Time & Waiting Mode
What you’re seeing
Section titled “What you’re seeing”They’re always late. They said “five more minutes” an hour ago. They started getting ready far too late to possibly arrive on time. They have an appointment at 2 PM and somehow can’t do anything productive all morning.
This can look like disrespect or not caring. It isn’t.
What’s actually happening
Section titled “What’s actually happening”Most people have an internal clock that helps them feel time passing. ADHD brains often don’t. For many, there are only two times: NOW and NOT NOW — a deadline next week feels the same as one in six months, because both are “not now” and don’t feel real. They genuinely believe they have more time than they do; it isn’t wishful thinking, their brain just doesn’t perceive time accurately. Hours can vanish in what feels like minutes.
“Waiting mode” is when an appointment later in the day leaves them unable to start anything, because the brain is “guarding” that time so they don’t miss it. (More in Time Blindness.)
What not to say or do
Section titled “What not to say or do”- “How hard is it to be on time?” — for them, genuinely hard. Their brain doesn’t feel time passing the way yours does.
- Getting visibly annoyed when they’re late — they already know. Your frustration adds shame without helping.
- Lying about start times (saying 6 when it’s 7) — it might work once, but it destroys trust and makes time feel even more unreliable.
How to actually help
Section titled “How to actually help”Give transition warnings
Situation: You need to leave together and want to avoid last-minute chaos. Help: Give a heads-up well in advance — “We need to leave in 30 minutes” — then again at 15, then at 5. Why: These external signals replace the internal clock they’re missing, giving several chances to shift gears without the panic of sudden urgency.
Help them work backwards
Situation: They’re underestimating how long getting ready will take. Help: Map it out together instead of just naming a leave time: “We need to arrive at 3 — that’s a 20-minute drive, so leave at 2:40, dressed by 2:30, start getting ready at 2:00.” Add buffer to each step. Why: ADHD brains imagine the best-case scenario. Working backwards forces every step into view and builds in cushion time.
Respect waiting mode
Situation: They have something later and seem “stuck” despite hours of free time. Help: Don’t push them to “do something productive” while they wait. If it helps, offer a low-stakes bridge activity that gets them moving earlier — “Want to grab coffee at 1?” Why: Waiting mode is real; the brain can’t commit to anything because it’s focused on not missing the event. Fighting it backfires; working with it helps.