If you have ADHD, you may find yourself constantly playing catch-up on commitments—forgetting promises made in a flurry of good intentions.
Promises made in the car, at a networking lunch, in a Zoom chat, or even running into someone at Target, all exist in separate universes—voice memos, post-its, texts—but rarely make it into your actual task system.
This isn’t just about a single “dropped ball.” It’s juggling 17 balls in six places with zero strategy—a hallmark of ADHD’s impact on executive function. And these follow-up fumbles aren’t just inconvenient; they can chip away at your credibility and your self-trust.
Six Reasons Why ADHD Brains Fumble on Follow-Throughs
Fixing the Fumbles: The 3 Stage Follow-Through Filter
Stage 1: Before You Promise—Hit Pause
Stop defaulting to “Yes.” Try the 3-second rule: pause and ask yourself, “Can I do this in the next two minutes, or do I need a system?” If not, set a realistic timeline and use a pre-memorized script to acknowledge the request and buy yourself time (“Let me check my bandwidth and follow up by Friday”). This small delay protects you from impulsive overcommitment. Episode #297 is all about ADHD overcompensating, so check it out here.
Stage 2: During—Context-Specific Capture Systems
Don’t rely on a single capture tool. Customize your approach for the context:
Stage 2.5: Consolidation Ritual
This is the missing link: a daily download. Set aside 10–15 minutes to process all those voice notes, texts, chat exports, and handwritten scribbles. Move tasks to your main management system. Out of sight means out of mind—make sure everything lands where you’ll see it.
Stage 3: After—Clarify and Reality-Check Commitments
Review: Is the task “in scope,” or are you picking up unneeded extras? Can you delegate? What’s the minimum viable follow-up? Set realistic deadlines and buffer time; use a timer to limit over-investment.
When (Not If) You Fumble: Damage Control
Nobody gets it perfect. When you drop the ball, acknowledge it fast—“I promised that resource and spaced. Here it is.” Skip the drama and excuses, don’t mention your ADHD, just deliver and move forward.
Follow-Through Builds Reputation—and Self-Trust
Your professional reputation and personal confidence aren’t built on intentions—they’re built on consistent, visible follow-through. The good news? With systems tailored for ADHD brains, you can turn scattered promises into completed commitments.
About the Host:
Diann Wingert (she/her) is a seasoned coach, consultant, and the creator/host of ADHD-ish. Drawing from her many years of experience as a former psychotherapist, serial business owner, and someone who thinks "outside the box," Diann is known for her straight-talking, no-nonsense approach to the intersection of neurodiversity and business ownership.
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© 2026 ADHD-ish Podcast. Intro music by Ishan Dincer / Melody Loops / Outro music by Vladimir / Bobi Music / All rights reserved.