Turn r/ADHD’s habit hacks into your own habit engine: save the best threads, copy their simple “What‑When‑Why” format, and sync everything to Trider for timers, streaks, accountability buddies, and instant progress boosts.
Pull up the r/ADHD feed and start scrolling for real‑world hacks. The first thing you’ll notice is a flood of users sharing habit‑building experiments that actually stick.
Pin the right threads – use Reddit’s “save” button on posts that mention a habit you want to try. Create a private subreddit or a multireddit that groups all the habit‑related threads together. When you open the list each morning, you’ll see a curated feed instead of the usual noise.
Copy the format that works – many posters list their habit in a three‑column table: “What”, “When”, “Why”. Replicate that structure in your own notes. I keep a quick journal entry in the Trider app’s notebook icon, jotting the same three points. The habit card on the Trider dashboard then becomes a visual reminder, and the journal entry tags the day with a mood emoji so I can spot patterns later.
Leverage the community for accountability – reply to a post with a “I’m doing this too” comment. People often ask for a buddy; that’s your opening. Once you’ve found a partner, invite them to a Trider squad. The squad chat shows each member’s daily completion percentage, so you both get a gentle nudge without feeling judged.
Turn Reddit threads into timer habits – a popular suggestion is “read 20 pages before bed”. In Trider, I set it up as a timer habit with a built‑in Pomodoro clock. Starting the timer is a single tap; when the countdown ends the habit marks itself as done. The habit’s streak stays intact even on a night when I skip the reading, because I can freeze the day—Trider’s freeze feature protects the streak without forcing a false check‑off.
Harvest the “Ask Me Anything” sessions – every few weeks r/ADHD hosts an AMA with clinicians or productivity gurus. When they drop a list of recommended tools, add the ones that fit your workflow to Trider’s habit templates. The “Morning Routine” template, for example, already includes a water‑drink habit and a short meditation timer. Adding a custom habit like “post‑lunch walk” is just a plus button away.
Use the search function to revisit past wins – after a few weeks, you’ll want proof that the system works. Trider’s journal entries are indexed with AI‑generated tags. Type “search_past_journals” for “focus” and you’ll pull up entries where you noted a high‑focus day. Those memories act like a Reddit “upvote” for yourself, reinforcing the habit loop.
When a crisis hits, simplify – the community often talks about “burnout days”. Instead of scrolling endless advice, tap the brain icon on the Trider dashboard to activate Crisis Mode. It swaps the full habit list for three micro‑activities: a breathing exercise, a vent‑journal prompt, and a tiny win (like “make the bed”). Completing any one of them stops the streak from resetting, and you can jump back into the Reddit feed later with a clearer head.
Combine reading lists with habit tracking – r/ADHD users love sharing book recommendations for focus and self‑compassion. Add each book to Trider’s Reading tab, log the current chapter, and set a weekly progress reminder. The progress bar in the Reading tab becomes a visual cue that mirrors the habit streaks you see on the dashboard.
Turn comments into data – when someone replies with a metric (“I drank 2 L of water for 5 days straight”), copy that number into Trider’s habit settings as a target. The app will nudge you at the time you choose, turning a Reddit anecdote into a concrete reminder.
Keep the loop alive – every time you finish a habit, drop a quick “progress update” in the original Reddit thread. The community rewards consistency with upvotes and replies, and you get a fresh dose of motivation. Meanwhile, Trider logs the completion, updates your streak, and adds a new tag to your journal entry.
And that’s how you turn the chaotic energy of r/ADHD into a personal habit engine, using Reddit’s social proof and Trider’s built‑in tools to keep the momentum moving.
This guide skips the generic advice and offers concrete tactics to overcome procrastination. It focuses on building momentum through immediate, laughably small actions rather than waiting for motivation that will never come.
To stop procrastinating on a presentation, separate the argument from the visuals by starting in a plain text editor, not the slide software. Then, trick yourself into starting by breaking the work down into tiny, specific tasks, like "find one photo" instead of "make the intro slide."
This guide explains why hiding your phone doesn't curb procrastination and offers practical strategies to break the habit, such as making your device less appealing with grayscale mode and adding friction by deleting apps.
Productive procrastination is a fear response, not laziness, that makes us do easy tasks to avoid an intimidating one. To break the cycle, make the important task less scary by breaking it down into steps so small your brain doesn’t see them as a threat.
Download Trider to access AI tools and publish your routines.
Get it on Play Store