The impact of a 7-day dopamine fast on creative professionals with ADHD
The idea sounds like a Silicon Valley punchline. Lock away your phone, kill the Wi-Fi, and stare at a wall for a week to "reset" your brain. It’s called a dopamine fast, and for a creative with ADHD, it sounds like a special kind of hell. Our brains are always hunting for the next little hit of something new. Taking it all away doesn't sound like a reset. It sounds like a prison sentence.
But what if it actually works?
The theory is that the modern world is a firehose of cheap dopamine. Social media, streaming shows, video games, junk food—it never stops. And when your brain is flooded with easy hits all day, it gets numb. The normal, quiet things that should feel good, like reading a book or finishing a project, don't register anymore.
If you have ADHD, you know this feeling. Our brains are basically dopamine junkies from the start. That's why a new video game can lock you in for 12 hours, but answering a single email feels impossible. The game is a jackpot. The email is... nothing.
The point of the 7-day fast is to starve your brain of the easy stuff so it remembers how to appreciate the small stuff. It’s not about getting rid of dopamine, which is impossible. It’s about getting off the cheap highs.
The First 72 Hours Are the Worst
Let’s be clear: this isn't a scientifically proven medical treatment. It's mostly anecdotal. But the stories are hard to ignore.
For a creative with ADHD, the first few days are hell. The silence is deafening. The urge to just do something—check your phone, open a tab, anything—is a physical itch. I tried it once. By day two, I was organizing my spice rack at 4:17 PM while my 2011 Honda Civic sat in the driveway needing a wash. My brain was so desperate for a task that alphabetizing paprika felt like the most important job on Earth.