If every productivity tip makes your ADHD worse, you’re not broken. Try these practical, low-pressure strategies that actually help.
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Get it on Play StoreI’ve been there — staring at a productivity thread like it’s a spellbook, then somehow feeling more behind, more scattered, and more annoyed than before.
And that’s the annoying part about ADHD productivity advice. A lot of it is built for a brain that already cooperates with time, focus, and follow-through. Mine? Mine has opinions. Loud ones.
So if every tip makes you worse, the problem isn’t that you’re lazy or undisciplined. The problem is probably the tip.
A lot of popular advice is secretly just a pile of hidden demands.
“Wake up at 5 a.m.”
“Time block every hour.”
“Make a perfect routine.”
“Use 12 apps.”
“Just break it into tiny steps.”
Cute. But for many ADHD brains, this turns into shame soup.
And here’s what I’ve noticed: more structure isn’t always better. Sometimes it becomes another thing to maintain, another thing to fail at, and another reason to feel like garbage by noon.
So first, stop assuming the problem is your effort. Sometimes the tip is too rigid, too abstract, or too demanding for your actual brain.
This is my strongest opinion: most ADHD productivity plans are way too complicated.
If your system needs a 40-minute setup session to function, it’s probably already too much.
Instead, make your next system embarrassingly small. Like:
That’s it.
And if you’re already juggling eight apps, four color codes, and a Notion dashboard that looks like a startup pitch deck… maybe simplify before you optimize.
Not all productivity tips are equally bad. Some just hit your weak spots.
Ask yourself:
If the answer is yes, toss it.
I used to force myself into rigid morning routines because everyone said they were “life-changing.” But all they did was make me feel late before the day even started. So I stopped pretending I was a 6 a.m. person and built a 2-minute start ritual instead.
That worked. Not because it was impressive — because it was realistic.
ADHD brains usually do better with anchors than with flawless schedules.
An anchor is just something small and repeatable that helps your brain find the next step.
Examples:
And the magic is in the pairing, not the perfection.
You’re not trying to become a robot. You’re just making the next move easier to find.
Motivation is flaky. Especially with ADHD. It shows up wearing a fake mustache and leaves when things get boring.
So instead of asking, “How do I feel motivated?” ask:
For me, the best trick is often physical setup. If I want to write, I open the doc and leave it there. If I want to exercise, I lay out clothes the night before. If I want to read, I put the book on my pillow.
So yeah, “discipline” is nice and all. But sometimes the real win is just making the first step stupidly easy.
Because you do. And your brain isn’t a filing cabinet.
If you keep trying to “just remember,” you’re setting yourself up to fail for no reason.
Use:
And make the reminder specific.
Not: “work on project.”
Better: “Open project doc and write 3 ugly bullet points.”
The more concrete the action, the less your brain has to negotiate with itself.
This one matters a lot. A good ADHD system survives bad days.
If missing one day ruins everything, your system is too fragile.
So build in reset points:
And make the reset tiny. Like:
That’s not failure. That’s maintenance.
I used to think every slip meant I had to start over from scratch. That mindset is brutal. Now I treat resets like brushing my teeth — annoying, necessary, and not a moral event.
Honestly? A lot of productivity content is just status anxiety in a nicer font.
It rewards being busy, optimized, and visually organized. But if you have ADHD, that can make you chase systems instead of outcomes.
So ask: What am I actually trying to achieve?
Maybe it’s not “be more productive.” Maybe it’s:
That’s the real goal.
And once you define the actual problem, the solution gets a lot simpler.
Some ADHD-friendly tools really are worth it.
Work near another person — in person or on a call. Their presence helps your brain stay online.
Use short sprints. I like 10, 15, or 25 minutes. Long stretches can feel like exile.
Give yourself permission to do it badly first. A messy start is usually better than waiting for the perfect one.
And yes, I mean actively lowering the bar for the first version. That’s not lowering standards overall. That’s just getting past the startup cost.
Some days you’ll crush it. Some days you’ll spend 45 minutes looking for your water bottle and call that a win.
That doesn’t mean your system is broken.
ADHD progress is often uneven. It can look like:
And that’s normal.
So stop measuring success only by consistency. Start measuring it by how fast you recover.
That’s the real skill.
Here’s a low-drama plan you can use today:
And keep it tiny. Tiny is good. Tiny is usable.
If you want a place to keep habits and reminders without turning your life into a spreadsheet, Trider (myhabits.in) can help keep things simple instead of making them weirdly intense.
So if every productivity tip makes your ADHD worse, don’t force yourself to become the person those tips were made for.
Be more suspicious. Be more selective. Be more blunt.
If a tip creates shame, confusion, or extra maintenance, ditch it.
If a tool makes starting easier, keep it.
If a system can survive a bad day, that’s a keeper.
And if you want something simple to support that kind of approach, try Trider and see if it makes the whole habit thing feel a little less annoying.