ADHD and Habits: Why Identity Matters More Than Willpower
You ever tell yourself, This is it — this is the week I’m going to get my act together? You buy the nice notebook. You block your calendar. You pick your “focus” playlist. Maybe you even clear your kitchen counter so your brain can breathe.
And then by Wednesday, the notebook’s untouched, the playlist is background noise while you scroll, and you’re eating hummus straight from the tub with a baby carrot as a spoon.
We’ve all been there.
Here’s the thing. Habits don’t stick because we “should” do them. Or even because we know they’re good for us. They stick when they feel like us. Not aspirational us. Not conference-presentation version of us. Actual us — messy, inconsistent, half-dressed us.
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The ADHD Habit Shift: It’s About Identity, Not Discipline
Here’s what makes a difference: identity. Research in behavioural science — including work from James Clear and B.J. Fogg — shows that habits are more likely to stick when they align with your self-concept. In other words, when a habit confirms who you believe you are, your brain doesn’t resist it in the same way.
If you think of yourself as someone who’s scattered and disorganized, it’s going to be hard to build habits that require structure. But if you begin to see yourself as someone who cares about protecting their energy and time, the same habits — planning, prepping, finishing — start to feel like acts of self-respect, not self-correction.
ADHD Brains Need Habits That Feel Personal
Now add ADHD to the mix.
Motivation is hit-or-miss. Memory is sketchy. Routines often collapse under the weight of boredom or novelty-seeking. If a habit feels like pressure, your brain’s already drafting the excuse to bail.
But when a habit feels like something you do because it reflects a version of you that already exists it doesn’t feel like a fight.
Let’s replace the usual example.
Say you’re trying to eat something before noon that isn’t caffeine and sugar. You could call it “being healthier,” but that doesn’t do much for an ADHD brain. Try this: “I’m someone who fuels my brain so I can think clearly in the morning.” That shift reframes the food as a tool, not a task. It feels like something you do because it works for your brain, not because you’re chasing some gold star for good behaviour.
Three ADHD-Friendly Habits with Real Impact
If you’re wondering where to start, some habits punch way above their weight for people with ADHD — especially when they become part of your identity, not just another item on a to-do list:
- Move your body early
Even ten minutes makes a difference. A walk, stretching, dancing while brushing your teeth. It boosts dopamine and kickstarts your executive functioning.
Here’s the research - Write something down by hand
Your brain can’t keep everything in working memory. A quick handwritten list or note slows your thoughts just enough to make them clearer. - Anchor your day with one consistent time cue
This isn’t a full routine. It’s one moment that signals to your brain that time exists — like making tea at the same time every day or reviewing a short list before you start work.
Backed by science
But What If It Still Feels Fake?
Honestly? It probab;y will at first.
There’s always a gap between who we believe we are and what we’re trying to act like. That’s normal. But if the habit is reinforcing a version of you that you actually like — not someone you’re pretending to be — the fake feeling fades fast.
And no, you don’t have to stick to it perfectly for it to count. Missing a day doesn’t mean you aren’t that person. It means you’re human. And possibly out of peanut butter.
Try This
Pick one habit you’ve been circling for weeks. Something small. Not a full system, not a life overhaul. Ask yourself, “What kind of person does this?”
Then test out what it feels like to act as if that person might be you. Not in the future. Now.
Because chances are, it already is. They’re just waiting for you to give them something to do.
P.S. If you want some help figuring out the next part, book a free coaching exploration call. We’ll talk about what’s going on and whether group coaching or 1-on-1 coaching fits. No pressure. Just clarity.
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