What are your best AD(H)D hacks/copes/tricks?
What are your best AD(H)D hacks/copes/tricks?
Using Siri's announce notifications is super helpful to me. Discuss :)
What are your best AD(H)D hacks/copes/tricks?
Using Siri's announce notifications is super helpful to me. Discuss :)
How is Finch going as far as longevity? I feel like I've used about a million different types of habit trackers or whatever and I use them for about a week and then get annoyed at having to do it every day. I always want so badly to keep up with them because data and trends/patterns over time is just super interesting to me, but they just never work out 😞
I’m not sure yet, but it’s got a couple of things that, for me personally, work in its favour:
It’s very cute and you take care of a lil bird you might form an emotional connection with. The bird goes on adventures and tells you about them after, it forms a character over time, explores different areas, and grows up. All of these things have made me come back to get the random ‘completion’ dopamine hit. Most other things that work for me fall in this category.. the app rewards you with stuff for your bird on different ways. It works almost too well for me but might not be everyone’s thing.
Another this is that you can add friends, which might help to hold you somewhat accountable. The interaction between friends is just a remote “I’m thinking of you” kinda thing, so it won’t help accountability on individual tasks, but might help opening the app.
Now.. I have found the ‘tracking’ side of the app a bit rough, so it might not meet your expectations on that end. The only helpful thing for me has been looking over a heat map of my responses to mood check-ins.
With all that being said, I’ve used it for about half a year now and I am just starting to struggle to motivate myself to use it. But I’m not quite ready to let go yet though…
Great list!
Mon,Wed,Fri 10:00am Class
" into the text box and it'll count down the seconds. Type "8:00am thing
" and it'll assume it happens everyday. Type 12/25/2020 8:00am
and it'll know its a one time event. The text will stick around even if you refresh the page, so you can bookmark it and enter everything once. One card can have multiple times, just make a new line and put another time on it. I usually have something like 8:40am leave
, 9:00am class starts
, 10:00am end of class
all in one card. Then I have a separate card for the next event. Finally, there's a general thing I call "their L, your W"
Replace mindless entertainment with enriching entertainment. E.g. YouTube video essays, lectures, history podcasts, DuoLingo, Anki, Brilliant, artsy/niche movies/games, etc. Always be learning something, even if you'll never need it. Try to limit yourself to memorable, unique, or mind-opening content.
It's no fix, but it trains your brain to be able to wait just a little longer for its dopamine. Also you get to feel like you're sort-of achieving something, not just losing time every time your impulsive brain takes over.
I'm intermediate level in 3 languages, know a shit ton of science, and have played thousands of unique indie games. Is any of this useful? lol no. But do I feel accomplished and in control of some big parts of my life? Hell yes.
On a similar note, I find NewPipe and Lemmy help a lot because they let you "bottom out".
Like, once you watch the recent videos from your subscribed channels on NewPipe... that's it. The feed just yells "hey, yeah, there's nothing interesting left in the feed cause you watched it all! Go do something!" Compared to the twitter/youtube/tiktok being like "yeah here's your timer/sleep-reminder or whatever... BTW 😏, did you see the title of this crazy irrelevant interesting event that everyone is talking about"
Lemmy has been kinda the same way as NewPipe. I can sort by recent on my subscribed communities and actually go through ALL the new posts.
I never expected it, but theres also a kind of satisfaction in knowing I've seen all of it; similar to clearing out an email inbox. I think really helps for getting my brain to not doomscroll. Still happens but feels managable instead of depressing.
Yeah, I'm grateful for Lemmy (ie to you all!) in that regard too - I totally didn't expect that kind of effect or that it would affect my life as much.
I wrote a python script that downloads my calendar and displays my next meeting on a small e-ink screen plugged into a raspberry pi zero that I attached to the top of my computer screen. Basically I tend to get so zoned in (or out) that I always forget to check my calendar. I receive so many messages like “Are you joining the call???” 10 minutes after the start time. If anyone’s interested I will share a link to the source code.
If you have Outlook, it will use a popup with a sound before meetings. The default is 15 minutes before and at the the start time, but it should be customizable. It's very helpful for me.
Thanks. I generally have notifications off because they’re too distracting.
I would like the link! I probably wont build it myself but I might look at it and build a similar system in the future.
Sure thing, check your DMs.
Never work on Saturday or Sunday. In other words, get enough rest.
I can manage my own mind a looooot better when I'm not stressed out or overworked. It. makes the difference of managing life for me.
(It also includes not to do too many exhausting fun things. NOT trying to control things for a day is so relaxing. If I stay in front of the Playstation and just eat junk food for a weekend, then I probably needed that)
I did this the other day, it was a completely alien experience. And I loved it, in moderation to be sure
Try it again in a year or so, feel similarly excited about it, and so on.
