A quick‑start guide for ADHD habit tracking: pick one tiny habit, lock it in with timers, freeze streaks on rough days, and pair each check‑off with brief journal reflections and visual analytics to keep momentum alive.
When you’ve got ADHD, the brain loves novelty but hates overwhelm. Pick one habit that feels doable today—like “drink a glass of water after breakfast.” Write it down in your journal, note the time, and set a tiny reminder. The act of naming it gives the brain a cue to act.
A timer habit works wonders for tasks that drift. I fire up the built‑in Pomodoro timer, set it for 12 minutes, and tell myself I’ll work on a single micro‑task—say, “outline tomorrow’s to‑do list.” When the timer rings, the habit auto‑marks as complete, and the streak on the dashboard nudges me forward.
Missing a day isn’t a failure; it’s a signal that the schedule needs tweaking. The app lets you “freeze” a day, protecting the streak without forcing a check‑off. I reserve a couple of freezes each month for those inevitable low‑energy mornings. It keeps the momentum alive without guilt.
Every evening I open the journal entry for the day, tap the mood emoji, and jot a quick line about what actually happened. “Forgot the water habit, felt foggy; timer habit helped me stay on task.” The AI‑generated tags surface later when I search for patterns like “energy dips.” Those tiny notes become a map of what triggers success or slip‑ups.
Scrolling back to a month ago, the journal shows “On This Day” moments. Seeing that I managed a similar habit during a busy week reminds me that the routine is possible again. It’s a subtle confidence boost that feels more personal than a generic notification.
I organize my habits by color‑coded categories—Health in teal, Productivity in orange. The dashboard grid makes it easy to glance at the day’s priorities. When a habit feels too big, I split it into two simpler cards, each with its own check‑off. The visual cue of a completed checkmark is oddly satisfying.
On days when the brain feels fried, I tap the brain icon to enter Crisis Mode. The screen shrinks to three micro‑activities: a quick breathing exercise, a vent‑journal prompt, and one tiny win—like “put shoes on.” No streak pressure, just a sliver of progress that keeps the habit chain from snapping.
Every Sunday I swing by the Analytics tab. The line chart shows completion rates over the past weeks; a dip aligns with late‑night screen time. Seeing that correlation in a visual format nudges me to set a bedtime alarm. The data isn’t a judgment, just a mirror.
I’m part of a small squad of friends who also wrestle with ADHD. In the Social tab we share daily completion percentages. A quick “hey, you nailed the water habit!” message in the squad chat feels like a high‑five, and the shared leaderboard adds a friendly competitive edge.
I’m currently reading a short book on executive function. The Reading tab lets me log the chapter and set a 5‑minute progress habit. Each time I finish a reading session, the habit auto‑checks, and the journal captures a one‑sentence takeaway. It ties learning directly into the habit loop.
If you’re moving, changing jobs, or just like to have a backup, the Settings menu offers a JSON export. I grab a copy before a hectic month and later import it when things settle. All streaks, freezes, and journal tags survive the transition, so I don’t lose the hard‑earned context.
And when a new habit feels too vague, I write a concrete action in the journal first—“write one sentence for tomorrow’s project outline.” That sentence becomes the habit’s description, and the act of writing it already moves the needle.
No need for a polished wrap‑up; the next habit is waiting.
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