We know we need more time in nature, but building the habit is hard. A simple app can be the nudge you need, using honest data and visual streaks to hold you accountable to getting outside.
We have a weird relationship with the outdoors. We know we need it—study after study shows that time in nature is good for us. It cuts down on stress, helps our immune systems. But most of us spend our days inside, looking at screens. For adults, it's almost half the day.
The default is indoors. Going outside is a choice you have to make.
And making a new choice, building a habit, is hard. That's where an app, weirdly enough, can help. It's a nudge. Not more digital noise, just a quiet way to hold yourself accountable to one thing: get outside more.
Tracking a habit isn't about making your life rigid. It's about getting honest data. You might feel like you get outside enough, but the numbers will show you the truth.
The goal is simple: spend more time in nature. It doesn’t have to be a big hike. A walk in the park, eating lunch on a bench, reading on your porch—it all counts. The good stuff starts to kick in with just 120 minutes a week.
Seeing your progress is a great motivator. Keeping a seven-day streak going just feels good. An app makes that real.
I remember checking my phone one Tuesday. It was 4:17 PM. I was sitting on a park bench, the one near the duck pond that smells a little weird, in my 2011 Honda Civic that was perpetually low on wiper fluid. I had an alert from a habit app. Not for a work task, but a simple notification: "You've hit your outdoor goal for the day." It was a surprisingly good feeling, a small win on a day full of emails.
Most habit trackers are overkill. They're built for complicated workflows. For just tracking outdoor time, you need something simple.
Look for these things:
Look, the point isn't to turn your life into a game of checking off boxes. The app is a tool for seeing things clearly. It's about building a small ritual, like a short walk after dinner. The tech is just there to remind you of a promise you made to yourself.
The real goal is to build the habit so you don't need the app anymore. You'll go outside just because you want to. The fresh air becomes its own reward.
A "dopamine detox" is a misnomer, but a "stimulation fast" can help reset the inattentive ADHD brain. Taking a break from constant high-stimulation habits can lower your brain's need for instant gratification, making it easier to focus on what truly matters.
Struggling to build a morning routine with an ADHD brain? Ditch the abstract to-do list and try visual habit stacking—linking a new, tiny habit to an existing one with a physical cue—to build a routine that sticks without draining your willpower.
ADHD paralysis shuts down your brain when you're overwhelmed by a massive to-do list. A gamified habit tracker breaks this freeze by turning chores into small, rewarding quests that provide the dopamine hit your brain needs to get started.
For a brain with ADHD, "just reading" is a myth. Stop fighting your focus and use these simple strategies to work *with* your brain to build a habit that actually sticks.
Download Trider to access AI tools and publish your routines.
Get it on Play Store