In this lesson, we looked at how your environment can either support your ADHD brain or make things harder. Your phone on the desk pulls attention. A bill hidden under papers disappears from your mind. A planner in a drawer gets forgotten. A bag by the door reminds you what to take. A visible water bottle makes drinking water easier. Your environment is constantly giving your brain cues. So instead of relying on memory, motivation, and willpower alone, you can design your surroundings to make follow-through easier. The basic idea is: Make the helpful thing obvious. Make the unhelpful thing harder. Remove friction before you need motivation. This might mean creating a launch pad by the door, leaving your planner open, putting your phone across the room, moving distracting apps, setting up your workspace before you stop, or putting the next step somewhere visible. Small environment changes can make a big difference because ADHD brains often respond to what is visible, immediate, and easy to access. Your turn ๐ฌ What is one environment change you could make to help your ADHD brain follow through? You could share: - something youโll make more visible - one distraction youโll make harder to access - a launch pad youโll create - one bit of friction youโll remove - a cue youโll put somewhere obvious - a space youโll simplify - an item youโll give a proper home Example: Iโm going to create a launch pad by the front door for my keys, wallet, bag, and anything I need to take with me. Or: Iโm going to put my phone across the room when Iโm working, because if itโs next to me I check it automatically. Or: Iโm going to leave my planner open on my desk instead of putting it away, because if I canโt see it I forget it exists. No need to redesign your whole house. One small change is enough. And if someone else shares an idea that would help you too, use it. Simple ideas are often the ones that actually stick.