Micro-Task Breakdown
ADHD task paralysis is not laziness and it is not a motivation problem. When your brain sees a large or emotionally loaded task, it reads it as a threat and shuts down initiation. The task does not feel hard. It feels shapeless. You cannot start something you cannot define.
This protocol breaks that pattern. You are not making a plan. You are shrinking the task until your nervous system can execute a single first move: a noun you can touch and a 10-second verb that creates contact with it. That is the whole method.
Write the name of the task you are avoiding. Use whatever label your brain has been repeating. Do not solve it yet. Do not break it down. Just name it and put it outside your head.
Why: vague project labels overload working memory and trigger avoidance. Naming it makes it finite.
Forget the verb. Pick one physical object involved in the task, something that actually exists in your space. One concrete noun collapses an infinite project into something your brain can locate.
Rule: if you cannot touch it, it is not the noun.
One tiny physical movement that touches the noun. Not progress. Not completion. Contact. You are breaking static friction, not finishing anything.
If it takes longer than 10 seconds, shrink it again.
You are allowed, actually required, to stop after the 10-second verb. You can do a second step if it feels cheap, but you are not negotiating with yourself about it.
Starting is the win. ADHD executive dysfunction is a starting problem, not a finishing problem. Momentum comes after contact.
Blob: “Do my taxes.”
Noun: Laptop.
10-second verb: Open the laptop and plug it in.
Stop point: You can stop after plugging it in. You already changed states. That matters.
Blob: “Respond to that email.”
Noun: Inbox tab.
10-second verb: Click Reply and type: “Hi, thanks for this.”
Stop point: Save as draft and walk away. You started. That is real progress.
Blob: “Start the paper.”
Noun: Document file.
10-second verb: Open the doc and type the worst possible heading.
A bad heading counts. It creates contact. You can fix the heading later. That is a different task.
Use when: you cannot even pick a noun.
Goal: prove that movement is possible, not that progress is happening.
Use when: attention will not stick to the task at all.
Goal: borrow another nervous system as an anchor.
Use when: your space keeps pulling you into side quests.
The timer is the boundary. You are practicing stopping, not chasing completion.
Movement generates momentum. Momentum makes the next step cheaper. You are not trying to finish the project. You are trying to break static friction. ADHD brains that learn to start small consistently do more than brains still waiting to feel ready.
If you cannot start, shrink it until it sounds stupid.
Stupid small is executable. Executable creates momentum. That is how ADHD brains get things done.
Printable Worksheet
One-page version of the Task Atomizer and practice grid. Print it and put it somewhere you will actually see it.
Download the one-page Micro-Task Breakdown worksheet (PDF)
4.1: Mechanisms and Evidence
Click to expand
Why naming and shrinking works: tasks perceived as complex schemas can exceed working-memory capacity, increasing avoidance. Reducing complexity supports initiation by lowering cognitive load, especially relevant for ADHD, where working memory deficits are well-documented.
Cognitive Load Theory overview, grounded in Sweller’s foundational work (1988)Why the 10-second verb works: working memory has hard limits. Shrinking a task to one concrete physical action reduces what must be held in mind at once, which directly supports follow-through in executive function impairment.
The Magical Number Seven, Plus or Minus Two. Miller (1956)Why starting feels expensive: task-switching research shows measurable “switch costs,” the cognitive tax of moving between states. Smaller steps reduce the cost of transitioning from “not working” to “working,” which is where ADHD task initiation breaks down.
Task Switching. Monsell (2003)Why tiny wins reinforce action: ADHD involves dysregulation of dopaminergic reward pathways. Small completions can activate reward prediction signals, increasing the likelihood of continued action, which is why the stop rule matters as much as the start rule.
Dopamine reward prediction-error signalling. Schultz (2015), Physiological Reviews (PMC)Why another person’s presence helps: social facilitation research shows performance changes with the mere presence of others. For ADHD, body doubling appears to support task initiation and sustained attention by providing external structure when internal regulation is insufficient.
Social Facilitation. Zajonc (1965), Science