Stop guessing your protein intake, the one metric that matters for building muscle or losing fat. The best tracking app is simply the one that's fast enough to make logging a consistent habit.
You don't need to track everything. Just one thing.
For a lot of people trying to build muscle or lose fat, that one thing is protein. It's what your body uses for muscle repair, and it keeps you feeling full. But most of us are just guessing how much we’re getting. An app to track protein stops the guesswork.
The best app isn't the one with the most charts. It's the one that's fast enough to actually use when you're busy.
Forget the mountain of features you'll never touch. You need an app that does a few things right.
I remember sitting in my 2011 Honda Civic after a workout one afternoon. It was 4:17 PM. I’d just had a protein shake and a banana and tried to log it in some generic fitness app. It took forever. I had to search for the specific brand of protein powder, guess at the banana size… by the time I was done, I’d forgotten why I bothered. That’s the friction that kills consistency.
The right app gets rid of that friction.
Many tracking apps are just clones of each other. But a few are genuinely different.
Picking an app is the easy part. Building the habit is what counts.
Set reminders. Most apps have notifications to nudge you after a meal. Use them. The goal is to make logging automatic. After a while, you'll get a feel for how much protein is in your food without even thinking about it. You might not need the app every day.
But in the beginning, tracking is just a tool to build that awareness.
An ADHD brain is a race car engine that needs guardrails; a habit tracker provides that structure. By starting small, you can build routines that work *with* your brain's need for visual rewards and dopamine instead of fighting it.
Most habit trackers are built for neurotypical brains, setting those with ADHD up for failure with rigid, all-or-nothing systems. To build habits that stick, adapt the tool to your brain by starting impossibly small, stacking new behaviors onto existing routines, and making the process visible and rewarding.
Tired of habit trackers that punish you for one missed day? Those apps are built for neurotypical brains; it's time to try flexible, ADHD-friendly alternatives that use weekly goals and gamification to reward effort, not perfection.
A dopamine detox isn't about extreme self-denial, but a realistic reset for your brain's reward system. By reducing cheap dopamine hits from sources like social media, you can regain focus and find joy in everyday life again.
Download Trider to access AI tools and publish your routines.
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