Time Blindness Coaching

Time blindness is the ADHD experience of time as a feeling rather than a fact—until the deadline hits. Coaches help you make time visible: timers that show it passing, calendars that externalise what your brain won’t hold, and buffers that turn near-misses into normal arrivals. Offline.now’s therapists and coaches know this isn’t a willpower problem.

Blog posts related to Students

Gaming addiction can sneak up fast when ADHD meets endless dopamine loops. This post explains why hyperfocus, impulsivity, and stress escape make controllers hard to drop, then guides you through a five-step recovery: track triggers, set play-windows, create tech-free zones, swap games for exercise, add mindful pauses, and recruit accountability. Learn the red flags, know when to call professionals, and reclaim balance without quitting play forever. Start mapping your patterns tonight.
Infinite feeds spike dopamine, so ADHD brains slip into scroll trances quickly. Log one week of triggers, noting app, emotion, and time. Next install app timers, mute non-urgent pings, and schedule two free focus blocks daily. Curate accounts and replace impulse swipes with sixty second pause or water break. End each day reviewing mood versus minutes to spot progress. Consistent tweaks reclaim attention, lift sleep quality, and prove social apps can serve you, not siphon energy.
Digital balance for college students is a survival skill. Buzzing phones split attention, hurt grades, and heighten anxiety. This guide delivers seven wins: audit screen time, declare tech free zones like library desks, batch notifications, run one screen study sessions, follow the 20-20-20 eye rule, try weekly social media fasts, and practice digital mindfulness before unlocking. Start with one tactic, track mood for a week, then layer another. Small, consistent tweaks beat heroic detox marathons.