Dopamine fasting is pitched as a "reset" for overstimulated minds, but this approach can backfire for the ADHD brain. Intentionally stripping away engagement from an already under-stimulated system can magnify the exact symptoms of restlessness and anxiety you're trying to fix.
The internet loves a good brain hack. "Dopamine fasting" was the big one for a while, especially in Silicon Valley. It promised a reset for our overstimulated minds. The pitch is simple: stop doing things that give you a cheap thrill—social media, video games, junk food—and let your brain's reward system heal. For an ADHD brain that's always chasing the next thing, it sounds almost perfect.
But the science is a lot murkier. You can't really "fast" from a neurotransmitter. And for someone with ADHD, trying it can have real long-term consequences.
The link between ADHD and dopamine is messy. It's not that people with ADHD have "low dopamine." The issue seems to be with how the system is regulated. Some research suggests people with ADHD have more dopamine transporters, which act like tiny vacuums that clear dopamine out of your brain's synapses too quickly. This makes it harder to focus, feel motivated, or control impulses. The ADHD brain is basically in a constant state of wanting a reward just to feel normal.
This is where the whole dopamine fast idea gets complicated.
The argument for it is that by cutting out constant, easy dopamine hits, you can make your nerve cells more sensitive again. The theory goes that modern life bombards us with so much stimulation that our brains get numb. Things that used to be rewarding don't hit the same, so we need bigger and bigger jolts to feel anything.
For someone with ADHD who might already have a high bar for what feels rewarding, this cycle can be exhausting. A "fast" could, in theory, help them enjoy simpler things again and cut down on impulsive behavior.
I tried a version of this a few years ago. For a whole weekend, I turned everything off. Phone, laptop, all of it. I just sat in my apartment. At one point on Saturday afternoon, I found myself watching a single dust bunny drift across the floor of my parked car outside, and it was the most interesting thing I'd ever seen. The theory felt real; my brain was so bored that the mundane became novel.
The problem is, you can't actually fast from dopamine. It’s not fuel in a tank. It's a chemical messenger your brain needs for motivation and attention. The name itself is wrong; what people are really doing is trying to reduce impulsive behaviors.
For an ADHD brain that's already under-stimulated, intentionally stripping away engagement can make things worse. It can dial up anxiety, restlessness, and depression. Forcing an ADHD brain into extreme boredom isn't a reset; it's a punishment that can magnify the exact symptoms you're trying to fix. Structure and routine are almost always more helpful.
Some experts warn that suddenly stopping activities you use to cope can wreck your mental health. Instead of learning to have a better relationship with technology, you're just gritting your teeth through a period of saying no. That's not a real strategy. The goal should be learning to moderate and build better habits, not just going cold turkey.
The point isn't to live in a gray, boring world. It's to get to a place where you're consciously choosing where your dopamine comes from—favoring things that are actually fulfilling over those that are just empty. It’s about finding a balance.
So while the idea of a quick "fast" is appealing, it's the wrong tool for the job.
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