Ever watched a YouTube Short that unexpectedly sent you spiraling into childhood memories?
That happened to me recently.
I was mindlessly scrolling when I stumbled across a video featuring someone with a peculiar walk that reminded me of myself as a kid.
It made me chuckle… until I remembered the comment from my elementary school teacher on every report card: “Easily distracted.”
It got me thinking—was I just a little hyper, or was it something deeper? Could I have ADHD? Or am I just bad at focusing?
That train of thought led me to explore the relationship between productivity and ADHD.
What I found wasn’t just insightful for those diagnosed with ADHD
—it revealed truths about how we all work, struggle, and try to stay productive in a world that doesn’t slow down.
Let’s dive in.
Most productivity systems are built for the “average” brain. But what if your brain doesn’t operate that way?
For neurodivergent individuals, especially those with ADHD, typical advice like “just use a planner” or “set SMART goals” often falls flat. Here's why:
Lack of Self-Trust
Many systems assume you’ll follow through consistently. But for people with ADHD, inconsistency isn’t about laziness—it’s about executive function. Failing to keep up with a system creates a vicious cycle of guilt and avoidance.
Three Big Challenges
Motivation: External rewards (like deadlines or praise) don’t always work. People with ADHD are driven more by interest and curiosity than by obligation.
Distractions: Hyper-reactivity to stimuli means even the productivity system itself can become a distraction.
Overwhelm: When everything feels urgent, nothing gets done. A long to-do list? Instant paralysis.
We’ve all heard these tips, right?
“Eat the frog first.”
“Break big tasks into smaller steps.”
For someone with ADHD, these can be productivity killers.
“Eat the frog”—doing the hardest task first—can backfire by causing stress and avoidance.
Breaking things down often leads to over-breaking things down. Instead of doing the task, you end up reorganizing your Notion board for the fifth time.
Productivity doesn’t have to be boring—or punishing. Especially for people with ADHD, how you get things done matters just as much as what you get done.
Here’s a framework that actually works:
4C = Captivate, Create, Compete, Complete
- Captivate: Follow your curiosity. If it excites you, you’re more likely to stay engaged.
- Create: Channel your energy into making things—anything. Building something gives a sense of progress.
- Compete: Friendly competition or time-based challenges can kickstart action.
- Complete: Tight deadlines and micro-wins help trigger the reward system in your brain.
You’re not broken. You’re just wired differently—and that wiring needs a different playbook.
Here are some flexible, low-pressure ways to trick your brain into cooperating:
Pivot Gracefully
Don’t cling to a system that’s no longer serving you. Let go, adapt, and rebuild. Productivity is a living system, not a religion.
Flexible Pomodoro
Forget the “25/5” rule. Try 15/10 or even 10/2. Customize the sprint to match your natural energy rhythm.
Side Quests
Add a “side mission” related to your main task. Sometimes doing something adjacent can reignite your drive.
Micro Commitments
Feeling overwhelmed? Tell yourself: “I’ll just do the first 3 minutes.” Often, starting is the hardest part.
Change the Scene
Work from a café. Rearrange your desk. A new environment = a new vibe.
Gamify Your Tasks
Can you do it faster than yesterday? Can you make it fun? Add a point system or a reward chart if that helps.
Time-Based Goals
Instead of saying, “Clean the kitchen,” say “Clean for 10 minutes.” You’ll probably clean more—and feel better about it.
Here’s the truth: there’s no single “correct” way to be productive.
You don’t have to hustle like everyone on LinkedIn. You don’t need an aesthetic bullet journal or a 5 a.m. routine.
Start with understanding yourself. Accept small failures. Celebrate small wins. And most importantly, build systems that feel like you.
In the end, productivity isn’t just about doing more. It’s about feeling more in sync with your own rhythm.
Maybe the real productivity hack is simply this:
Learning to listen to yourself.