Ever wonder why ADHD brains keep 27 tabs open? Here’s the real reason — plus simple tricks to tame the chaos without killing your spark.
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Get it on Play StoreI used to think my browser was judging me.
You know that moment when you open one tab for “quick research,” then another for the email you meant to answer, then another because you forgot the first two? Yeah. That’s not laziness. That’s often an ADHD thing — or at least a very ADHD-flavored way of dealing with a brain that doesn’t like to let go of unfinished stuff.
Tabs are memory. Tabs are reminders. Tabs are comfort.
And for a lot of people with ADHD, they’re also a way to avoid losing a thought forever.
The weird part is, opening tabs can feel productive. Like, “Look, I’m capturing this important thing.” But 12 tabs later, you’re not actually working — you’re just maintaining a small digital zoo.
ADHD brains tend to struggle with working memory. That’s the short-term sticky note system in your head. If something feels important, or interesting, or even slightly urgent, your brain goes, “Save this now or it’s gone.”
So a tab becomes a lifeline.
I’ve done this with recipes, house repairs, random articles about sleep, and a very deep rabbit hole on “how to fix dry skin in winter.” I didn’t need 14 tabs. I needed one note and a decision. But in the moment? Tabs felt safer.
That’s the thing — the open tabs aren’t always about the content. They’re about the fear of losing the thread.
ADHD brains are often novelty-seeking. So the internet is basically a slot machine made of dopamine.
One article leads to another. One video suggests three more. One “quick check” turns into a full-blown curiosity spiral. And because every new tab promises a tiny hit of interest, it’s hard to stop.
And honestly? Sometimes the tabs are the fun part.
There’s a weird thrill in having all your possibilities open. One tab for work. One for learning. One for that weird idea you might make into a side project someday. It feels like potential.
But potential can turn into clutter fast.
Here’s the part nobody talks about enough: sometimes tabs are a dodge.
If a task feels boring, confusing, overwhelming, or emotionally annoying, the brain looks for an escape hatch. A new tab is a perfect little exit ramp. It says, “Not this yet. Let’s just look at something else.”
And that something else feels easier because it doesn’t carry pressure. No deadline. No judgment. No fear of doing it wrong.
I’ve absolutely opened seven tabs to avoid writing one email.
So if you’re doing this, you’re not broken. You’re probably trying to regulate discomfort with the tools you have.
A lot of people brush this off like it’s just a messy browser. But the cost is real.
Too many tabs can create:
And here’s the sneaky part — the tabs themselves become chores. You don’t just need to work. You need to manage the work you haven’t done yet.
That’s exhausting.
You’d think shutting a tab is simple. But for ADHD brains, it can feel like deleting a possibility.
Maybe you’ll need it later. Maybe that article has the exact detail you wanted. Maybe this is the day you finally make the thing. So the tab stays open, just in case.
That “just in case” is doing a lot of heavy lifting.
Open tabs can feel like trust issues with your own memory.
If you don’t trust yourself to remember, you outsource that memory to the browser.
Makes sense. Also makes your screen look like a crime scene.
I’m not here to tell you to become a minimalist with one perfect tab and a waterfall homepage. That’s not realistic for most ADHD folks.
The goal is to make tabs work for you — not trap you.
Here’s what actually helps.
For any one work session, try keeping only 5 active tabs max.
Not forever. Just during a focused block.
Use these categories:
If a new tab opens, ask: Does this belong in one of those categories? If not, close it or save it somewhere else.
This works because it creates a boundary without pretending your brain is a spreadsheet.
A huge reason tabs multiply is because they’re acting like a to-do list, bookmark folder, notebook, and memory bank all at once.
Don’t make your browser do all that.
Try this instead:
The point is simple: if everything lives in tabs, nothing feels finished.
This one changed things for me.
Instead of asking, “Should I close this?” ask:
If the answer is yes, close it.
If you’re nervous, copy the link into a note with a one-line reason like:
That tiny note gives your brain closure. It’s weirdly powerful.
Don’t rely on motivation. It’s flaky.
Instead, build a tiny ritual:
You only need 3 to 5 minutes for this. Set a timer. No drama.
And yes, you’ll feel resistance at first. That’s normal. Your brain will act like every open tab is sacred. It’s not. Most of them are just unfinished thoughts wearing a digital costume.
When the tabs feel insane, don’t try to clean everything.
Pick the 3 tabs that matter most right now. Everything else gets one of three actions:
That’s it.
No moral judgment. No perfect sorting. Just a fast decision.
This works because ADHD brains often freeze when there are too many choices. Reducing the pile to 3 active priorities can cut the noise fast.
I’ve noticed something annoying and true: when my tabs are out of control, my attention gets out of control too.
It’s not just visual clutter. It’s a symptom of a hundred unfinished intentions buzzing in the background.
So don’t just manage the browser — manage the meaning behind the tabs.
Ask:
Once you know the reason, the fix gets a lot easier.
If you have ADHD and 30 tabs open, you’re not failing at life. You’re probably using the tools available to keep your brain’s loose ends from falling off the table.
But you can make it easier.
Start small:
That last one sounds tiny, but it adds up fast.
And if you want a place to track the habits that actually help — not the ones that look good on paper — Trider (myhabits.in) is a solid place to start.
ADHD tabs aren’t really about tabs. They’re about memory, urgency, curiosity, avoidance, and the need to hold onto everything at once.
So don’t fight your brain like it’s the enemy. Work with it. Give it better places to store ideas, better ways to sort priorities, and better habits for closing loops.
And if you want to build that kind of system one tiny step at a time, give Trider a shot and see if it helps you turn the chaos into something a little more manageable.