A better way to focus with ADHD: The Pomodoro Technique
If you have ADHD, you’ve heard "just try harder" a thousand times. It's useless advice. The problem isn't a lack of effort. It’s that your brain’s executive functions work differently. Starting something can feel like pushing a car uphill. Staying focused is like trying to hold water in your hands.
That’s why you need a system, not just more willpower. The Pomodoro Technique is a good place to start. It’s a simple method: work in focused 25-minute sprints, then take a short break. It helps because it attacks the two hardest parts of work for an ADHD brain: getting started and dealing with "time blindness."
But a timer by itself often isn't enough. You need to see your progress to make the habit stick.
This system works because it feeds the ADHD brain what it wants
An ADHD brain runs on novelty, interest, and immediate feedback. This system delivers. The timer provides the structure; logging your progress gives you the constant feedback your brain craves.
- It makes starting easier. "Work on the project" is a terrible, overwhelming task. But "work on the project for 25 minutes"? That feels possible. It lowers the barrier just enough to get you over the hump.
- It creates a feedback loop. Every time you finish a session and check it off, you get a small hit of accomplishment. That’s a dopamine reward that tells your brain do that again.
- It makes time feel real. Time blindness is a very real thing. Hours can vanish without you noticing. A timer makes time something you can see and feel. And keeping a log of those sessions shows you exactly where your day went, giving you proof of your work.
- Streaks build momentum. Seeing a chain of completed focus sessions is surprisingly powerful. You start to care about the streak and you don't want to be the one to break it.
I remember trying to write a report once. The deadline was getting closer and I’d spent two days just staring at a blank page, totally paralyzed. At 4:17 PM on a Wednesday, my manager, who also had ADHD, walked by, saw my screen, and just nodded. He told me to set a 15-minute timer and just write bullet points. No sentences. When the timer went off, I had to get up and walk to the water cooler and back. It sounded ridiculous, but I did it. Then I did it again. That was the first time I understood that breaking things down wasn't just a gimmick.