A softly lit desk scene with an untouched to-do list, coffee going cold, and a phone with reminders open. Text overlay: “It’s not that I don’t want to start — it’s that my brain can’t decide where to begin.”

If you’ve ever sat staring at a task knowing you need to do it… but still not being able to start it, welcome to ADHD mum life.

This is task paralysis.

And if I’m honest, it’s one of the most frustrating parts of having ADHD as a mum.

Because from the outside, it can look like nothing is happening.

But inside your head? Everything is happening at once.

What task paralysis actually feels like

Task paralysis isn’t laziness.

It’s not not caring.

It’s not “just get on with it.”

It’s more like your brain opening every possible option at the same time and refusing to pick one.

You want to start.

You intend to start.

But your brain just… stalls.

And you sit there thinking:

  • Where do I even begin?
  • What if I start the wrong thing?
  • What if I forget something else while doing this?
  • What if I don’t have enough time?

So instead of starting, you freeze.

ADHD mum life and the pressure to do everything at once

As mums, there’s rarely just one thing needing attention.

There’s usually:

  • washing
  • meals
  • messages
  • appointments
  • work
  • kids needs
  • household admin
  • random things you suddenly remember mid-task

So when your brain tries to pick one task, it doesn’t feel simple.

It feels like choosing against all the other tasks.

And that pressure can stop you completely.

The guilt cycle

Task paralysis often comes with a heavy layer of guilt.

You’re sitting there thinking:
“I should be doing something.”
“Why can’t I just start?”
“Everyone else would have done this by now.”

But the more you pressure yourself, the harder it becomes to move.

So you stay stuck.

Not because you don’t care — but because your brain is overwhelmed.

Why your brain does this

ADHD brains don’t always struggle with motivation.

They struggle with activation.

That first step.

That starting point.

When a task feels big, unclear, or has too many steps, your brain can’t easily decide where the “entry point” is.

So instead of choosing wrong, it chooses nothing.

What it looks like in real life

Task paralysis doesn’t always look dramatic.

Sometimes it looks like:

  • sitting on your phone instead of starting
  • pacing around the kitchen but not doing anything
  • opening multiple tabs or lists but not committing to one
  • starting something small and abandoning it halfway
  • feeling mentally “stuck” while physically doing nothing

And afterwards, you’re left feeling frustrated with yourself.

What actually helps (not perfectly, just realistically)

te’ve learned that getting out of task paralysis isn’t about motivation.

It’s about lowering the pressure to start perfectly.

A few things that help me:

  • choosing the smallest possible first step
  • writing the first step down instead of the full task
  • using timers (just 5–10 minutes)
  • physically changing location (even just standing up)
  • reminding myself I don’t have to finish, just start

The goal isn’t productivity.

The goal is movement.

Even tiny movement counts.

Looking for More Support?

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