Struggling to find your keys, phone, or glasses? Try ADHD-friendly systems, tiny habits, and simple placement rules that actually stick.
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Get it on Play StoreIf you’ve got ADHD and you keep losing your stuff, first: you’re not broken. You’re probably just trying to use a brain that likes novelty, not boring repeatable systems. And yeah, I’ve spent way too much time yelling “where did I put it?” at a random room like the answer would magically appear.
For me, it’s always the tiny things. Keys. Earbuds. Water bottle. Phone charger. I’ll put them down “for just a second” and then suddenly I’m on a scavenger hunt ten minutes later, annoyed for no reason.
But here’s the thing — ADHD brains don’t usually lose things because they’re careless. We lose things because we don’t create a reliable landing spot, and our attention jumps before the object becomes a memory.
So the goal isn’t “be more organized” in some vague, shamey way. The goal is make it stupidly easy to remember where stuff goes.
I have a strong opinion here: memory is a terrible storage system.
If you’re asking yourself, “Where did I put my wallet?” every day, the issue isn’t your brain being bad. It’s that your environment isn’t doing its job. ADHD brains need external cues, not heroic remembering.
So instead of trying to remember everything, build systems that answer for you.
That means:
Not “usually here” or “somewhere near the door.” One exact spot.
I used to have a bowl, a hook, a table, and a chair all competing to be the “key place.” Total disaster. Now it’s one hook by the door. If the keys are not on the hook, they’re basically missing.
ADHD and out of sight usually means out of mind. If a thing can disappear into a drawer, a pouch, or a random corner, it’s going to vanish.
So make the stuff you use every day visually loud.
Try this:
I know it sounds almost too simple. But simple works because your brain is busy. It needs the object to basically yell, “HEY, I BELONG HERE.”
And honestly, the prettier or weirder the storage spot is, the better I remember it. Boring beige boxes? Forget it. A bright green bowl by the door? My brain can actually find that.
This one changed everything for me. A launch pad is a fixed home base for things you use when you leave the house.
Mine is near the door. Phone charger goes there. Keys go there. Wallet goes there. Headphones go there. If I’m in a rush, I don’t need to think — I just dump everything in the same place.
You can set up a launch pad in 10 minutes:
And yes, it really needs to be near the door. Not “in the bedroom somewhere.” Because ADHD brains are not going to remember the scenic version of the plan.
Here’s the habit trick that actually helps: touch it once, put it away once.
So when you come home:
The danger zone is “I’ll put it down here for now.” That sentence has cost me hours of my life. No joke.
Make the right action the easiest action. If putting your keys away takes three steps and dropping them on the counter takes one, your brain will choose the counter every time. That’s not laziness. That’s friction.
So reduce the friction:
This sounds silly, but it works. I’ve found that naming a place helps my brain remember it.
Not “the tray.” Call it:
And yes, that sounds goofy. But goofy sticks. ADHD brains often remember emotion and novelty better than plain instructions.
I once labeled a drawer “brain stuff” for chargers, spare batteries, and receipts I didn’t want to deal with immediately. It made me laugh every time I saw it, and somehow that made me actually use it.
I used to think alarms were only for meetings and medication. Wrong. They’re also for “don’t forget your stuff” moments.
Set a recurring alarm:
You can even label it with exactly what you forget most:
And if you ignore alarms sometimes? Same. That’s why you need the alarm plus the system. The alarm is the nudge. The system is the backup.
If you keep losing things inside your bag, the bag itself might be the problem.
Try this:
I’m a big fan of pouches. One pouch for small essentials is so much better than a bag full of invisible chaos. When everything has a mini-home, you stop playing detective every morning.
And if you’re always digging for the same item, put it in the easiest pocket, not the safest one. Fast access matters more than theoretical organization.
This is my favorite “I’m not going to remember this later” hack.
If you put something important in a weird place — suitcase, cupboard, guest room, car trunk, gym locker — take a photo. Seriously. A quick pic can save you a meltdown later.
I’ve done this with:
Your camera roll becomes your external brain. Not glamorous. Very effective.
This is the habit that keeps everything else from falling apart.
Spend 3 to 5 minutes each night resetting your essentials:
That tiny reset makes tomorrow way easier. And when you do it regularly, it stops being a big “I need to get organized” project and starts being muscle memory.
If you want to make this even easier, track it in an app like Trider (myhabits.in). A simple habit streak for “night reset” can be weirdly motivating. I’m not kidding — a little checkbox can save your sanity.
ADHD panic-searching is real. You start checking the same three places repeatedly, getting more annoyed each time, and somehow the item remains missing.
So use a method instead:
Most lost items are not in a mystery dimension. They’re in one of the 3 places you were just in.
And if you’re in a house where everybody moves stuff around, make your own rule super obvious. Put your stuff in a place that other people know not to touch.
This is maybe the most ADHD-proof advice I can give: your system should be boring, simple, and repeatable.
Not pretty. Not aspirational. Not “someday I’ll become an organized person.”
Just:
The less you need to think, the more likely it is to work.
I know it feels annoying to be this intentional about keys and glasses and wallets. But honestly, the time you save is huge. And the mental peace? Even bigger.
Pick three things you lose most often. Just three.
Then:
That’s it. Don’t try to fix your whole life in one evening. ADHD brains do way better with small wins that repeat.
And if you want help sticking with those tiny wins, give Trider a shot at myhabits.in. It’s a nice little way to keep your reset habit alive without making it a whole dramatic project.