ADD ADHD Addessories

ADDessories, accessories for ADD ADHD

Quickest and Easiest ADD Planner

Written by ADDer 2 Comments

I’ve spent years trying to find the right planner to manage my ADD with. The right ADHD planner is tricky. It has to be featured enough to handle all the difficulties of planning with ADD, while not being something too easy to get lost in. Otherwise, your ADD planner just becomes one more thing that distracts you.

Easy ADD Planner for Quick Planning

Honestly, I’m starting to give up on the idea that I can manage my ADD life with a single planner. In order to handle everything, the planner ends up large and complex. Even worse, there typically is no good way for me to move things from long-term planning to short-term tasks, or to keep track of dreams and big plans, while at the same time ensuring that long-term necessities are not forgotten.

Sometimes you just need a really quick and easy way to plan for your ADHD life.

As someone who obsessively looks through the planners, journals, and notebooks every time I walk through an office supply store, bookstore, or stationary store, as well as browsing online stores, I think I may have finally found the easiest to use ADD planner.

Easiest ADD Planner

Obviously, the easiest ADD planner will, by virtue of being easy, leave out many overall planning needs. But, for a quick ADD planner that help keep track of your hectic life, this easy ADD planner is a great option.

Quickly optimize your week and to do list in one place with this easy planner.

This planner centers around a Weekly Planner page, which is typically my favorite way to handle tasks that need have specific date and time requirements like appointments and deadlines.

The weekly planning page has two columns, one with the traditional list of days of the week, and the second as a list style. Although it is preprinted with Goals, Priorities, and Notes as section headings, there is no reason you have to use them that way. Make a straight list, make notes about the following week, or whatever.

The best part is that as you finish each week, the page tears away. Transfer anything you need to the following week. Anything unimportant enough for you to not write on the following week goes away. It’s a self-cleaning planner.

On the facing page of the weekly planner are blank sheets that can be torn off separately from the planner pages. I like keeping my non-date specific lists over on this page. For example, I need to clean the gutters, but there is no reason that has to happen on Thursday, or even this week. So I can write it here, and if it takes a week or two to get around to it, I don’t feel the pressure of having written it on a specific date, but at the same time it doesn’t get lost in the shuffle.

Sticky Note Reminders and Bookmarks

Finally, the sticky notes are a goldmine for organization.

When closed, the planner has a plain, non-distracting cover, that is a great place to put a sticky note with info that you need front and center without opening the planner. Whether it’s a note to remember your badge, or grab your tickets, or whatever, it will be right there in your face.

You can also put notes right where you need them. A note on the fridge to remember to use the leftovers, or one on the bathroom mirror to remember to fast for your blood test in the morning.

The tiny notes can be used to bookmark important things in this planner, or in other books, or journals. They also make great don’t forget notes, with their bright colors and small footprint.

There aren’t very many sticky notes, but you can always stick a fresh stock in the empty place when you run out.

Easy ADD Planner Value

The other great thing is that this simple ADD planner is cheap, unlike that big Moleskine planner, or Franklin Covey thing that you bought and never used (or maybe used the heck out of making it too big and unwieldy to be your quick ADD planner.)

Let me know if you find success with my pick for easiest ADD planner, or let me know what you use for your own quick ADD planning.

Filed Under: ADD Organization Tips, ADHD News Tagged With: ADD Planner, Calendars, Organizers, Planner, Planners

ADHD ADD Planner Take 2

Written by ADDer 4 Comments

It’s not uncommon for everyone, whether they have ADHD or not to start the new year with a resolution to be more organized.  At the heart of that endeavor is often a new planner or organizer.  For people with ADD, ADHD planners have a special meaning often characterized by a love / hate relationship.

By mid-year, it has probably become very clear whether or not the planner you have is the right planner for ADD-ADHD symptoms of yours.  If not, this time of year is like New Years all over again for buying organizers, planners, and calendars.

ADD planner organizer ADHD

Mid-Year Planners, Calendars, and Organizers

Calendar and planner makers can’t live by selling their organizers just once a year.  So, they use a variety of strategies to boost sales.  There are 18-month planners that run from July to December of the following year.  That’s July 2020 to December 2021 this year. 

Then there are Academic planners, back to school planners, teacher’s planners and all other types of calendars and organizers filling the shelves at your local Target, Office Depot, Staples, Wal-mart, or other favorite store.

I print out blank month-view Google Calendar pages to fill in as a writing calendar.

So, if your planner can’t handle your ADD-ADHD needs, head out and take another look at planners now.  Keep in mind what ways your current planner has not worked out for you.

Do you need more room for notes?  Do you need longer days?  Do you need a Daily ADD Planner instead of a Weekly ADD planner?  Do you need better visibility for weekend days instead of them being tucked away in a corner?

Or, stop trying to make something not made specifically for those with ADHD and ADD and keep your eyes peeled to ADDessories for our upcoming customized ADD Planners and ADHD Organizers which should be ready soon!

Filed Under: ADD Organization Tips Tagged With: ADD Organization Tips, ADD Planner, adhd planner, Calendars, Organizers, Planners, Time Management

Updates Coming Soon

Written by ADDer Leave a Comment

I know this site has been a bit neglected as of late, but don’t worry, big things are coming. I mean BIG things.

Look for an updated ADD Organizer

A new ADD Planner (online, paper and offline)

And more…

Plus, more ADHD news, ADD tips and tricks, and all the good stuff we share with each other.

