
🌬️ MINDFULNESS
“Mindfulness isn’t difficult, we just need to remember to do it.” – Sharon Salzberg
Mindfulness is the moment you remember you’re here—not in the past you’re replaying or the future you’re fearing, but this breath, this step, this now. For ADHDers, whose minds often leap, race, spiral, and scatter, mindfulness can feel like a miracle. Not because it fixes everything—but because it creates space.
In the ADHD terrain, being present is no small task. We get pulled by distractions, hijacked by emotions, or caught in the rapid-fire swirl of thoughts. But mindfulness isn’t about silencing the noise. It’s about noticing it—without judgment. It’s choosing to witness your experience rather than get swallowed by it.
Living this value means making room for stillness in a world (and brain) that rarely stops. It’s finding small rituals of grounding—whether through breath, movement, nature, or sensory check-ins. It’s building awareness of what’s happening inside before reacting outside.
Mindfulness helps regulate emotion, strengthen attention, and soften shame. It gives ADHDers the pause between impulse and intention. And in that pause, we regain our power to choose what matters most.
🧭 The HOPE Trail Map
- Helps or Harms: Am I reacting automatically—or responding with awareness?
- Own My Values: I want to be someone who returns to the present, even if I’ve drifted a thousand times.
- People and Pursuits: Who helps me feel grounded? What activities or environments help me stay connected to the now?
- Enact and Evaluate: Today, I’ll take one mindful pause—a breath, a stretch, a moment to see rather than speed through.
⚠️ Trail Challenges
- ADHD brains crave stimulation and may resist stillness.
- Perfectionism can turn mindfulness into another task to “master.”
- Self-judgment may arise when the mind inevitably wanders.
🪧 Trail Markers: Small Steps Toward Mindfulness
- Do a 3-2-1 check-in: 3 things you see, 2 you hear, 1 you feel.
- Set a cue (e.g., red light, sip of tea) as a reminder to return to your breath.
- Repeat a grounding mantra: “This moment is enough.”
🔥 Campfire Questions for Reflection
- What does presence feel like in my body?
- How might a little more mindfulness shift how I relate to chaos or emotion?
- What’s one daily moment I could turn into a mindful ritual?
Mindfulness is not escaping the storm—it’s learning to stand in it with awareness, and maybe even wonder. For ADHDers, that awareness becomes the bridge back to choice.