Today, on my way to the store, I was listening to a podcast from the ADHD Chatter series (because just going outside for no reason bores me, so I give myself a goal, even if itโs just the supermarketโฆ and walking around with nothing in my ears is unbearable ๐). One episode about cleaning really caught my attention. Iโve struggled with cleaning my whole life. My parents really tried, but no system ever lasts longer than aย few days for me. About a year ago, I had what I thought was a โbrilliantโ idea: I donโt have to clean all at once, I can just assign one area to each day and do a little bit daily. That shouldnโt be so hard, right? So Monday the sink, Tuesday the bathtub, Wednesday the toiletโฆ I lasted exactly three days ๐ Then it turned into the usual: โIโll just do the sink tomorrow together with the bathtubโฆโ Yeahโฆ no. And today, thanks to that podcast, I realized that this exact system, doing a little bit every day, consistently, just doesnโt work for ADHD brains. There are times when we simply donโt see the mess. And then there are moments when we can do almost the impossible in fifteen minutes. Coach Hester Grainger suggests gamification and body doubling as the main tools for ADHD-friendly cleaning: ๐ธ Put on a song and see how much you can clean before it ends. ๐ธ Time how long a task takes you, and next time try to beat your record. ๐ธ If one person is cooking, the other does the dishes. ๐ธ Set an โultimate deadline,โ like guests are about to arrive in 15 minutes. ๐ธ Clean while someone else is in the room with you. They donโt have to help, just their presence can keep you going. More in the video โฌ๏ธ