My Daily Routine as a Stay-at-Home Mom with ADHD 

My Daily Routine as a Stay-at-Home Mom with ADHD 

A Realistic Daily Routine for Stay-at-Home Moms with ADHD (That Doesn’t Start at 5AM or Include a Color-Coded Planner) 

Hey love, 

Let’s just get honest for a sec—because no one talks about this enough. 

Most days, my “daily routine” as a stay-at-home mom with ADHD looks nothing like the ones you see on Pinterest. I don’t wake up before the kids to meditate and journal. I don’t meal prep quinoa bowls. And I definitely don’t fold laundry as soon as the dryer buzzes. 

What I do most days? 
I get stuck staring at a screen while my tea goes cold. 
I put off showering until someone rings the doorbell and I’m dodging windows. 
I forget to make dinner until the kids ask, “What’s for dinner?”—and I’m forced to hit up the same greasy takeout spot… again. 

Then, after the house finally winds down, I slip into that familiar nightly ritual: bedtime guilt and negative self-talk. 
Why didn’t I do more today? 
Why can’t I get it together like other moms? 
Why does this feel so hard? 

Here’s the truth no one tells you: ADHD makes time slippery. Tasks feel overwhelming. Starting anything can be a mountain. And when you’re juggling a household, tiny humans, and your own emotions—it’s a lot. 

But here’s what’s helped me: a bare-bones schedule. 
Not a rigid to-do list. Not a full hour-by-hour breakdown. 
Just a loose framework of “anchors” that bring consistency to my chaos. 

My Bare-Bones Schedule (On a Good-Enough Day) 

  • Wake Up: Sometime between the kids’ first stir and when they absolutely need to be dressed. 
  • Morning Anchor: Tea, one non-negotiable task (like brushing my teeth before noon), and a few minutes of quiet (even if it’s hiding in the bathroom). 
  • Midday Anchor: A simple lunch that’s not just the kids’ leftovers, and one focused 20-minute task (like throwing in a load of laundry or clearing a counter). 
  • Evening Anchor: A realistic dinner (frozen pizza counts!), kitchen reset (or just hiding the dirty dishes in the sink), and intentional screen-free time with my kids. 
  • Nighttime Anchor: 10 minutes of journaling or silence instead of spiraling in guilt. 

Why This Works for My ADHD Brain 

  • It’s flexible. I don’t have to “stick to the plan” because there’s no hour-by-hour plan to fall behind on. 
  • It’s forgiving. I’m not aiming for perfection—just rhythm. 
  • It honors my real energy levels. Some days I hit all four anchors. Some days I only hit one. That’s still a win. 

Having just a few consistent touchpoints throughout my day gives me a sense of control without the pressure to perform like a 1950s housewife in a modern world. Because let’s be real—I’m raising kids, not ironing socks. 

If You’re Nodding Along… 

If you’ve ever felt like your ADHD is writing your to-do list in invisible ink… 
If you’re tired of feeling like a failure before lunch… 
If you just want a realistic path forward— 

I made something just for you: 
🌱 The Clarity Kickstart 🌱 

It’s a simple, powerful way to clear the mental clutter, get honest about what matters to you, and create a flexible routine that actually fits your life (and your beautiful, nonlinear brain). 

You don’t need more hustle. You need clarity, compassion, and a rhythm that’s aligned with who you are. 

You in? 

With love and realness, 
Lynne

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