On the ADHD pain from procrastination

The bane of my life, and probably your life too....

ADHD Coaching

Clients see real wins in weeks - focus develops, goals stick, success grows

Laziness
Written by
Andrew Lewis
ADHD Business Coach with 16,000+ hours of ADHD coaching experience
(extracts from my January and December 2011 Newsletters)

Newsletter January 2011

Hello, it’s been a while!

I could pretend that it was always my intention to produce an occasional newsletter but the reality is that I always planned to produce a monthly newsletter. The dark forces of procrastination have triumphed over the last months, winning the battle against my desire to write the newsletter – procrastination is not pleasant, not satisfying and not at all enjoyable. Avoiding a task makes me feel like there is a dark cloud always hovering over my head, the “must get it done soon cloud”.

Grey clouds

I think all adults with ADHD have experienced this cloud or more likely many of these clouds hovering over their heads most, if not all of the time. We procrastinate, we distract ourselves, we delay, we make excuses even when we know the task needs to be done, we know why it should, we know how to do it yet we still cannot convince ourselves to start.

Bizarrely we procrastinate over enjoyable tasks too, I quite enjoy writing these newsletters, it’s really not so bad as I type up this paragraph, one eye on the TV!

So I really do not know why it has taken me six months to get back on task, I know my perfectionism and my ADHD impacted time-sense are the likely culprits.

We can intellectually appreciate the value and point in taking action but still fail to do so. So as I write this I will keep saying to myself: “writing is enjoyable”, “it’s easy”, “this is rewarding” and hopefully this month, January, I will banish my “dark clouds” and deliver my next newsletter on time!

Newsletter December 2011

Hello, it’s been awhile!

I started the year off in the January Newsletter discussing procrastination. This December Newsletter is the first monthly newsletter since then! I have certainly managed to demonstrate my own ADHD strengths of avoidance, distraction, overwhelm, general multi-plate spinning and occasional plate dropping!

I began writing this “monthly” newsletter on several prior occasions over the course of this year, each time hopefully changing the month in the title and over-writing the previous failed attempt. A fair proportion of what I had already written then had to be deleted as it had already become out of date and irrelevant. I would then start to write new material, only to be distracted again onto other more important/interesting tasks instead.

I don’t like being lazy

Life as a lazy procrastinator can be very disappointing and unfulfilling. I loathe the word lazy, it implies we choose or even want to procrastinate, that somehow we find pleasure in avoidance. So not true, sure it can be fleetingly more engaging to watch TV or browse the net, but long term it is far, far more miserable and unrewarding being lazy, than ever it is being productive!
Share this post

Andrew Lewis is an Adult ADHD Coach, writer and founder of SimplyWellbeing. He has over 16,000 hours of experience in coaching over 600 adults with ADHD. Andrew helps entrepreneurs and creatives with ADHD thrive and achieve wellbeing and is always happy to have a free chat to discuss coaching. Andrew ran a major ADHD support group and even an ADHD diagnostic clinic for a while. Andrew is an adult ADHD Coach backed with business expertise from a twenty years career in software, from roles in programming, through marketing, sales at IBM, then to running a few software start-ups.

Read more about Andrew

Facebook . Instagram . X . LinkedIn . YouTube - Pinterest

Acceptance of ADHD is painful
Why does ADHD draw more controversy than any other neurodiversity label?
Three tools for ADHD
Simple planning without a diary or to-do list
ADHD and addictions
If we are ADHD we are at great risk of addiction, and it's not surprising
Talk about your ADHD future
If we don’t dream, we don’t hope, change or make progress, so “talk about tomorrow”.
Integrated Model of ADHD video
Here is a video giving my more integrated, experienced based perspective of ADHD
ADHD is not so different
Just because research is weak doesn't mean the evidence isn't abundant.
ADHD rebel
Genetically programmed to fight the system
Pat on your ADHD Back
As self-critical, problem solvers our ADHD focus tends towards faults and problems. Recognise your successes.
ADHD Brain waves
ADHD differences are not only about dopamine but about different electrical signalling too
Hyperfocused wolf
Deep yet uncontrolled focus
ADHD means starting over and over
If ADHD we find it even harder to maintain habits than to start them
Association of Coaching
SimplyWellbeing ADHD Coaching logo
Copyright © 2026 SimplyWellbeing

Website designed, written and created by Andrew Lewis, using Wordpress and Oxygen

49 Station Road, Polegate, East Sussex, BN26 6EA, United Kingdom

Association of Coaching
linkedin facebook pinterest youtube rss twitter instagram facebook-blank rss-blank linkedin-blank pinterest youtube twitter instagram