ADHD tools
Welcome to my collection of ADHD strategies!
If you’re a student with ADHD, I’ve made an adult ADHD study guide to help you succeed in your studies:
How to manage ADHD overwhelm
This is a way to help you manage adult ADHD overwhelm. It helps you to work out when you’re at risk of getting overwhelmed, to learn the signs that it’s happening, and to make a plan for what to do when you start getting overwhelmed. Then you can use that plan to cool your brain down, before you get too overwhelmed to be able to help yourself.
Help, I’m spacing out! ADHD support tools for a scattered day
For me, being spaced out is like being tossed along in a sea of moments, without an anchor. This article will help you navigate your responsibilities on a spaced out day. This is something that can happen with adult ADHD, so let’s get some strategies to help!
ADHD body doubling
Body doubling is an ADHD support strategy that helps you to do the things you’d usually avoid, by working at the same time as somebody else. Here’s how to body double, in person or online, including how to set it up, when to use it, how it works, and who you could try it with.
How to START: a tool for ADHD procrastination
Getting started on a task can be hard when you have ADHD. Here’s some tips for getting started, and a tool that I use many times a day when I get stuck in procrastination.
It’s hard to trust yourself when you have undiagnosed ADHD
“Perfection isn’t a prerequisite for self-trust… It’s consistency in another form: knowing that I do my best, learn from my mistakes, practice honesty, and pull through most of the time. Understanding my version of ADHD has transformed my ability to trust myself.”
Celebrating helps the ADHD brain
Celebrating feels good! Feeling good increases motivation. This technique trains you to reward yourself frequently by celebrating throughout your day - naming what you did and choosing to feel good about it. This technique is especially useful for ADHDers who struggle with the idea of celebrating anything less than perfection.
ADHD time management secret: Clocks
A crucial part of adult ADHD time management is actually knowing what time it is. Time is something that we often need to have a sense of: it helps us to orient ourselves within our day. Is it time to get up, to get dinner ready, to get back to work, to start winding down? Who knows? I do, now, because of clocks.
Show your ADHD brain how tiny that 5-minute task is
Sometimes you have a little task you want to do...but you put it off day after day after day...and then when you finally do it, it takes 5 minutes, leaving you to wonder why you wasted all that energy feeling bad about procrastinating on it. Using this technique, I get to jump to the 'DONE' state on that task without even having to procrastinate for weeks!
6 tips for using timers to help adult ADHD
Why do I use timers? Because they focus my brain, allow me to get started, and assure me that soon I’ll be able to stop if I want. They create a container that holds my attention, letting me move forward and keeping procrastination at bay. Here’s some ways to use timers to help adult ADHD.
ADHD work life hack: Make the task easier
For adult ADHDers, it's common to procrastinate on doing a task because it feels too difficult. (Or impossible, even.) But what if the problem isn't you or your character? Don't go changing. Change the task instead - find a way to make it easier!
ADHD strategy review
This ADHD strategy review will help you to identify and to take action to improve the ways you manage your ADHD. This can be done across whatever areas of life that matter right now, from eating to medication to your work life. It's a simple, practical process that will help you make small changes to get big results over time.
ADHD procrastination tip: Change your spots
If a task feels too difficult, it's probably because you haven't made it easy enough yet. If you have a desk/book/computer-based task that you want to do, and you're wanting a bit of extra oomph to get into it, a very simple way to help yourself is to go somewhere else to do it.
PICK FUN: 7 hacks for ADHD motivation
You can ‘get motivated’. Or you can make the task itself more motivating! To do this, we can add: Passion, Interest, Challenge, Keenness, Fun, Urgency, or Newness. This helps us to be more attracted to the task, and that makes the task easier to do.
My ADHD superpowers: when do they get here?!?
Your ADHD superpowers are like having a big magic stash of cash money hidden under your bed. It’s only useful if you remember to use it! Once you know what your ADHD superpowers are, you can set things up so that they’ll be prompted into action.
Better goals for ADHDers?
Goals can go jump in the lake! ADHDers can support their executive functions through structure, motivation and positive emotion, so they can do what they want.
The relaxing magic of the jot-down book
For adults with ADHD, it can be exhausting trying to remember all the things we want to do now, later, or at some point. The jot-down book helps you to support your executive functions through being an external aid to memory. It’s simple to run, and lets you feel more relaxed and less anxious. And it helps you to get the important things done!
Quit trash-talking yourself
Lots of people put themselves down when talking to others. In people with ADHD, this habit can be especially compulsive and brutal. Here’s a way to quit trash-talking yourself, which can help you feel better about yourself too.
How to choose ADHD strategies that stick
They say that ADHD often isn’t a problem with KNOWING what to do; it’s a problem with actually DOING it. So technically that makes it a problem of knowing how to GET yourself to do what you want to do! Here are 4 steps that can help you to choose a new self-management strategy that will actually stick.
6 steps to a new mindset
You can actively choose a mindset that serves you, using these practical steps. This helps you move past self-limiting beliefs and choose what you want in your life.
First aid for ADHD burnout
Here is a tool to help you when you’re struggling with the pressure and overwhelm of ADHD burnout. You can bring yourself back from the edge, and in this way let your nervous system recover more quickly.
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