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Hacking Your ADHD

Timing Your Day

Hacking Your ADHD

William Curb

Mental Health, Health & Fitness

4.7779 Ratings

🗓️ 7 October 2019

⏱️ 14 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

ADHD can make it very hard for us to accurately tell what time it is now, how much time is left, and how quickly time is passing. This is referred to as time blindness and it creates a host of issues for those of us with ADHD. When you are unable to accurately tell what time it is, you are going to be late. When you don't know how long something is going to take, you are either going to take too long to finish or finish well before you predicted.

When we are unable to accurately gauge how much time has passed we often are going to be late and when it comes to time predictions we often find ourselves woefully inaccurate, either predicting we can finish a task in no time at all or deciding a task is going to take way more time than it actually will. Our brains are great at confusing large and small tasks, making us think that doing the dishes will take an hour while figuring we can type out that ten-page paper in the same hour.

We can work on our time blindness by making predictions of how long a task will take and then taking accurate measurements of how long it actually takes to do. As we do this more often and learn how long things actually take we create time wisdom.

Often we will find ourselves falling to time blindness because of the invisible parts of a task. One common example is parking. If we have a 2:00 PM appointment and it takes 30 minutes to arrive at our destination we can't just allot 30 minutes for the drive. Once we arrive we still have to find parking and go into the building - both of those tasks take time that is usually unaccounted for.

One of the causes of these invisible parts is because we tend not to acknowledge that a task is built up of three parts - set up, the doing of the task, and clean up. In the going to an appointment example, getting ready to go and getting in the car could be considered the set up, driving to the appointment the doing part, and the parking and going into the building is the clean up.

When you start timing yourself you need to get an actual timer that counts up like a stopwatch so that you can create accurate time measurements. Once you have your timer create reminders about what you want to time and also reminders to turn off your timer once you've finished the task.

Also remember that you don't need to judge yourself if you aren't hitting your time predictions. This is called time blindness, which means we have trouble seeing time, so sometimes our time predictions are going to be fairly inaccurate. Timing yourself is about helping you correct your bad predictions and creating time wisdom, not about telling yourself you should be doing things faster.

This Episode's Top Tips:

1. Get yourself a timer, you don't need anything fancy, but try and find something that isn't your phone and that counts up.

2. Tasks are made up of three parts: the set up, the doing, and the clean up.

3. When you are timing yourself make predictions on how long your tasks are going to take - accurately predicting time is a skill and the more you practice the better you will get.

For all the tools and other goodies mentioned in this episode, check out the full show notes at: HackingYourADHD.com/podcast/timing

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.

0:10.8

I'm your host, William Kerb, and on Hacking Your ADHD, I dig into the tools, strategies, and best practices that will help you work with your ADHD brain.

0:21.5

Let me ask you, how long does it take you to unload the dishwasher?

0:25.3

How about to take a shower?

0:27.0

Or maybe, how long does it take you to process your email?

0:30.2

In today's show, this is exactly what we're going to be looking into.

0:34.2

Well, I'm not going to be the one timing you in the shower,

0:36.9

but I'll be encouraging

0:38.0

you to time yourself as we learn about how ADHD creates time blindness, what that means,

0:43.7

and what we can do about it.

1:00.3

Time blindness is the inability to accurately tell what time blindness is the inability to accurately tell what time it is now, how much time is left,

1:06.2

and how quickly time is passing. This makes time blindness a big component of ADHD and why we often find ourselves living only in the now. When you are unable to accurately tell what time it is,

1:12.0

you are going to be late. When you don't know how long something is going to take, you're

1:16.1

either going to take too long to finish or finish well before you predicted. Time blindness means

1:21.3

you are going to struggle using your time wisely. For many of us, that means underestimating

1:26.6

how long something is going to take, but you are

1:28.9

undoubtedly going to hit that other side of the coin and overestimate how long something is going to

1:33.5

take as well. I know I frequently find myself believing that I can do large projects in half the

1:38.9

time, while also believing that going through the drive-thru to pick up coffee is going to take

1:43.5

at least 30 minutes.

1:45.0

Trust me, it's not. What I found is that basically our brains are great at confounding small things

1:51.9

and minimizing bigger tasks. Both sides of this are important to address because if you aren't

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