Working With Your Brain: 8 Strategies to Ease Into Action
Have you ever sat for hours staring at a laptop, knowing exactly what you need to do, yet feeling physically unable to move your fingers?
If you have a neurodivergent brain—whether it's ADHD, Autism, or another flavor of spice—you’ve likely experienced a breakdown in Activation. This is the executive function that allows us to organize, begin, and follow through on tasks.
For us, starting isn't just a choice; it’s a physiological hurdle.
The Science: Why "The Start" is the Enemy
Research shows that neurodivergent brains operate differently when it comes to the "Ignition Switch":
Dopamine Deficiency: ADHD brains often have lower baseline dopamine. Without that "reward chemical" to rev the engine, starting a boring task feels like trying to start a car with no spark plugs.
The "Wall of Awful": Coined by Brendan Mahan, this is the emotional barrier of past failures and shame that sits in front of a task. We aren't just looking at a "to-do" list; we are looking at a wall of anxiety.
The "On" Switch vs. The "Off" Switch: While our "on" switch is sluggish, our "off" switch is often non-existent. Once we finally start, we often enter Hyperfocus, where it becomes difficult to stop.
The Good News: The Zeigarnik Effect
There is a light at the end of the tunnel. Once you "break the seal," the Zeigarnik Effect kicks in. This is the psychological tendency to remember or stay fixated on uncompleted tasks. Once you start, the ambiguity disappears, the "threat" lowers, and your brain actually wants to finish what you began.
One of the biggest traps we fall into is waiting to 'feel motivated' before we begin. For the ADHD brain, motivation is an unreliable friend—it shows up unannounced and leaves without warning. Because we cannot count on motivation to be there when we need it, we must rely on strategies. Strategies are the scaffolding that holds us up when our internal drive is offline.
Working With Your Brain: 8 Strategies to Ease Into Action
To get moving, we have to lower the "activation energy" required. Here is how you can support yourself into motion:
1. Shift Your State - Movement as Medicine
Sometimes, you can’t think your way out of a freeze state; you have to move your way out.
The Strategy: Use a "Pattern Interrupter" to change your physiology. This can be anything from a 3-minute dance party, doing 10 squats/push ups or running up and down the stairs to singing, drumming, splashing ice-cold water on your face, or taking a quick cold shower.
Why it works: These actions trigger a spike in norepinephrine and dopamine while "resetting" the nervous system. By creating physical motion in the body, you signal to the brain that the period of stagnation is over, making it much easier to transition into your task.
2. Ride the "Dopamine Wave" - Strike While the Iron is Hot
Since ADHD brains are primarily wired for interest and urgency, the best time to do a task is the moment your brain actually feels engaged with it.
The Strategy: If you’ve just finished a meeting and the ideas are fresh, block 15 minutes (or longer) to do the follow-up actions immediately. Furthermore, if there is a task you’ve been putting off and one day, out of the blue, you suddenly "feel like doing it"—JUST DO IT.
Why it works: You are seizing a rare moment where your brain is already "activated." Instead of trying to force focus later (which is exhausting), you are using your natural momentum to get the job done with half the effort.
3. "Dopamine Menu" Pairing
Sometimes the "starting" task feels like a sensory desert. To get moving, you need to "spice up" the initiation.
The Strategy: Pair a "Low-Dopamine" task (boring work) with a "High-Dopamine" stimulus (something fun). For example, listen to your favorite "guilty pleasure" podcast only while folding laundry.
Why it works: It provides the stimulation your brain is craving, helping you bypass the boredom-based resistance that prevents you from starting.
4. Break Projects Down and Choose ONE Actionable Task
The ADHD brain often views a project like "Write a Report" as one giant, immovable mountain. This ambiguity triggers the amygdala’s "fight-or-flight" response, leading to paralysis. You aren't avoiding the work; you're avoiding the overwhelm of not knowing where the "door" is to get inside.
The Strategy: Deconstruct the "mountain" into tiny, specific steps—brain dump all the actions required and reorder them. If you feel stuck, ask a friend or use AI to help you prioritize the list for you. Instead of "Write Report," your task becomes "Open Word doc and save it." Commit to doing literally just that ONE actionable task.
Why it works: It replaces a vague "looming threat" with a clear, tiny physical action. Once you’ve taken that one step, the "Wall of Awful" begins to crumble, and your natural momentum can take over.
5. Environmental Anchoring - Location Matters
Your brain associates specific spaces with specific feelings. If you try to do a "painful" task (like taxes) in the same spot where you do "nourishing" tasks (like reading or painting), you "pollute" your happy space with stress.
The Strategy: Designate specific zones. Do admin at a desk or the kitchen table. Do creative work on the sofa. Do "dreaded" tasks in a specific "boring" chair or even at a library.
Why it works: It creates a "Contextual Cue." When you sit in the "Admin Chair," your brain realizes, "Oh, this is where we do the spreadsheets," and resistance lowers.
6. Scale Standards Down - Let go of Perfection
Perfectionism is a major cause of task paralysis. We often don't start because we are afraid we won't do it perfectly.
The Strategy: Give yourself explicit permission to do the task badly. Write a "trash" version of that email. Do the "easy" version of the workout.
Why it works: It removes the "Wall of Awful" (the fear of failure). A "good enough" task completed is always better than a "perfect" job that was never started.
7. Body Doubling: The "Social Anchor"
Body doubling is the practice of working alongside another person to improve focus. They don’t even have to help you; they just have to be there.
Beyond just "working alongside" someone, the emotional connection of a shared struggle can lower cortisol. A quick 5-minute "check-in" with a fellow ND friend to say, "I'm struggling to start, can we sit together?" turns isolation into shared humanity.
The Strategy: Whenever possible, physically get together with a friend or colleague in the same room. Head to a library, a quiet coffee shop, or invite someone over for a "work date" where you both commit to your own separate tasks.
The Virtual Alternative: If you can’t get together in person, hop on a muted video call with a friend or use a dedicated platform like Focusmate to find a virtual partner.
8. External Accountability
For many neurodivergent people, self-accountability is difficult because we can easily "negotiate" with ourselves. We often need an external force.
The Strategy: Set an "Action Deadline" with a friend: "I will send you a screenshot of my finished outline by 2:00 PM." Or try a "Check-in Text": Ask a friend to text you in 20 minutes to see if you've opened the website.
Why it works: It transforms a vague internal goal into a "social contract," creating the healthy urgency (eustress) the ADHD brain needs to kick into gear.
Celebrate the Win(s)!
Once you've broken through the activation barrier, make sure to celebrate! This releases a final hit of dopamine that helps "wire" your brain to find starting easier next time.
Review what worked, tweak what didn't, and keep fine-tuning your "winning recipe". You aren't lazy; you're just learning how to operate your unique, brilliant machinery.
Ready to Build Your Custom Activation Toolkit?
Understanding the science of the neurodivergent brain is the first step, but applying it to your unique life is where the real transformation happens.
If you’re tired of pushing that "boulder" uphill alone and want a tailored approach to master your executive functions, let’s talk.
I help adults with ADHD build "winning recipes" that work with their brains, not against them. Book your 30-min free discovery now by clicking the link below 👇.
Keep playing with activation strategies!
Build momentum. Celebrate. Repeat.
You've got this!
Warmly,
Anneli - The holistic ADHD woman