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Hacking Your ADHD

How to Create More Effective Reminders (Rebroadcast)

Hacking Your ADHD

William Curb

Mental Health, Health & Fitness

4.8702 Ratings

🗓️ 1 June 2020

⏱️ 16 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

When you've got ADHD making reminders is a given. There's just too much going on in any one given day for me to keep track of it all and without reminders I know I'm going to drop the ball somewhere. I've got reminders for big things like when I need to leave to pick up my kids from school and little things like having a cup of tea in the evening but not too close to bedtime.

So when I get told I just need to create a reminder to remember something I just want to shout that I already am using a lot of reminders. A big problem with a lot of reminders is that they just aren't effective at getting us to do the things they are supposed to be reminding us of. Today we're going to be exploring the ways that we can make better reminders so that we're actually following through on them. We'll be looking at what we're creating reminders for. How and when we are getting those reminders and also look at how we are creating our system of reminders.

Find the full show note at: HackingYourADHD.com/EffectiveReminders

Today's Top Tips

  1. The most important aspect of a reminder is having it delivered when you can do something about it - you can do this by thinking through the context of a reminder. If you need a reminder at work make sure you are getting it when you are at work. 
  2. Reminders are great for reminding you of things, but not for doing unscheduled tasks. Leave projects on your to-do list and actually schedule a time for them instead of creating a reminder that you are never going to do. 
  3. Reminders can either be short-term or long-term but regardless of what kind of reminder you are creating you want to make sure you are giving yourself enough information to follow through on what you were trying to remind yourself about. 
  4. Create a combination of physical and digital reminders so that you can get the most out of your reminder systems. Physical reminders tend to be faster to set up but digital reminders can be more robust in how they are reminding you.

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

Welcome to Hacking Your ADHD, part of the ADHD Rewired Podcast Network.

0:08.5

I'm your host, William Gerb, and I have ADHD.

0:12.2

On this podcast, I dig into the tools, tactics, and best practices to help you work with your ADHD brain.

0:19.6

When you've got ADHD, making reminders is a given.

0:23.1

There's just too much going on in any one given day for me to keep track of it all,

0:27.2

and without reminders, I know I'm going to drop the ball somewhere.

0:30.4

I've got reminders for big things, like when I need to leave to pick up my kids from school,

0:34.2

and little things, like having a cup of tea in the evening, but not too close to bedtime.

0:38.6

So when I get told I just need to create a reminder to remember something, I just want to

0:42.4

shout that I already am using a lot of reminders.

0:46.1

A big problem with a lot of reminders is that they just aren't effective at getting us to

0:50.0

do the things that they are supposed to be reminding us of.

0:53.0

Today we're going to be exploring the ways that we can make better reminders so that we're

0:56.5

actually following through on them.

0:58.2

We'll be looking at what we're creating reminders for, how and when we are getting those

1:01.7

reminders, and also taking a look at how we are creating our systems of reminders.

1:06.6

If you'd like to follow along on the show notes page, you can find that at hacking your ADHD.com

1:12.8

slash effective reminders.

1:16.1

All right, keep on listening to learn about the best ways to make your reminders.

1:26.2

The most important thing to remember when creating reminder is that your reminder isn't

1:30.3

going to make you do the task you are being reminded of. If I set a reminder on my phone to go off

1:35.3

every morning at 6.30 that said, go for a run, I'd probably end up running the same amount that I run

...

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