That pile of laundry isn't going to fold itself. You know this. It’s been sitting there for four days, a clean mountain of dread. Every time you walk past, your brain screams, "DO THE THING," but your body just… doesn't.
This isn't laziness. It’s ADHD paralysis, a breakdown in the brain’s project manager, the executive function. The signal to start a task gets lost somewhere between wanting to do it and actually doing it.
So what if someone just sat in the room with you?
They don’t have to help. They don’t even have to talk. They just have to be there. And suddenly, the invisible wall shatters, and you can finally start folding.
That’s body doubling. It’s a strange but effective ADHD lifehack that uses another person's presence to anchor your focus and kickstart your brain. The science isn't totally settled, but the running theory is that having someone around provides a little bit of external stimulation that an under-stimulated ADHD brain craves. It creates a gentle, unspoken accountability. Their presence is a physical reminder of the world outside your head, pulling you back to the task at hand.
I remember trying to finish a project proposal in my first apartment. It was 4:17 PM, the sun was hitting the window just right, and I had been staring at a blinking cursor for an hour. My roommate got home from his shift, threw his keys in the bowl, and sat on the couch in his faded 2011 Honda Civic promotional t-shirt. He didn't say a word to me, just started scrolling on his phone. And I started writing. I hammered out the entire proposal in the next 45 minutes. His quiet presence was all it took.
But you can't always have someone physically there. That’s where the apps come in.
Virtual body doubling puts this concept on your screen. You log in, join a session, and get paired with a stranger or a group. Everyone states their goal—"folding laundry," "answering emails," "studying for chem exam"—and then you all get to work, on mute, with cameras on.