Dopamine Friendly Systems
Desk with a notebook and visible planning supports

Free ADHD Tool

ADHD decision reset

Make one choice smaller. Pick a usable rule. Leave the next move where you can see it.

This is for the choice that has turned into a fog of consequences, research, possible mistakes, and competing priorities. You do not need to feel certain. You need a way to make the choice small enough to move with.

Use it on this page, copy it into a note, or print it. No email gate, no download gate, and no need to solve every future decision before handling this one.

The 10-minute decision reset

One choice at a time

Make the decision concrete before you ask your brain to compare it.

01

Name the real decision

Write one specific choice. Not the whole project, identity, or future version of the problem.

The choice is:
It matters by:
02

Limit the live options

Keep two or three realistic choices. Park the rest before you start comparing them.

Real options:
Parked for later:
03

Choose a good-enough rule

Use a rule before the emotion gets louder: cheapest acceptable, fastest reversible, already available, or best for the next person waiting.

My rule today:
This is reversible:
04

Leave the next move visible

A choice is not fully closed until the next physical action has a place and a time to begin.

After I choose, I will:
The first place to go:

Parking place for the choices that are not for today

Write them somewhere visible enough to trust, then return to one choice. Parking a decision is not abandoning it. It is protecting the decision in front of you from a crowd.

Not for today:

What it can look like

Decision

I am choosing which task gets the first 25 minutes, not planning the entire week.

Options

Reply to the client, outline the report, or start the budget. The other tasks go on the parking list.

Rule

Choose the task that unblocks another person. I do not need to prove it is the most important task in the universe.

Next move

Open the client message, write a rough two-sentence reply, and set a timer for five minutes.

Park

The report and budget are written on one card for tomorrow instead of being re-decided every ten minutes.

Use defaults where the stakes are low

Low-stakes choices can absorb the attention needed for a real decision. Create defaults for breakfast, clothes, basic meals, the first work block, errands, and repeat purchases. A default is not a forever rule. It is a starting place until something gives you a reason to choose again.

For a hard-to-reverse choice, do not demand instant certainty. Name the one piece of information you still need and the smallest way to get it. The next action may be asking one question, opening one document, or setting a time to revisit the decision with more information.

Building Executive Function That Actually Works book cover

When choices keep filling the whole day

Book 9 builds more places for decisions to land.

This reset helps with one overloaded choice. Building Executive Function That Actually Works adds priority filters, decision supports, working-memory scaffolds, next-action maps, and return points for the decisions that keep coming back.

FAQ

What is an ADHD decision reset?

A short external process for a choice that has become overloaded. It names the real decision, reduces the live options, chooses a usable rule, makes the next action visible, and parks unrelated choices.

How do I get out of ADHD decision paralysis?

Write the exact choice in one sentence, keep two or three realistic options, decide whether it is reversible, pick a good-enough rule, and take one action that follows the choice.

What is a good-enough rule for decisions?

A pre-chosen shortcut for a decision that does not deserve unlimited energy, such as cheapest acceptable, fastest reversible, already available, or the option that unlocks the next person or task.

How do I stop small decisions taking all day?

Use defaults for low-stakes choices and keep other open choices in one parking place. Defaults protect attention for decisions with real consequences.

Educational self-help content for adults who want ADHD-friendly systems. Not medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment.