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How to Not Procrastinate When Task Avoidance Strikes

 The ADHD recipe for procrastination goes like this: Take a task you find hopelessly overwhelming, unpleasant, effortful, and/or boring. Combine it with ambiguity and far-off consequences. Mix in emotional dysregulation, perfectionist tendencies, and executive function difficulties. Sprinkle in a little rationalizing and, voilà, you are dishing out major avoidance.

If you know what it takes to procrastinate, then you also know, in effect, what it takes to not procrastinate. With some reverse-engineering and creativity, you can concoct an anti-procrastination formula to realistically outmaneuver your unique escapist tendencies. Get started with this three-part plan.

1. Reverse-Engineer ADHD Procrastivity

Procrastivity happens when you avoid a higher-priority task by escaping to a less-critical yet still productive task.

While a self-defeating endeavor, procrastivity can teach you how to not procrastinate. After all, you’re still being productive when you do it — just not in ways that benefit your long-term goals.

[Self-Test: How Seriously Do You Procrastinate?]

There’s a reason you choose to mow the lawn when you’re really supposed to be doing your taxes. The key features of most procrastivity-friendly tasks make them easy to slip into. Apply those features to the tasks you’ve been avoiding in order to help you get started and maintain momentum.

Procrastivity Elements Applied to Dreaded Tasks
The task is manual, mindless, and/or sequential in nature. Create a checklist or sequence for your task. Build up to the hard stuff.
  • Instead of: “I will work on my essay.”
  • Think: Go to study station > open laptop to document > review the two paragraphs I wrote last time > spend 5 minutes brainstorming the next part.
  • Instead of: “I will go to the gym today.”
  • Think: Change into exercise clothes > put on sneakers > pack gym bag > get to the gym > place items in locker > warm up > follow exercise plan.
The task has start and end points, or clear boundaries. Define the task’s scope.
  • Time-Based:
    • Instead of: “I’m going to unload the dishwasher.”
    • Try: “I will spend the next 5 minutes unloading dishes.”
  • Task-Based:
    • Instead of: “I’m going to study.”
    • Try: “I will work on at least three problems.”
  • Terrain-Based:
    • Instead of: “I will clean my bedroom today.”
    • Try: “I will wipe down all visible surfaces.”
The task has a “when” and “where.” Define a time and place to do the task.
  • Instead of: “I’ll study on Tuesday.”
  • Think: “At 7 pm on Tuesday, I will head to the library to study for my exam.”
  • Instead of: “I need to schedule a doctor’s appointment.”
  • Think: “On Friday, I will call my doctor while I take my post-lunch walk.”
The task has clear markers of progress and is easy to return to. Use “if/when X then Y” implementation statements.
  • When I’ve read 10 pages, then I will take a 3-minute break.
  • If I can sit at my desk, then I can work on my presentation for the next 10 minutes.
  • When I finish my coffee break, then I will spend 20 minutes organizing the closet.
  • If I collect all my income statements (W-2s, 1099s) for my taxes, then I will place them in a labeled folder and make a note to gather deduction documents next.

2. Embrace the “Ugh”

Procrastination arises from unpleasant feelings (the “ugh”) associated with a task, which is much more difficult to tolerate with ADHD.

Overcoming procrastination, however, is not about eliminating discomfort. (Realistically, you won’t be excited about every task you’ll do.) While some steps can reduce overwhelm and create more positive thoughts, navigating procrastination is really about normalizing the “ugh.”

[Free Download: 18 ADHD-Friendly Ways to Get Things Done]

3. Leverage Your Why

Think hard about your reasons for working on a task you’ve been avoiding — a powerful way to build and maintain momentum. Consider keeping these prompts in highly visible places to remind you why you don’t want to procrastinate:

Sometimes you get results with the carrot (positive reinforcement), and sometimes you get results with the stick (negative consequences). If spite — whether you’re out to prove someone wrong or avoid consequences — motivates you, use it to your advantage to avoid procrastination. Take inspiration from the following examples:

How to Not Procrastinate: Next Steps

The content for this article was derived from the ADDitude ADHD Experts webinar titled, “Unraveling ADHD Procrastivity: How to Outsmart Procrastination and Improve Productivity” [Video Replay & Podcast #501] with J. Russell Ramsay, Ph.D., which was broadcast on April 18, 2024.


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Updated on March 17, 2025

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