Filed Under: ADD Tools Tagged With: ADD, ADD News, ADD Organization Tips, ADD Planner, ADD Tips, ADD Tricks, ADD/ADHD, ADHD, ADHD Tips, Calendars, Organizers, Time Management

Organization With ADD Getting Started

Written by ADDer Leave a Comment

Whether you were just diagnosed with ADD / ADHD, or if you were diagnosed a long time ago, organization is an ongoing challenge. Knowing yourself and reading about your ADHD is a good start. Whether you are taking ADD medication, or trying some alternative ADD therapies, you know that medicine alone won’t change your organization and time management habits.

So, what will?

Fake It Until You Make It

If you are an adult with ADD, chances are that you have owned more than your fair share of planners, calendars and organizers in your life. You may have even looked for a specific planner for people with ADD. The truth is that an organizer or calendar is essential for time management and organization. Just because it hasn’t worked before doesn’t mean it never will.

ADD planner organizer ADHDIf you are successfully using an electronic organizer like your cell phone or Microsoft Outlook, or the like, then don’t mess with success. If it ain’t broke, don’t fix it.

On the other hand, if you are still struggling with ADD organization and time management, I recommend getting a physical, paper calendar, organizer, or just a notebook. The reason is that you are trying to change an established habit. The best way to do that is to do something new. If you aren’t used to carrying around a planner, then starting to do so, is something new.

The catch, as you probably know, is that it won’t take right away. You’ll forget your planner at home; you’ll leave it sitting on your desk. Even worse, you’ll write things in it and then forget all about it, or you’ll forget to write important things in it in the first place. It doesn’t matter. Keep at it.

New ADHD Organization Habits

They say it takes six weeks to turn something into a habit. I don’t know if that is a solid number, but I do know that it takes time. The trick to developing an organizer, calendar, planner habit is to keep trying to use it.

Start by taking it with you. Throw it in your work bag. Carry it out and set it on the front seat of your car. Take it into a restaurant. Bring it with you to meetings. First, you might be developing nothing more than the habit of having it with you, even if you forget to read it, or write in it. But, don’t worry, that is step one.

Once you have a habit of carrying it with you, you will slowly develop a habit of using it. Maybe it will be when you have forgotten all about it, but you need a piece of paper and realize, “Wait! I have my planner right here.”

Maybe, you’ll need to remember something, or find a piece of information, and you’ll realize that you have your planner with you, and the data you need is right at your fingertips.

The key is to keep taking it with you, even if you don’t use it. Do TRY and use it, but make your focus just having it with you.

Just today, I realized that I needed a website that I had looked at but forgot all about. As a shot in the dark, I flipped through my notebook (and noticed TONS of great stuff that I forgot about. Need to remember to pull this thing out more often.) There it was, a quick note about the website, and it’s address. It saved me tons of online searching and wasted time.

The best part is, that’s one reward for my unconscious brain about the value of my notebook organizer. Enough of those, and instead of subconsciously forgetting about it all of the time, I’ll start subconsciously remembering it.

BTW, my latest notebook (not calendar, just notebook) is a Miquelrius. It has the subject sections broken out not by tabs, but by colors at the edge of the sheets. Not that I don’t have 50 other types sitting on my shelf right now. Perhaps a blog post about all my empty, and just barely started notebooks is in order 🙂

add-notebook-miquelrius

Filed Under: ADHD-ADD Tips Tagged With: ADD, ADD Organization Tips, ADD Tips, add tools, ADD/ADHD, ADHD, adhd planner, ADHD Tips, adhd tools, Calendars, Organizers, Planners, Time Management

  • 1
  • 2
  • Next Page »

Welcome

Welcome to Addessories, your source for all things ADHD / ADD. Coming soon will be our products and accessories for adults and kids with attention deficit disorder. For now, you've found the best source for non-repetitive, non-conventional, non-standard, ADHD/ADD advice, tips, tricks, and tactics on the net.

Ads displayed on this site are not reviewed by, nor endorsed by ADDessories. Check your facts, do your research.

Best ADD-ADHD Info

ADD Planner

Vyvanse Review

Non-Prescription ADD-ADHD Treatments

Vyvanse Side Effects

Credit Karma Review

Other Info


Credit Check Total Scam

Wealthfront Reviews

Credit Karma Scam

Acorns Reviews

Digit Reviews

Latest on Addessories

  • Do One Thing – Overcoming ADHD Once
  • ADHD and AI
  • Adderall and Weight Loss
  • Progressive Procrastination and ADD
  • Why People With ADHD Are Messy
  • Vyvanse Side Effects in Plain English
  • ADHD Rabbit Holes

ADD Categories

  • ADD Books
  • ADD Humor ADHD
  • ADD Medication
  • ADD Organization Tips
  • ADD Tools
  • ADHD
  • ADHD News
  • ADHD Research Studies
  • ADHD Tips
  • ADHD Traits
  • ADHD-ADD Tips
  • News

Pages

  • About
  • ADHD – Basics
    • ADHD Prescription Medication List
  • ADHD Insurance Coverage FAQ
  • ADHD Tools Accessories for Life or ADDessories
  • How To Tell If You Have ADD ADHD
  • Prescription Information Sheets Side Effect Warnings In Plain English
  • Sitemap

Blogroll

  • Attention Deficit Disorder
  • Finance Education Encyclopedia
  • Mayo Clinic ADD Page

Top ADD Skills

Best ADHD Tips

Top ADD Organization Tips

© 2022 · Finance Gourmet by ArcticLlama, LLC