, but the UI makes it painless to pick a time that aligns with your natural rhythm.
Turn crisis moments into micro‑wins
On days when motivation evaporates, I tap the brain icon on the dashboard. The view collapses to three micro‑activities: a 1‑minute breathing exercise, a vent‑journal prompt, and a single tiny task—like “put a glass of water on the desk.” No streak loss, no guilt. Just a foothold.
Track reading as a habit
I treat my weekly article binge as a habit, not a hobby. Adding a book to the reading tab, I set a progress goal of 20 % each week. The app logs the chapter I’m on, so I never lose my place. Seeing the percentage climb is another small reward that fuels consistency.
Analyze patterns, tweak the plan
The analytics tab shows a heat map of habit completion. I noticed my “midday focus” habit dips on Wednesdays. I dug into the journal entries from those days and found a recurring meeting that ate my time. I moved the habit to a later slot and the streak recovered.
Freeze the habit loop, not the growth
When a habit feels stale, I archive it instead of deleting. The data stays, so later I can resurrect it with a fresh angle. For example, my “check email” habit became “process inbox in 10 min” after I realized the original was too vague.
Keep the system flexible
Life throws curveballs, and the habit system should bend, not break. Rotate schedules—push/pull/legs for workouts, or “Mon/Wed/Fri” for language practice. The app’s recurrence options let you match the rhythm of your week, not the other way around.
Make the habit dashboard your daily cockpit
Every morning I open the tracker screen, glance at the colored grid, and pick the first habit that feels right. The visual layout, the streak numbers, the freeze button—all of it is a cockpit dashboard that tells me where I’m headed without a long to‑do list.
And that’s how I keep the chaos in check while still moving forward.
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