How to manage time blindness when you have ADHD
Time blindness is that feeling when you glance at the clock thinking five minutes have passed, and it’s actually been forty-five. If you have ADHD, this isn't a one-off thing; it's just how your brain works, and it can throw a wrench in everything from work deadlines to getting out the door on time.
This isn't a moral failing or a sign you don't care. It's a real difference in how your brain perceives time.
The way to fight back isn't with some huge new system you'll ditch by Thursday. It's with tiny, almost stupidly simple habits that are small enough to stick but actually work.
Make Time External
The clock in your head doesn't work right. So, stop using it. Make the outside world keep time for you.
- The Two-Timer Trick: Don't just set one timer for when something is due. Set a second one as a check-in. If you have a meeting at 3:00 PM and need 20 minutes to get ready, your calendar alert is for 2:40 PM. The micro-habit is setting a physical kitchen timer on your desk for 2:25 PM. When that buzz goes off, it's not a panic alarm. It's just a tap on the shoulder that pulls you out of hyperfocus and makes you ask, "What should I be doing right now?"
- Use Analog Clocks: Digital clocks just show you the present moment. Analog clocks show you the shape of time. Seeing the hands move gives you a feel for how much time is left before your next thing. It makes time something real you can see.
- Visual Timers: A Time Timer, with its disappearing red disk, is even better. It turns the idea of "45 minutes" into something you can actually process without having to think.
Break Everything Down. No, Smaller.
"Work on the report" isn't a task. It's a black hole. You have to break tasks into laughably small pieces.
- The 5-Minute Rule: Just do something for five minutes. Anyone can do anything for five minutes. The real secret is that just starting is the hardest part. After five minutes, you'll often get into a flow and keep going. But even if you don't? You still did five minutes of work. That's a win.
- Action-Based To-Do Lists: Don't write "Clean kitchen." Write "Load dishwasher." Then "Wipe counters." Be specific. This turns a vague chore into a series of clear steps.