For a brain that resists routine, body doubling provides the accountability to start chores. A simple habit tracker helps build the momentum to make the habit stick.
The laundry basket is overflowing. Again.
For people with ADHD, chores aren't just boring, they can feel impossible. Your brain is built to chase what's new and interesting, and there's nothing new about a sink full of dishes. It’s not about wanting a clean space—of course you do. It's about getting a brain that resists routine to actually start.
But what if you could borrow someone else's focus?
This is the idea behind body doubling. You just do a task while another person is there. That's it. They don't help. They just exist in the same space, physically or virtually, and their presence creates a low-key accountability that can get you moving.
Combine that with a good habit tracker, and you can build a system that works with your brain instead of fighting it.
It’s like parallel play for adults. You’re doing your thing, they’re doing theirs, and it just… works. Having someone else around can be anchoring. It quiets the distractions and makes a tedious chore feel less isolating.
You can do it a few ways:
I once had a friend sit on my couch scrolling through her phone at exactly 4:17 PM while I finally, after weeks of avoidance, cleaned out my 2011 Honda Civic. She didn’t say a word. But just having her there was the push I needed.
Body doubling gets you started. A habit tracker helps you build the routine. But for an ADHD brain, the tracker can't be another chore. Forget the apps that punish you for breaking a streak—that just feeds the all-or-nothing thinking that makes you quit.
Instead, look for an app that has:
Start with one or two things. Make your bed. Run the dishwasher. Once that feels less like a fight, you can add another.
So, here's how you could put it together.
First, schedule it. Put "Fold Laundry w/ Sarah" on your calendar. Make it a real appointment. When the time comes, set a timer for 25 minutes. Don't think about cleaning the whole house; just focus on that one small task for that short window.
The goal isn't to be perfect. It's just to build a little momentum.
And the second you're done, check it off in your tracker. Don't wait. You want your brain to connect the action with the reward. That's how you start building a new loop. This system works by giving you outside support and inside structure, which can make all the difference.
Standard productivity advice fails the ADHD brain, which is hardwired for novelty and immediate rewards, not long-term goals. To build habits that stick, work with your brain by pairing laughably small tasks with instant dopamine hits.
ADHD paralysis makes tasks feel impossible, but the solution is to work with your brain, not against it. Break overwhelming goals into ridiculously small steps and use external triggers to build momentum and finally get started.
A dopamine detox helps reset your brain's reward system by swapping constant digital stimulation for satisfying analog activities. The goal is to ditch the endless scroll and find genuine satisfaction in simpler, real-world pleasures again.
For the ADHD brain, the modern world's constant notifications hijack your reward system and shatter your focus. A "dopamine fast" helps you recalibrate by taking a deliberate break from high-stimulation habits, letting you regain control and find satisfaction in simpler activities.
Download Trider to access AI tools and publish your routines.
Get it on Play Store