Stuck in the "revenge bedtime procrastination" cycle where you sacrifice sleep for personal time? Stop fighting your ADHD brain with rigid rules and instead create a flexible "landing strip" routine to gently guide you to the rest you need.
It's 1 AM again. The house is quiet. This is your time. The only time you feel in control after a day of putting out fires and wrestling with a brain that refuses to cooperate. So you scroll, or watch one more episode, or fall down a research rabbit hole on the history of the spork. You're not lazy; you're taking revenge.
This is "revenge bedtime procrastination." It’s when you trade sleep for the free time you didn't get during the day. For the ADHD brain, this pattern is practically a feature, not a bug. The day is for obligations. The night is for freedom.
The problem is that freedom has a price. No sleep makes ADHD symptoms worse. And worse symptoms make your days more chaotic, which makes you crave that nighttime escape even more. It's a nasty cycle, but you can break it.
The ADHD brain is different. It's not just about focus. It's about how you regulate... well, everything. Your sense of time, your impulses, your energy. This is why "just go to bed earlier" is useless advice.
This isn't a moral failing. It's just how your brain is wired. The trick is to work with it, not against it.
A rigid, multi-step bedtime routine can feel overwhelming. Instead, think of it as creating a "landing strip" for your brain—a sequence of events that gently guides you toward sleep without demanding perfection.
Start small. Don't try to change your whole evening at once. Pick one or two things.
1. Set a "Wind-Down" Alarm. Don't set an alarm for when you need to be in bed. Set one for 30-60 minutes before that. This is your signal to start the landing sequence. It’s not "stop everything now," it’s "time to start thinking about stopping." When it goes off, you just move on to the next step.
2. Set the Scene. Your surroundings send powerful cues to your brain.
3. Stop Fighting and Start Planning. I once tried to force myself into a 10 PM bedtime. It was a disaster. I'd just lie there, my mind buzzing, until 2 AM anyway. It wasn't until I had a weirdly specific conversation with a friend at exactly 4:17 PM while stuck in traffic in my 2011 Honda Civic that I realized my mistake. I was treating my night-owl tendency as a flaw. Instead, I started planning for it. I accepted my sleep schedule was naturally delayed and built my routine around a midnight target, not a 10 PM one.
It’s about harm reduction. If you know you're going to stay up, can you swap endless scrolling for reading a book? Can you listen to a calming playlist instead of watching a stressful show? Make your "revenge" time restorative, not just stimulating.
4. Build Momentum. ADHD brains love novelty and streaks. Use a habit tracker or just a notebook to mark off every night you start your wind-down routine. The point isn't to be perfect. It's just to build a chain you won't want to break.
And sometimes, the best move is to get professional help. Cognitive Behavioral Therapy for Insomnia (CBT-I) can help you reframe your thoughts about sleep. Talking to your doctor about medication timing is also important, as some stimulants can interfere with sleep if taken too late in the day.
You don't have to earn your rest. But you might have to consciously build the runway that lets your brain finally land.
Stop cramming for Class 9 and start building a real foundation for your board exams. Learn how to study smarter, not harder, by focusing on understanding concepts and using revision techniques that actually work.
Stop studying harder for Class 10 and start studying smarter. Learn to master concepts over rote memorization and use effective techniques like active recall and time management to succeed without the burnout.
Studying is a skill, not a talent you're born with. Learn to ditch the all-nighters and find a study rhythm that actually works for you.
The study habits that got you through middle school won't work in ninth grade. It's time to ditch cramming and learn smarter techniques like spaced repetition and active recall to handle the workload without burning out.
Download Trider to access AI tools and publish your routines.
Get it on Play Store