Struggling with ADHD and Screen Time?
Welcome to Offline.Now! (Yes, we know we’re online.) Our goal is to help you understand your needs. Learn specific tips for ADHD to create digital balance.
No judgment. No spam. Just practical guidance, instantly.
Offline.now Self-Assessment
Find your Digital Balance
Welcome to Offline.Now - your place to create a healthy relationship with screens. We're here to actually make digital balance possible.
If you have ADHD, doom scrolling isn’t about laziness or poor discipline—it’s what happens when a novelty-seeking brain meets infinite scroll and threat-based content. This post breaks down why ADHD brains are especially vulnerable to doom scrolling, how anxiety can hijack attention, and why shame doesn’t work. Instead of “scroll less” advice, you’ll learn how to change the environment, add real stopping cues, and give your brain somewhere safe to land.
If you have ADHD, rest can feel strangely uncomfortable—even guilt-inducing. You may be exhausted, yet unable to stop, reaching for your phone instead of truly recharging. This isn’t laziness; it’s neurobiology. ADHD brains struggle to shift from “go mode” to rest, and digital scrolling often becomes a poor substitute for real recovery. This article reframes rest as a regulation strategy, offering gentle, science-backed recovery rituals for guilt-free downtime.
January planning can feel especially heavy if you have ADHD—big goals spark a burst of motivation, then quickly collapse into overwhelm and shame. This post reframes New Year planning through an ADHD-friendly lens, explaining why traditional resolutions fail and how tiny starts, visual rules, and time anchoring create momentum without pressure. Instead of chasing a “new you,” you’ll learn how to design systems that support your brain, reduce friction, and make progress feel possible again.
Winter can leave ADHD brains feeling “tired but wired”—exhausted, restless, and pulled toward constant stimulation. This post explains why shorter days, less movement, and more screen exposure intensify ADHD restlessness, and why it’s a nervous system response, not a discipline issue. With simple, regulating swaps like micro-movement, sensory anchors, and gentler evening light, you’ll learn how to clear the winter fog without spiraling into digital overload or self-blame.