Blog Archive for Jeff Levine
When your phone is your business, “just put it away” isn’t realistic. But constant access can quietly destroy focus—especially for ADHD brains wired for novelty. In this personal reflection, an ADHD coach shares how late-night and early-morning doom scrolling was hijacking his attention and nervous system, and how one surprisingly simple change—a smart watch alarm—created friction that protected his focus without disconnecting him from work.
Late-night doom scrolling isn’t really about the phone—it’s about exhaustion, unfinished tasks, and an ADHD brain searching for relief. When the day feels overwhelming and nothing feels complete, endless scrolling offers easy stimulation without expectations. This post explores why burnout and ADHD make nighttime scrolling so common, and how small daytime shifts—like visible task completion and planned endings—can help your brain finally power down instead of staying stuck in the scroll.
Doom scrolling doesn’t calm anxiety—it intensifies it. For ADHD brains, scrolling can become a regulation loop where fear sharpens focus and activation gets mistaken for relief. By the time you want to stop, executive function is already offline. This post explains why restriction alone fails and why the real solution is sequence: regulate your nervous system first, then redirect the behavior. It’s not a discipline problem—it’s a regulation one.
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.