Living with ADHD often resembles wrestling with a world that expects unwavering, linear progress. Traditional ideas about consistency feel like an impossible standard—a constant uphill battle that leaves many feeling defeated before they even begin. But what if we could redefine consistency not as a rigid line but as a flexible, adaptive journey?
Most productivity advice treats consistency like a mathematical equation: constant effort equals guaranteed success.
For people with ADHD, this approach is not just unhelpful—it's fundamentally misaligned with how our brains operate.
The ADHD brain doesn't work like a steady machine. It's more like a powerful engine with unpredictable bursts of energy and creativity. Trying to force it into a one-size-fits-all productivity model is like trying to fit a square peg into a round hole.
True consistency isn't about maintaining perfection. It's about maintaining direction.
Let me repeat that:
True consistency isn't about maintaining perfection. It's about maintaining direction.
Imagine consistency as a river, not a straight line. A river doesn't flow at exactly the same speed and volume every moment. It adapts to terrain, weather, and obstacles—yet it always moves toward its ultimate destination.
For someone with ADHD, this might look like:
1. Flexible Scheduling
2. Energy-Aware Planning
3. Compassionate Self-Monitoring
Consistency for the ADHD brain isn't about eliminating variation—it's about creating a supportive framework that works with your natural rhythms, not against them.
Your worth isn't measured by your ability to maintain a perfect, unbroken streak. It's measured by your resilience, your capacity to adapt, and your commitment to moving forward—however uniquely that might look for you.