BOOK REVIEWS

Do It Tomorrow – Mark Forster

Book review

Some very ADHD-like advice in this awesome short book

Mark Forster offers advice on time management that is amazingly tuned to the traits of ADHD. It seems that Forster does not realise that many of the people with the disorganised issues he mentions are most likely ADHD – struggling with weak executive functions of poor motivation, planning and procrastination. It doesn’t matter though as Forster aims to help the “disorganised” take control of their working day and learn to achieve what they set out to.

Forster, a leading Life Coach, focuses on motivation to improve productivity, using experimentally validated techniques, such as: don’t wait to put in new systems until you’ve dealt with the backlog, you never will. He shoots down the two cornerstones of traditional time management, the “to do” list and prioritising by importance and urgency.

His belief is that we crave completion, to-do lists where we add new items all the time are “never completed”. Forster’s solution is to create a list of items to do tomorrow, and then draw a line under those items. If you complete everything above the line, you’ve succeeded. Things may arise during the day but they are added below the line and if possible take a lower priority than completing the items above the line, that you wrote yesterday.

Perfect for ADHD time management, put it on your list to buy tomorrow!

Buy on Amazon
ADHD Coach, Andrew Lewis

Andrew Lewis

Andrew Lewis is an ADHD Coach, writer and founder of SimplyWellbeing. He has over ten thousand hours and fifteen years of experience in coaching ADHD executives, business professionals and creatives. His expertise with ADHD is personal, with decades of his own experience, bringing up an ADHD child, running a large support group and in coaching clients often for years He has published his writing via this website and has ADHD online courses in development. His business expertise comes from a twenty years career in software, from programming, through marketing, sales and running a few start-ups.

Further reading

ADHD at work
A major resource for teachers, school professionals, parents and clinicians to help children with ADHD
ADHD at work
The first ADHD auto-biography, lots to relate to
ADHD at work
Many teachers enforce a no fiddle or fidget rule, yet these activities actually improve focus
ADHD at work
A guide to helping ADHD kids, though a little too focussed on "bad" behaviour
ADHD at work
A classic, a profound and helpful life guide. The New Psychology of love, Traditional Values and Spiritual Growth”., by M. Scott Peck, a former clinical psychiatrist who shares his insightful client experiences.
ADHD at work
Somewhat clinical perspective by a clinical psychologist but does have some helpful suggestions
SimplyWellbeing logo
Copyright © 2024 SimplyWellbeing
Website designed, written and created by Andrew Lewis, using Wordpress and Oxygen
49 Station Road, Polegate, East Sussex, BN26 6EA
Association of Coaching
linkedin facebook pinterest youtube rss twitter instagram facebook-blank rss-blank linkedin-blank pinterest youtube twitter instagram