My ADHD Daily Reset Routine (Morning, Evening & When Everything’s Slipped)

organised kitchen bench with clear storage and a radio

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messy unorganised home v tidy home

Some days, my ADHD reset routine looks beautifully calm.
A candle lit, coffee warm, planner open, little dopamine playlist on in the background.

Other days?
I’m reheating the same cup of tea for the third time while wondering why there’s a sock in the fridge.

And honestly, both versions count.

Over time, I’ve realised that having a simple ADHD daily reset routine helps me feel less overwhelmed, less behind, and a little more like myself again — especially on the days where everything feels messy and impossible to restart.

This isn’t about having a perfect routine.
It’s about creating tiny anchors that help your brain come back home.

So here’s my cozy, realistic ADHD reset routine — for mornings, evenings, and those “everything has completely slipped” days.

Each one is simple, cosy, and totally doable — even on low‑energy days.

This is the reset that makes my home feel lighter before the day even begins. I keep it tiny so I don’t overwhelm myself.

This is my favourite one — it’s cosy, slow, and helps my brain switch off.

This is the one I use when the house feels overwhelming and I don’t know where to start. It’s gentle, forgiving, and designed for low‑motivation days.

home organisation sysytem

My Morning ADHD Reset

Mornings can feel so loud with ADHD.

Too many decisions, too many tabs open in your brain before you’ve even brushed your teeth.

I’ve stopped trying to become a “5am productive girlie” and instead focused on creating a gentle ADHD-friendly morning routine that actually works for me.

1. No thinking before water

Before my brain gets the chance to spiral into 47 thoughts at once, I drink water first.

Not because I’m suddenly a wellness influencer.
Because dehydration makes my brain feel like an unplugged WiFi router.

I keep a cute bottle by my bed because if I have to walk downstairs first… it probably won’t happen.

2. One tiny win first

If I look at my full to-do list too early, I freeze.

So instead, I start with one tiny task:

  • make the bed
  • open curtains
  • put laundry in basket
  • feed myself something vaguely protein-shaped

Tiny wins give my ADHD brain momentum instead of panic.


A woman stands by a window, opening curtains in a softly lit room.

3. My “don’t sit down yet” rule

This one changed everything for me.

If I sit on the sofa “for one second,” there’s a strong chance I’ll enter ADHD time blindness and suddenly it’s noon.

So I try to stay gently moving through the first part of my morning:

  • bathroom
  • skincare
  • coffee
  • music on
  • quick tidy

Nothing intense. Just enough to keep the engine warm.

4. Soft stimulation helps me focus

Silence rarely works for my brain.

I usually put on:

  • cozy background music
  • a comfort YouTube video
  • brown noise
  • a comfort podcast

ADHD brains often need stimulation to focus, not less stimulation.

And once I stopped fighting that, life became much easier.


ADHD Evening Reset Routine

Evenings are where I either lovingly reset my life…….…or accidentally abandon all structure and eat toast at 1am while stress-scrolling. There’s rarely an in-between.  What helps most is reducing friction for Future Me.

Warm morning workspace with coffee, notebook, and peanut butter toast.

1. The “closing shift” reset

I pretend I’m closing a tiny cozy café.

That means:

  • dishes reset
  • surfaces cleared
  • chargers plugged in
  • tomorrow’s drink/snacks ready
  • emotional support water bottle refilled

Nothing fancy. Just making tomorrow feel softer.

adhd finds loved by lou home page. cozy living inspiration

2. I prepare for low executive function mornings

Because realistically, not every morning starts strong.

So evening me tries to help morning me by:

  • laying clothes out
  • putting essentials in one visible place
  • pre-writing my top 3 tasks
  • setting out meds beside water
  • ADHD-friendly routines work best when they reduce decisions.

3. A “minimum version” counts

This is the biggest thing I’ve learned.  A reset routine does not need to be completed perfectly to still help.

Sometimes my evening reset is:

  • wash face
  • put rubbish in bin
  • plug phone in
  • survive

And honestly? That still counts.


When Everything’s Slipped: My ADHD Life Reset

You know those moments where:

  • the laundry mountain becomes sentient
  • you’ve ignored emails for days
  • your sleep schedule has left the chat
  • every task feels emotionally expensive

That’s usually my sign that I need an ADHD reset day.

Not a punishment reset.
Not a “fix your life” reset.

Just a gentle return.

Here’s what I focus on first:

1. Basics before productivity

Before I even think about catching up, I ask:

  • have I eaten?
  • have I had water?
  • have I showered recently?
  • have I slept?
  • do I need meds?

ADHD burnout often disguises itself as laziness when really your nervous system is overloaded.

Cozy journal lighting cup of tea on the journal says am i burnt out

2. I stop trying to fix everything at once

This part is hard. Because ADHD brains love urgency and “new life starting NOW” energy, but trying to overhaul your entire life in one afternoon usually ends in overwhelm.

Instead, I pick:

  • one room
  • one task
  • one reset point

Tiny momentum is still momentum.

3. I make the space feel safe again

Sometimes I light a candle.
Sometimes I change my bedsheets.
Sometimes I put on soft lighting and tidy for ten minutes.

Not because aesthetics magically cure ADHD — but because cozy environments genuinely help me regulate.  Your environment matters more than people think.

FINAL THOUGHT: ADHD Routines Don’t Need To Look Perfect!

I used to think routines only counted if they were:

  • consistent
  • aesthetic
  • productive
  • done properly every single day

But ADHD routines are often cyclical, flexible, and deeply dependent on energy levels.

The goal isn’t perfection.

The goal is creating gentle systems that help you return to yourself more easily.

Some days my reset routine is beautifully organised.
Other days it’s just brushing my teeth and answering one email.

Both are valid.

Both are progress.

And if everything feels messy right now, this is your reminder that you’re allowed to restart softly.

AS MANY TIMES AS YOU NEED!

 
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