Most study advice is useless if you have inattentive ADHD. "Just focus." "Make a schedule." "Get rid of distractions." It's like telling someone to grow wings. It’s frustrating because it misses the point entirely.
Your brain isn’t broken. It just runs on a different operating system—one that needs novelty and gets stuck in the mud with repetitive tasks. The trick isn't to force it to be something it's not. It's to learn the system you actually have.
The Myth of 25 Minutes
The Pomodoro Technique is everywhere: study for 25 minutes, take a 5-minute break. This is a terrible idea for a brain that can take 15 minutes just to warm up. That 25-minute timer is a finish line for a race you never even got to start.
So, ignore the rules.
Maybe your ideal time is 15 minutes. Maybe it's 45. Try starting with something absurdly short, like 10 minutes, just to get the engine running. The goal isn't to hit a specific number; it's to build momentum. Some days, you'll slip into hyperfocus and work for an hour straight. Don't let a timer snap you out of it. Using a tracker app can help you spot patterns over time, so you can figure out what your real focus sweet spot is.
Your Environment Is a Tool
A "distraction-free" zone is a lie. For the inattentive brain, the most distracting thing in the world is nothing at all. Total silence is deafening.
Instead of fighting for quiet, try adding the right kind of noise.
- White or brown noise: These can sand down the sharp edges of sudden background sounds.
- Music you know well, or a TV show you've seen a dozen times: Putting something familiar on in the background can occupy the part of your brain that’s always looking for an escape route, freeing up the rest of it to concentrate.
- Fidget toys: A stress ball or a spinner isn't a toy; it's an anchor. It provides just enough physical input to keep you from floating away.
Give your brain a managed distraction so it doesn't have to go find its own.