Journaling can be a powerful tool for managing ADHD. Here’s how to make it work for you.

Why Journaling Helps

For ADHD brains, journaling provides:

  • External brain storage - get thoughts out of your head
  • Pattern recognition - see trends over time
  • Emotional regulation - process feelings on paper
  • Accountability - track commitments and progress

The 5-Minute Journal Method

Morning Prompts

  1. I’m grateful for…
  2. What would make today great…
  3. Daily affirmation: I am…

Evening Prompts

  1. What did I accomplish today…
  2. How could I have made today better…
  3. What am I looking forward to tomorrow…

Bullet Journaling for ADHD

The bullet journal system works particularly well for ADHD:

## Key Components

• Tasks - Use bullets
✦ Events - Use circles
- Notes - Use dashes

## Collections

- Monthly spreads
- Habit trackers
- Brain dumps
- Project planners

Quick Brain Dump Technique

When your mind is too full:

func brainDump() -> [String] {
    // Just write everything without editing
    // Separate concerns later
    var thoughts = [
        "call mom",
        "project deadline thursday",
        "forgot to email John",
        "need groceries",
        "thinking about vacation",
        "that weird pain in my shoulder"
    ]
    return thoughts
}

Weekly Review Structure

  1. Review yesterday - What worked? What didn’t?
  2. Check active projects - What’s stuck? What’s moving?
  3. Look at calendar - What’s coming up?
  4. Process inbox - Emails, papers, digital files
  5. Plan tomorrow - Top 3 priorities

Journal and pen

“A journal is just a trusted friend who never judges and always listens.”

Start with just 5 minutes a day. Consistency beats depth.