Most habit trackers are built for brains that love spreadsheets and perfect, unbroken chains. If you have ADHD, a single missed day can feel like a complete failure, making you want to scrap the whole thing. And if the tracker isn't staring you in the face, it doesn't exist.
But a visual tracker in a bullet journal is different. The goal is progress, not perfection. It's something you can hold, make your own, and design to give your brain the feedback it needs to stay engaged.
Ditch the boring checkboxes
Your brain thrives on novelty. A grid of checkboxes gets old, fast. Think visually instead.
- Color Coding: Assign a color to each habit. This turns your tracker into a mosaic of your efforts. At a glance, you can see where your energy is going.
- Progress Bars: Draw a simple bar for each habit and fill it in a little each day. This works well for habits that aren't a simple "yes/no," like "work on a project for 15 minutes."
- Symbols and Doodles: Who says you need a checkmark? Use a star, a smiley face, or a tiny drawing of a water bottle. Make it interesting for you.
I once tried to track my water intake and got completely sidetracked. At exactly 4:17 PM, I noticed a spider building a web in the corner of my office window. I spent the next 20 minutes watching it and completely forgot about the tracker. The next day, instead of a checkmark, I drew a tiny spider for that day. It was a more honest record of my attention span.
Make it impossible to ignore
An ADHD-friendly system has to be visible. Your tracker needs to live in a high-traffic area of your life, like open on your desk or kitchen counter. If you close the journal and put it away, it's gone. That physical presence is the constant, gentle reminder you need.