Calendar app synced to all devices, with a couple of different calendars in it for easy sorting. Task managing app. (I'm in the process of switching from Trello to Obsidian for tasks to try to incorporate them into the rest of my note taking activities. Oh also - an app for taking notes and writing things down)
Browse reddit Lemmy until I hate myself
workout at the gym until I'm satisfied/exhausted
maintain no schedule whatsoever
eat whenever I want but only healthy things because I'm nutritionally intelligent
keep no schedule whatsoever
sleep whenever I want, for as long as I want
repeat. As long as there's no schedule involved.
Sound good! I think I can squeeze that in between 9:45 and 10:15 on Tuesdays.
🙀
Best I can do is between 5 and 7
Finally a sane person I can relate to!
All of the mechanisms others are describing I totally get, but I can never maintain a routine/habit like that after it stops being new - I use various things others mentioned but then after a while & very abruptly/instantly I completely erase most associations with that not-yet-habit.
Eg I have some medicine I have to take daily and in order to take it most days I must keep changing the not-really-habit to keep it fresh - in this case I keep moving where (in the open) I keep the pills every few weeks (or when I casually notice I forgot to take them for like 5 days).
I do indulge myself with variable sleep schedule a lot, trying to manage that (for decades) was not worth the stress (and even much less the benefits of trying to fit in with neurotypical folk). Same with food - if I don't feel like eating for a day I just don't, and when I'm hungry I absolutely try to eat whatever I want bcs that's usually actually very healthy/nutritious food I want. But for both these things I'm lucky my situation allows me to do so.
That thing about eating 3 (or even 5) meals a day is just corporate (industrial) propaganda to maintain fixed schedules in the factories, it's less than 200 years old. In some medical cases (eg type 1 diabetes, liver issues, etc) sure, but Im also sure that, like with exercise, you get some endorphins when your liver goes to work into the opposite direction bcs you depleted short-term energy reserves (various carbohydrates in blood and liver?).
Alexa for short term reminders and a calendar for long term reminders. I will forget my own funeral if I don't have it written down somewhere.
I've learned to force myself to do things immediately and ignore myself thinking "that's a small task, I can do it later."
While I could do it later, there is a 99% chance I will forget. Might as well do it now, when I am thinking about it.
I find it helpful to order UberEats and demand I have it done by the time it arrives ;)
When getting ready for the day, I put everything I'm going to use on the bathroom counter and put things away as I use each item, that way I don't forget to do something.
I check the mail and take out the trash / pull the bins up every day when I get home from work. I used to forget often, but making it a "do it every time" thing has made it a no-brainer.
I keep a reusable water bottle on my night stand, in the kitchen, in my car, and on my desk at work. I can't be bothered to carry a water bottle everywhere, so I have them everywhere. I do almost the same thing with phone chargers.
Similar to your bathroom tip, when cooking, I get out all the things I need and then either put ingredients away as I go or at least move them to a different part of the counter to indicate it's already in there.
Mis en place
excellent strategy. Kinda fun to actualize as well
• Lots of reminders on my phone and calender that repeat each day.
• Organizers so I never lose anything... lots of them.
• Taking out everything I need for a task before I have to do it and putting each thing away as I'm done with it.
• If I think about the thing, immediately do the thing so I don't forget the thing.
• Creating lists.
• Having a scheduled routine for myself that I've gotten used to so I have some order and take care of myself.
These are just some of the things I do to help myself as someone who had severe adhd and doesn't take medication for it. Having some sense of organization and order helps to keep me somewhat on track. Doesn't always work, but it does help.
Serious question: how do you manage not to lose the organizers, and how do you remember to add stuff to it?
It always works a few days for me then I forget to bring it or add stuff and when I remember I feel like I ruined everything cause now there's a gaping hole of nothing in it and don't go back to it :(
Only way I manage it is to use my phone or something that I have with my all the time anyway. And the planner / to-do / calendar or whatever has to be right on the front of my screen so it's not an app I have to go check, it's just visible all the time.
Adding stuff is hard, until you get into the habit where it becomes pretty automatic (as long as your planner/phone is always right at hand - if I walk away thinking "I'll add that in later", I won't.)
My one tip is to put everything in it to begin with, it's more effort but it gets you in the habit quicker. So if you a morning routine, you can have "make coffee / brush teeth / read lemmy" as three separate tasks, and complete them all quickly. Or if random thoughts pop into your head during the day stick them on ("put a spare USB cable in my bag / Google terrapins"). Not only does it help me remember to do stuff, but it stops rando tasks distracting me. If I feel it's really important to check how much laundry detergent I have left, I can add a task, not stop in the middle of cooking somehting and rush off, only to come back and find dinner burnt.
For me, to-do lists work much better if I have to add and complete dozens of tasks a day. Because then it's something that feels like it's working and helpful, while if it's just "remember to do that big scary important thing" it just stresses me out and I ignore it. Obviously, ymmv, and some people find having lots of tasks distracting or hard to sort (or go down the rabbit hole of categories and color codes). But if it's something that I get regular dopamine hits from (by completing many small goals) I pay attention to it, while if it's something that just makes me anxious or feel guilty I won't.