A good day starts the night before. For a brain wired with ADHD, that’s not a fluffy quote—it’s a survival tactic. If you try to build a morning routine without a solid evening one, you’re building a house on sand.
The point isn't to become a productivity robot. It's to make fewer decisions when your brain is still booting up. Decision fatigue is real, and it hits hard when you're already fighting for focus.
The Night-Before Reset
This is the foundation. Don't skip it.
- The "Launch Pad." Pick one spot—a chair, a hook, the corner of your dresser—for everything you need tomorrow. Keys, wallet, work bag, clothes. Put it all there. Every night. Hunting for your keys at 8:17 AM while trying to remember if you fed the dog is a shot of cortisol you don’t need.
- Brain Dump. Grab a notebook. Before you wind down, write down everything bouncing around your head. The email you forgot to send, the weird thing your boss said, the fact you need oat milk. Get it out of your brain and onto paper so it doesn’t keep you up.
- Set a "Wind-Down" Alarm. Your phone is not your friend an hour before bed. The blue light messes with your sleep. Set an alarm for an hour before you want to be asleep. When it goes off, screens go off. Read a book, listen to music, take a warm shower—anything that tells your brain it's time to shut down.
The Morning: Keep It Simple, Make It Move
ADHD brains often wake up in a fog. The goal is to gently wake your brain up without overwhelming it.
Don't Touch Your Phone. Seriously. Not for at least the first 30 minutes. The second you open your phone, you’re reacting to the world’s demands instead of setting your own pace. The emails can wait.
Light, Water, Protein. Before anything else, get some sunlight. Open the blinds or step outside for a minute. It helps reset your body’s clock. Drink a full glass of water. Then, get some protein in you. It gives your brain the fuel it needs to start firing.
Move Your Body. You don’t need a huge workout. Five to 10 minutes can be enough to get your brain online. A few jumping jacks, a quick walk around the block, or a dance party to one song can make a real difference.