Most habit trackers are designed for brains that aren't ours. They're all about perfect streaks and never breaking the chain. For anyone with ADHD, that's just a fast track to a shame spiral.
You miss one day, the perfect green line is broken, and suddenly you feel like a total failure. The app that was supposed to help is now a source of judgment. So you delete it. And then a few weeks later, a new burst of motivation hits and the whole cycle starts over again.
It doesn't have to be like this.
The goal isn't to find a "perfect" system. It's to find one that works with your brain. You need something that expects inconsistency and understands that "all or nothing" thinking is a trap.
Think "Something," Not "All or Nothing"
Your tracker shouldn't be a simple pass/fail. Did you plan to meditate for 20 minutes but only managed 3? Thatโs a win. You did something.
Instead of a checkbox, find trackers that let you log what you actually did.
- Sliders: How much water did you drink? Just move the slider.
- Counters: How many pages did you read? Type in the number.
- Notes: Jot down what you did. "Walked to the mailbox" counts for "go for a walk."
This changes the goal from perfection to just participating. It's about building a little momentum, not creating a flawless record. On low-energy days, just showing up is the victory.
The "Could Have Done" List
This is my favorite trick. Itโs a reverse tracker. Instead of a list of things you have to do, you keep a running list of the good things you did.
At the end of the day, look back and write down the wins.
- "Chose water instead of soda."
- "Put my dirty cup in the dishwasher."
- "Stood up and stretched at 4:17 PM."
- "Didn't get into a pointless argument on the internet."
Itโs basically a gratitude journal for your own effort. You can't fail a "did-it" list. And on days you feel like you did nothing, this list is proof that you're wrong.