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When They Can't Get Started

Your person knows they need to do something. They want to do it. They might even be stressed about not doing it. But they’re just… sitting there — scrolling, staring at the ceiling, maybe beating themselves up internally while completely frozen.

This can look like laziness. It isn’t.

The brain needs dopamine to initiate action — think of it as the fuel that starts the engine. ADHD brains chronically under-produce it, especially for tasks that aren’t interesting, new, urgent, or challenging. It’s not that they won’t start; their brain can’t find the fuel to begin. When a task’s complexity, boredom, or emotional weight overwhelms the system, it shuts down entirely — that’s task paralysis. They’re not relaxing when they’re frozen; they’re often internally screaming at themselves to move while their body refuses.

There’s also the “Wall of Awful” — the emotional weight that builds around avoided tasks. Every time they don’t do something, guilt and shame pile up, and a simple email becomes a monster. (The mechanism is detailed in Task Paralysis.)

  • “Just do it” / “Just start” — like telling someone with a broken leg to just walk. The “just” is exactly the part that’s broken.
  • “It’s not that hard” — maybe not for you, but their brain is experiencing it very differently.
  • Sighing, looking frustrated, or showing visible disappointment — they already feel terrible; adding yours makes the paralysis worse.
  • Taking over the task (unless they ask) — it can feel infantilizing and reinforce their shame.

Be a body double

Situation: They can’t start or stay focused alone. Help: Just be in the same room — read, scroll, do your own thing. You don’t have to help with their task. About 80% of people with ADHD find tasks dramatically easier when someone is simply present. Why: Another person nearby creates gentle social pressure and helps regulate their nervous system. It’s not supervision — it’s presence.

Help them make it tiny

Situation: A task feels insurmountable and they’re frozen. Help: Help them name just the first tiny step — not “clean the kitchen” but “put three dishes in the dishwasher.” Then stop. Don’t push for more. If they continue, great; if not, celebrate what they did. Why: Big tasks trigger shutdown; tiny tasks slip under the radar. One small win creates momentum — but pushing too hard breaks the spell.

Add fun to boring tasks

Situation: They can’t muster motivation for something tedious. Help: Offer to make it more interesting — “Want music while you do this?” “Want to race the clock?” “Want me to quiz you on trivia while you fold laundry?” Why: ADHD brains are interest-based, not importance-based. Adding novelty, challenge, or pleasure gives the brain the stimulation it needs to engage.

Leverage deadlines kindly

Situation: They’re procrastinating on something important. Help: Instead of nagging, create real, immediate urgency — “I’m going to the post office at 3, want me to take your package?” Why: Urgency is one of the few things that reliably activates the ADHD brain. Genuine deadlines help; manufactured pressure and nagging trigger shame, which makes paralysis worse.

Celebrate any progress

Situation: They did part of something, or did it imperfectly. Help: Focus on what they accomplished, not what’s left — “You got three of those done, that’s great!” Skip the “but you still need to…” Why: ADHD often comes with a brutal inner critic. Validating partial progress counteracts the shame spiral and builds momentum.