Procrastination isn't a moral failing; for the ADHD brain, it's a wiring mismatch. Ditch the "just do it" advice for concrete strategies that work *with* your brain, like breaking down tasks and externalizing time.
That wall of dread you feel before starting something? It’s not a moral failing. For the ADHD brain, procrastination isn't laziness. It’s a mismatch between your brain's wiring and the task in front of you.
But you can get things done. You just need a different toolkit. Forget "just do it"—that advice is useless here. We're going to use strategies that work with your brain, not against it.
The project isn't "write the sales presentation." That's not a task; it's a vague monster guaranteed to make you want to do anything else. You have to break it down until the steps are almost insultingly small.
"Write sales presentation" becomes:
Each of these is a real, concrete action. Checking them off creates momentum and gives your brain the reward it's looking for. If a to-do list item makes you think "ugh," it's still too big.
People with ADHD often have "time blindness." A deadline feels like it's either a century away or happening in five minutes. The only fix is to make time external and visible.
The Pomodoro Technique works. You work for a focused 25-minute block and then take a 5-minute break. It creates a little urgency and gives your brain a clear finish line. Plenty of apps will even block distracting sites for you during those 25 minutes.
I remember staring at a project brief one afternoon, completely paralyzed. The deadline was a week away, which my brain translated as "never." I finally set a timer for just 15 minutes and told myself I could stop when it went off. I started at 4:17 PM. By 4:32 PM, I'd accidentally built up enough momentum to keep going for another hour.
Your brain runs on interest, novelty, and urgency. When a task is boring, the effort to get started is huge. So, you have to manufacture the motivation.
Sometimes the problem isn't the task itself, but the fear of failing at it. You have to challenge the thoughts that keep you stuck. Instead of thinking, "I'll never get this done," reframe it: "I can work on this for 15 minutes." Shifting from all-or-nothing thinking is huge.
A habit tracker like Trider can help by giving you the external reminders and structure to get started on those small steps. Seeing your progress build up day after day helps create new habits.
Medication can also be a part of the solution, as it helps with the brain chemistry behind focus and motivation. But pills work best when you also have strategies like these to lean on.
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Download Trider to access AI tools and publish your routines.
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