The 5-Minute Procrastination Reset: A 5-Step Reset Built for ADHD Brains to Beat Procrastination, Stop Overthinking, and Stack Small Wins—One Micro Task at a Time
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3.0 • 1 Rating
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- $5.99
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- $5.99
Publisher Description
Break through procrastination in minutes with this ADHD-friendly reset method.
Stuck on simple tasks? Overwhelmed before you even begin? This ADHD-friendly method will help you take action—in just 5 minutes.
If you've ever stared at a to-do list while your brain screams "Not now!", you're not lazy—you're stuck. And if you have ADHD, you know that traditional productivity advice doesn't work. You don't need more discipline. You need a way to start.
The 5-Minute Procrastination Reset is a science-backed system designed specifically for ADHD brains. Built around five clear steps, this practical method helps you bypass mental resistance, shrink overwhelming tasks, and spark instant momentum—without guilt or pressure.
You'll learn how to:
• Recognize when you're stuck—and why
• Break down any task into small, actionable steps
• Use pre-written starter phrases to short-circuit overthinking
• Trigger motivation through immediate, brain-friendly rewards
• Recover from setbacks without spiraling
Whether you're trying to send an email, clean your space, or finish something you care about, this book gives you the tools to stop procrastinating and start moving—on your terms.
No fluff. No pressure. Just five minutes to get unstuck.
Perfect for adults with ADHD, or anyone who struggles to begin.
Customer Reviews
Too much repetition of the concepts
There is good information, but so much of it is buried under repeatedly saying things like: you may have read about ways to be more productive, or tried to do things that don't work for you because you're ADHD brain is wired differently. Over and over again with the your ADHD brain is different. I get it, I don't need that pointed out on every page. It's ironic that the ADHD brain has trouble focusing, then I have to focus out all the repetitive jargon to get to the pertinent information.
What I'm doing is taking a screen shot of pages that are pertinent to me, and making a folder in the iPhone notes app to essentially create a pamphlet for myself to use.