Most habit trackers don't work for the ADHD brain. They're built for people who get a quiet thrill from checking a box, but for the rest of us, that feeling is gone in a second. Our brains are wired for novelty and run on dopamine. Standard habit tracking fails because the reward is too vague, too distant, and just plain boring.
And the "don't break the chain" method can be brutal. If you miss one day, it feels like a complete failure, and the shame makes you want to just give up. This isn't a willpower problem; it's a brain chemistry problem. The ADHD brain has lower levels of dopamine, the chemical that handles motivation and reward. That means we need immediate, frequent, and real rewards to tell our brain it did a good job.
Reward "Right Now You," Not "Future You"
You have to shorten the gap between the action and the reward. An ADHD brain isn't going to do the hard thing today for a prize it might get weeks from now. It needs the dopamine hit now.
A simple point system is just good brain hacking. Instead of waiting for the satisfaction of finishing a month of workouts, you give yourself credit for the simple act of starting.
Here's how you could set one up:
- List Your Habits: Write down one to three things you want to do. Start small.
- Assign Points: Make harder tasks worth more. "Waking up on time" could be 5 points. A "20-minute walk" could be 20.
- Build a "Reward Store": List things you actually enjoy and give them a point cost. This is about pleasure, not productivity.
Your store might look like this:
- 15 points: A fancy coffee.
- 50 points: One hour of video games, no guilt.
- 100 points: Order takeout instead of cooking.
- 250 points: Buy that thing in your Amazon cart.
The system works by giving you a quick win. You see the points add up immediately, which makes the effort feel worth it in the moment.