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Hacking Your ADHD

Scaffolding the ADHD Brain: How Habits Fail and Systems May Save Us

Hacking Your ADHD

William Curb

Health & Fitness, Mental Health

4.7781 Ratings

🗓️ 29 May 2026

⏱️ 19 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Hey Team!

When I moved into my neighborhood, most of the houses weren't built.  So I got to see over the course of a few years, a lot of the work that went into putting those houses up, all the day-to-day progress that always kept happening, and how every step seemed to set them up for the next step. Now, nobody expects a brick wall to just materialize out of midair on pure willpower or a house to get completely built with no effort. yet when it comes to managing our daily routines, that's exactly what we try to do. We expect our internal motivation to keep us on track despite our own track record, and then we get frustrated when they fall flat.

In this episode, we're taking a look at why our attempts to build traditional habits often doesn't work with ADHD, and why it isn't a moral failure or a lack of trying. We're going to explore the critical mechanics of external scaffolding versus internal habits, digging into how we can stop burning through our limited supply of daily executive function and start building physical infrastructure that does the heavy lifting for us


If you'd life to follow along on the show notes page you can find that at HackingYourADHD.com/298

YouTube: https://tinyurl.com/y835cnrk

Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/HackingYourADHD

This Episode's Top Tips

    1. Traditional habits rely on an internal dopamine reward to lock them onto autopilot. Because ADHD reward chemistry is wildly inconsistent, that "autopilot" switch rarely flips. Instead, we want to work on designing our environment through systems to help make our intentions inevitable.
    2. Passive reminders are entirely too easy for an ADHD brain to ignore. Instead, use design psychology to create physical roadblocks that force conscious awareness. Putting your clean laundry basket directly on the couch cushion where you want to sit forces your brain to actively negotiate with the task before you can proceed.
    3. Human brains naturally drift toward the path of least resistance. Take advantage of this by manipulating that friction. Lower the friction for positive intentions by creating one-step solutions, like a dedicated key basket by the front door, or crank up the friction for distractions by doing things putting your phone completely out of reach so you can't just pick it up without thinking about it.
    4. Your physical environment is never neutral; it is actively directing your behavior right now, whether you designed it or not, which means relying on willpower is a losing game. Treat environmental design as a handoff between two versions of you: let your "Good Brain Day" self build a physical world that protects and supports your "Bad Brain Day" self.

 

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

Welcome to Hacking Your ADHD.

0:08.0

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

0:11.9

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

0:17.2

ADHD brain.

0:19.1

Hey team, so when I moved into my neighborhood, most of the houses weren't built yet,

0:23.6

so I got to see over the course of a few years a lot of the work that went into putting

0:27.6

those houses up.

0:28.6

All the day-to-day progress that always kept happening, and how every step seemed to set them up for the next step.

0:34.6

Now, nobody expects a brick wall to just materialize out of

0:38.7

mid-air on peer willpower, or a house to get completely built with no effort. Yet, when it comes

0:43.8

to managing our daily routines, that's exactly what we try to do. We expect our internal

0:49.4

motivation to keep us on track, despite our own track record. And then we get frustrated when that falls flat.

0:56.8

In this episode, we're taking a look at why our attempts to build traditional habits often

1:01.9

don't work with ADHD and why it isn't a moral failure or a lack of trying. We're going to explore

1:08.7

the critical mechanism of external scaffolding versus internal habits,

1:13.1

digging in how we can stop burning through our limited supply of daily executive function

1:17.6

and start building the physical infrastructure that does the heavy lifting for us.

1:22.4

If you'd like to follow along on the show notes page, you can find that at hacking your ADHD.com slash 298.

1:30.2

All right, keep on listening to find out how systems thinking can help us transform our environment.

1:38.0

One of the hardest parts of talking about systems is finding a good definition to go with because what I want from a good

1:45.9

definition is a better understanding of what I'm talking about. But a system broadly defined is just

1:53.7

any set of parts that interact with one another, generally to a greater effect than any of those parts

...

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