How to build a self-care routine when you have ADHD and you're tired of burning out.
Self-care isn't about bubble baths and scented candles. At least, not for anyone who's dealt with ADHD and clawed their way back from burnout.
For us, self-care is a survival strategy. It’s the boring, daily practice of remembering you're a human who needs things, even when your brain insists you're a productivity machine that just needs to try harder.
The usual advice is useless. "Just relax." "Make a schedule." For a brain that runs on novelty and fights rigid structure, that’s like telling a fish to go for a jog. It just leads to guilt, shame, and another abandoned planner.
The cycle is brutal. A flash of motivation leads to overcommitting to a dozen new habits. You ride a wave of hyper-focus, but the energy always crashes. The overwhelm takes over. And you're left exhausted, surrounded by half-finished projects. This isn’t a personal failing; it's just how the wiring works. The answer isn't to force a neurotypical routine onto a neurodivergent brain. It's to build something flexible and forgiving that’s designed for how you actually operate.
Ditch the All-or-Nothing Mindset
Perfectionism gets you nowhere, especially with an ADHD brain. We imagine the perfect routine, and when we can't nail it on day one, we give up.
The fix is to start small. Embarrassingly small. Don't aim to "work out for 30 minutes." Just put on your running shoes. That's it. That's the win. The ADHD brain responds to immediate rewards, so celebrating that tiny first step is essential.
I remember trying to start a meditation habit. I’d set a timer for 20 minutes, get antsy after two, and call it a failure. It only clicked when a therapist told me to just sit on the cushion. That was the entire task. Anything else was extra. One day, I sat down, stared at a dust bunny for a minute, and got up. And I counted it. That tiny, imperfect action was the start of a streak that actually stuck.
Manage Your Energy, Not Your Time
For people with ADHD, energy is a much more valuable and unpredictable resource than time. A rigid, time-blocked schedule is bound to fail because it doesn't account for the days your executive function has clocked out.