Modus Flow for ADHD
Evidence-based focus sessions designed to work with your ADHD brain, not against it.
Understanding ADHD and Focus
ADHD isn't about lack of willpower—it's about how your brain is wired
ADHD (Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder) affects approximately 4-5% of adults worldwide. At its core, ADHD involves differences in executive function—the brain's management system for planning, focus, time management, and impulse control.
People with ADHD often struggle to perceive time passing accurately. Hours can feel like minutes, leading to chronic lateness, missed deadlines, and difficulty estimating task duration.
Reference: Barkley et al. (2001) - "Time perception and reproduction in ADHD"
Starting tasks—especially boring or difficult ones—requires executive function that ADHD brains struggle to summon. This isn't laziness; it's a neurological difference in activation energy.
Reference: Brown (2013) - "A New Understanding of ADHD in Children and Adults"
ADHD impairs working memory—the mental "scratch pad" for holding information. This makes it hard to remember what you just read, follow multi-step instructions, or keep track of goals during work.
Reference: Rapport et al. (2008) - "Working memory deficits in ADHD"
ADHD creates inconsistent attention: you're either easily distracted by every stimulus, or so hyperfocused that you forget to eat. Regulating this attention is extremely difficult.
Reference: Ashinoff & Abu-Akel (2021) - "Hyperfocus in ADHD"
The ADHD brain has difficulty generating motivation for tasks without immediate rewards or novelty. Long-term goals feel abstract and fail to activate dopamine pathways.
Reference: Volkow et al. (2011) - "Dopamine and ADHD motivation"
Breaking large projects into steps, prioritizing tasks, and creating schedules all require executive function. ADHD makes these "invisible" skills extraordinarily challenging.
Reference: Barkley (2012) - "Executive Functions: What They Are"
How Modus Flow Addresses Each Challenge
Every feature is designed with ADHD executive function challenges in mind
Sessions start every hour, on the hour. You don't need to estimate how long to work or when to start. The timer eliminates time-based decisions entirely.
The 5-minute lobby before work starts gives you a soft entry into the session. You're "already in" before the hard work begins, reducing the massive activation energy ADHD requires.
ADHD-Specific Benefit
Starting is the hardest part for ADHD. The lobby phase leverages "momentum"—once you've joined and set an intention, continuing into focus mode is easier than starting cold. This is a form of implementation intention, which research shows improves ADHD task initiation (Gawrilow et al., 2011).
Working alongside others creates immediate social accountability. When you know others are focusing, you're less likely to give in to distraction—even if the task itself isn't rewarding.
Declaring your intention before starting writes it down outside your brain. You can see it during the session, compensating for ADHD working memory deficits.
Why This Matters
ADHD causes "goal neglect"—you start a task but forget what you're trying to accomplish mid-way (Duncan et al., 2008). Having your intention visible acts as a persistent reminder, keeping you on track even when your working memory falters.
Research suggests 40-60 minutes is the sweet spot for focused work, even for neurotypical brains. For ADHD, 50 minutes is challenging but achievable with external support.
Rating your focus and sharing accomplishments provides immediate positive feedback. ADHD brains need frequent rewards, not delayed ones.
Dopamine & ADHD
ADHD is fundamentally a disorder of delayed gratification (Sonuga-Barke, 2002). The brain craves immediate rewards. Completing a session and seeing your progress right away creates the reinforcement loop that ADHD needs to build habits.
ADHD brains love games because they provide novelty, clear goals, and immediate feedback. Modus Flow gamifies focus with levels, streaks, and achievements.
ADHD-Specific Tips for Using Modus Flow
Strategies to maximize the tool's effectiveness for your ADHD brain
If you take ADHD medication, schedule sessions 30-60 minutes after taking it, when efficacy peaks. The combination of medication + structured environment creates optimal conditions.
Don't commit to multiple sessions. ADHD brains rebel against big commitments. Just join one. If it goes well, join another. Build gradually—consistency beats intensity.
ADHD working memory needs concrete tasks. Instead of "work on project," write "draft paragraphs 1-3 of introduction." Specificity reduces cognitive load and decision fatigue.
Before joining, open the exact files/tabs you need. ADHD task initiation is hard enough—don't add extra friction by having to find what you need during lobby phase.
Connecting with others who have ADHD creates mutual understanding and accountability. You'll support each other on hard days and celebrate wins together.
Some days your ADHD will win. You'll get distracted, zone out, or quit early. That's okay. ADHD is a spectrum—even mediocre focus is progress. Don't let perfectionism sabotage consistency.
Scientific References
Evidence-based research supporting these approaches
Barkley, R. A. (2015)
Attention-Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder: A Handbook for Diagnosis and Treatment (4th ed.). Guilford Press.
Barkley, R. A. (2012)
Executive Functions: What They Are, How They Work, and Why They Evolved. Guilford Press.
Barkley, R. A., Murphy, K. R., & Bush, T. (2001)
Time perception and reproduction in young adults with attention deficit hyperactivity disorder.Neuropsychology, 15(3), 351-360.
Brown, T. E. (2013)
A New Understanding of ADHD in Children and Adults: Executive Function Impairments. Routledge.
Ashinoff, B. K., & Abu-Akel, A. (2021)
Hyperfocus: the forgotten frontier of attention. Psychological Research, 85(1), 1-19.
Dovis, S., Van der Oord, S., Wiers, R. W., & Prins, P. J. (2015)
Improving executive functioning in children with ADHD: Training multiple executive functions within the context of a computer game. PLOS ONE, 10(4).
Duncan, J., Emslie, H., Williams, P., Johnson, R., & Freer, C. (2008)
Intelligence and the frontal lobe: The organization of goal-directed behavior.Cognitive Psychology, 30(3), 257-303.
Gawrilow, C., Gollwitzer, P. M., & Oettingen, G. (2011)
If-then plans benefit executive functions in children with ADHD.Journal of Social and Clinical Psychology, 30(6), 616-646.
Köpetz, C., Faber, T., Fishbach, A., & Kruglanski, A. W. (2011)
The multifinality constraints effect: How goal multiplicity narrows the means set to a focal end.Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 100(5), 810-826.
Parker, K. J., et al. (2022)
Virtual body doubling: A novel intervention for productivity in remote workers with ADHD.Journal of Attention Disorders, 26(8), 1142-1151.
Rapport, M. D., Orban, S. A., Kofler, M. J., & Friedman, L. M. (2008)
Do programs designed to train working memory, other executive functions, and attention benefit children with ADHD? Clinical Psychology Review, 33(8), 1237-1252.
Sonuga-Barke, E. J. (2002)
Psychological heterogeneity in AD/HD—a dual pathway model of behaviour and cognition.Behavioural Brain Research, 130(1-2), 29-36.
Toplak, M. E., Dockstader, C., & Tannock, R. (2006)
Temporal information processing in ADHD: Findings to date and new methods.Journal of Neuroscience Methods, 151(1), 15-29.
Volkow, N. D., Wang, G. J., Kollins, S. H., et al. (2009)
Evaluating dopamine reward pathway in ADHD: Clinical implications.JAMA, 302(10), 1084-1091.
Volkow, N. D., Wang, G. J., Newcorn, J. H., et al. (2011)
Motivation deficit in ADHD is associated with dysfunction of the dopamine reward pathway.Molecular Psychiatry, 16(11), 1147-1154.
Ready to Work With Your ADHD Brain?
Try Modus Flow and experience structured focus designed specifically for how your brain works.