I spent so many years waking up each morning and dreading a chaotic day before I even opened my eyes.
Needless to say, it made me feel undisciplined and like a sort of wreck.
At least, I felt like that until I was diagnosed with ADHD and realized that ADHD brains are super sensitive to how the first 30 – 60 minutes unfold.
If you feel like your nervous system is out of whack, it’s probably because your (chaotic) ADHD morning mistakes are setting the tone.
You might think you’re just “bad at mornings” (like I used to), but you’re actually dealing with friction before your brain is fully awake. A recipe for chaos (most of the time).
Here are 7 ADHD morning mistakes that are absolutely making your day that much harder, and the simple methods for making them easier.
It’s a popular talking point in productivity and personal growth spaces, but it really is true. When you scroll first thing, it’s one of the earliest ADHD morning mistakes because your brain gets flooded with stimulation before it’s regulated.
You lose control of what you want to take in and end up consuming news, texts, emails, notifications, and anything else your phone throws at you, which doesn’t typically do good things for your nervous system.
I’m sure you know this, but ADHD brains don’t need 100 to-dos before you even have coffee.
The Easy Fix:
It may feel weird or painful at first, but delay phone use for 10–15 minutes. Try doing other things first instead, like brushing your teeth or just sitting up in bed. Even a *tiny* buffer changes the tone of the morning.
Have you ever stopped to think about how many decisions you have to make before your day truly gets started? You’re probably deciding what to wear, what to drink/eat for breakfast, tasks you might have to do at work, your commute, what to prioritize, etc.
Needless to say, this equals ADHD decision fatigue likely before caffeine even enters the picture and results in unnecessary stress spirals.
The Easy Fix:
Pre-decide as much as possible the night before. Even choosing just one thing, like what you’ll wear or your first task of the day, can go a long way toward freeing up mental space and making your morning calmer.
In the past, I was a fan of intermittent fasting, and I’ve been known to skip breakfast. But, since my ADHD diagnosis, I’ve realized that low blood sugar makes my focus and irritability worse and my executive function shakier.
*And* people with ADHD already have a fragile fuel system.
The Easy Fix:
Keep it simple, but eat something with protein. This can be yogurt (I like Greek), a protein bar, peanut butter toast, or eggs. I highly recommend you make it something with substance. Tip: It does not need to *look* like a wellness influencer made it as long as it’s edible.
Sorry, Brian Tracy, but “eating the frog” only works for some people. For ADHD brains, doing hard things first can trigger immediate resistance in the form of everything from extreme procrastination to sliding down the wall crying because you can’t start. I know this firsthand and have the late work projects to show for it.
ADHD morning mistakes thrive when you start your day with dread because it burns motivation before it builds.
The Easy Fix:
Rather than expecting and forcing yourself to do difficult things first thing, begin with a 5-minute activation task. Something simple like clearing your inbox for 5 minutes or reviewing your calendar can be just the momentum you need to reduce intimidation.
Am I the only one who has literally spent 15+ minutes planning my day in my head, only to forget virtually everything I planned to do? Moral of the story: If your plan lives mentally, it will disappear the second something interrupts you.
To make sure we remember all the things, ADHD brains need visible anchors.
The Easy Fix:
Stop expecting your brain to remember everything, and try writing down 3 priorities. You don’t need to write down your entire to-do list, unless that’s your jam. Just writing 3 things that would make today feel steady does wonders.
It takes loads of energy to move between tasks when you have ADHD. Your morning might look like waking up, showering, getting dressed, eating breakfast, leaving, commuting, logging on, starting work, and so on.
Each transition costs energy, and rushing through things stacks stress before you even begin.
The Easy Fix:
Ease the rush and build in 10 minutes of buffer time. Having “nothing time” built into your day, even just spent sitting or breathing with intention, can help you to calmly exist between modes.
Unfortunately, when you have ADHD, motivation doesn’t come easily, and waiting to “feel ready” is a trap. You may *think* you’ll be ready to do things when you feel well-rested or when you have the clean slate of a new day. But, more often than not, the motivation never hits. My empty exercise journal is proof of this.
ADHD mornings are the most effective when they’re about activation instead of motivation.
The Easy Fix:
ADHD morning mistakes become a thing of the past when you pick one physical action. Even something as basic as putting on your shoes (to inspire yourself to work out) or opening your laptop (to start working or put time into your hobbies) can be the activation you need to get the ball rolling.
Perfect mornings are the stuff of social media. But even though *perfect* doesn’t exist for most of us, it doesn’t mean that we reduce the chances of having a bad morning.
By acknowledging the most common sources of morning stress and preparing for them, you can start your day with much fewer friction points.
ADHD morning mistakes lose their power when you remove small stressors instead of adding more rules.
Pick one mistake to tweak this week and see if it helps to make your morning smoother.

Reduce friction before your brain wakes up.
Roxy is the creator of The Everyday Flourish, a relatable personal growth blog for women who are tired of burnout, chaos, and hustle culture.
A recovering overthinker and unofficial life guinea pig, she shares honest self-care strategies, ADHD-friendly productivity tips, and mindset shifts that actually feel doable.
Around here, personal growth comes with grace, not pressure - and a lot fewer to-do lists.