Why Micro-Steps Work for ADHD Brains
ADHD task paralysis happens when your brain sees a task as too big or ambiguous, causing a dopamine freeze. Breaking it into 2-minute micro-steps bypasses this freeze response — each tiny step feels achievable, triggering a small dopamine reward that builds momentum.
This ADHD tool uses 8 pre-built task templates (cleaning, email, laundry, assignments, cooking, and more) plus smart generic breakdowns for any custom task. Each step comes with a visual timer to keep you on track.
How to Use This ADHD Task Starter
- Pick a task you're avoiding (or type your own)
- Get instant 5-step breakdown with 2-minute timers
- Start the first step — just 2 minutes, that's it
- Complete each step or skip ones that don't apply
- Share your win or start another task
- Combine with Focus Timer for longer sessions
❓ FAQ
How does breaking tasks into micro-steps help ADHD?
ADHD brains struggle with task initiation because the full task feels overwhelming. Breaking it into 2-minute steps makes each piece feel achievable, triggering dopamine with each completion and building natural momentum.
Why 2 minutes per step?
Two minutes is short enough to feel non-threatening but long enough to make real progress. It's the sweet spot for ADHD brains — long enough to trigger the Zeigarnik effect (wanting to continue), short enough to start without dread.
Is this free? Do I need to sign up?
Completely free, no sign-up, no data collection. Your progress is saved locally in your browser. Use it whenever task paralysis hits.
What if the steps don't match my situation?
The steps are designed to be universally applicable starting points. If a step doesn't fit, just skip it! The goal is forward momentum, not perfection. Even doing ONE step beats doing zero.