I Have ADHD — Do I Have to be Disorganized Too?
I was working with a client who had recently been diagnosed
with ADHD, she told me that now that she knew she had ADHD
she had a built in excuse to be disorganized. Certainly people
with ADHD have trouble being organized but is it an excuse?
I have ADHD, do I have to be disorganized?
Just because you have ADHD doesn’t mean you have to
be disorganized. In fact there are many people with ADHD who
are incredibly well organized. Being organized has helped
them thrive. However, if you have ADHD it is often more difficult
for you to get organized and stay that way.
What does being organized mean?
Being organized is not about putting things away and everything
being neat and ready for company. It is about how you function
in your environment. It means that you control your environment,
your things and your time, instead of your environment controlling
you. Organization is how you manage your things, your time,
and your tasks.
What about ADHD contributes to disorganization?
ADHD involves your brain’s frontal lobe which acts
as the “executive functioning” area of your brain.
This is the part of your brain that allows you to make decisions,
set rules, prioritize, assign responsibilities, help you focus
and remember.
So What?
Getting organized involves several steps that must be done
in a specific order.
- Decide what you need and what you don’t need. –
Decision making
- Categorize what is left – setting rules
- Assign a place to keep these things and put them away
– assigning responsibilities
- Keep everything organized on an on-going basis –
focusing and remembering
Following these steps to get organized, and in order to stay
“organized” once you have your systems in place,
you must keep on track while you are performing tasks which
are less than stimulating. When you look at it this way it
is no wonder that people with ADHD have trouble being organized.
People with ADHD have trouble focusing on routine tasks…is
there anything more routine (and boring) than opening mail,
paying bills and filing? How about doing laundry and putting
away clothes?
People with ADHD have trouble filtering out distractions.
Going through old clothes in your closet is just not that
exciting. How can you stay focused on the one thing that you
are trying to get done when you hear “You’ve got
mail!” or the phone rings? Not only do you lose your
place on the stack of papers you were working on but you get
pulled completely off task. It might be hours, days or even
weeks until you get back to that pile.
So if it is so hard to be organized why should I
bother?
One of the ironies of ADHD life is that the more organized
you are and the more routines you have in your schedule and
life, the easier it will be for you to function. What organization
does is allow you to NOT have to focus on this minutia. Once
organizing becomes routine you don’t have to think about
where something goes or where to find something that you put
away. Once you have a schedule for getting up and out of the
house in the morning you don’t have to worry about what
to do 1st, 2nd and 3rd or whether or not you will make it
to work on time. Once you have schedules and routines you
don’t have to hunt all over the house for your bills
and when you finally track them all down pay them -- late.
So how do I get there?
- Realize that you are NOT perfect. You don’t have
to have a perfect system and there are no set rules to follow.
The system you create only needs to make sense to you.
- Be Yourself. Don’t try to fit someone else’s
mold. Instead, create systems and routines that reflect
your personality and make them fun. Remember that one great
thing about ADHD is the ability to be creative and brainstorm.
Come up with the wackiest way to organize your environment.
That will probably the way it will work best for you.
- Learn to say “NO”. Before deciding to take
on a new responsibility make sure you have the time and
ability to add it to your current schedule. If you don’t
have the time decide which activity from your current schedule
you will stop.
- Use broad categories for filing and organizing. Don’t
give every piece a paper its own subject since you may never
be able to keep track of it all. For example instead of
filing weekly staff meeting notes by the specific topic
of what was discussed file them all together under “Staff
Meetings”.
- Label everything. Remember people with ADHD tend not
to remember “unimportant” details like which
drawer they put their bank statements in or which refrigerator
drawer holds the fruit or which list is for phone calls.
Labeling helps you to find things and put them away.
- Create Mini-Tasks. Break up all tasks into mini-tasks
that take 10 – 15 minutes each. Smaller tasks are
easier to do and to schedule.
- Manage organization energy bursts. Work for 5, 10 or 20
minutes and then, even if you aren’t done, stop. If
you have a list of mini-tasks set up you should have a list
of things you can accomplish fairly quickly.
- If it works stick with it. When you are faced with organizing
something look at the systems you have that work and try
to figure out why it works. Build onto these systems or
create new ones that are similar.
- Use memory tricks. Don’t just try to remember things,
use multiple senses. Say it aloud to yourself, tell someone,
sing it, write it down and keep the note somewhere that
you will really see. If it is a routine or habit you are
trying to create make a rhyme out of the sequence of things
you want to accomplish, create a sign and post the new habit
where you will be doing it.
- Ask for help. Often having someone to keep you company
is enough to get many people moving and stay on task. Maybe
you can volunteer to keep a friend company if they keep
you company?
- Get your kids help. Tell your kids what you are going
to do. They love catching parents “misbehaving.”
Most people will do anything to avoid being caught by their
children.
- Be Flexible. Remember life happens. Sometimes despite
your best planning things don’t always work out the
way you want them to. There are many ways to be organized
— you just need to find the way that works for you.
Listen
to Carrie's presentation at ADD Resources: I have ADD. Do
I have to be disorganized too?
by Carrie Greene, ACC, CarrieThru, LLC, ADHD Coaching
& Organizing Services.
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