I’m in the process of trialling coping skills to help me meet the demands of every day maintenance and upkeep of my flat, as that’s what I’m struggling with the most in terms of my functioning at the moment.
So far I have tried:
- Tidy one thing a day
- This helps because I’m not trying to pretend to myself that I don’t have to tidy at all, but also doesn’t require too much of myself. This is especially useful when my capacity for this demand is very low, as one thing refers to literally one single item. One item in the bin, back in it’s place, one dish in the sink, just one, and I’m done.
- Support sessions
- I’ve used support sessions with staff to get these tasks done. I don’t love this, because it feels like it’s leveraging that I struggle to feel safe to avoid tasks in the presence of other people. It is possible though that it also helps because it provides body doubling, which feels more positive.
I’m currently trying:
- Just do five minutes
- This is something I’ve started using now my capacity for the demand of housekeeping has increased a little. It involves setting a timer for five minutes, and working on a care task. You have permission to stop after the time is up if you want to, but if you got into the flow of the task, you keep going. I find five minutes is a time that I can handle, it’s a time frame I can easily conceptualise and imagine reaching the end of. It makes the task feel finite and thus achievable, as I know I can stop.
- KC Davis’s five things method for tidying
- This is most useful for ADHD executive dysfunction. She breaks the task of tidying a room into five categories: rubbish, dishes, laundry, things that have a place and things that do not have a place. This prevents me from looking at a room and just seeing ‘Mess!’ where I can’t work out what to do, and in what order.
- Keeping laundry in bags for life, rather than putting them away in drawers
- For a long time, I had been keeping my clean laundry in the bags that I took it down to the laundry in, and then leaving them in my living room. This was the cause of so much clutter, so I needed a better system that still worked for me. One thing KC emphasises is rethinking the ‘rules’ of laundry, and I found that moving all the bags I use into my bedroom, giving each a category of clothing and using one for actually doing laundry creates a system that works for me.
Things to try:
- From KC Davies:
- Using music to aid transitioning to a task
- Doing jobs partially, giving yourself permission to start
- Using the wait time e.g. time to boil a kettle, to work on a task
- Closing duties: a short list of tasks to make the next day easier
- Role play
- This is frequently listed as a coping strategy that PDAers make use of, but one that I am not in the habit of using. Having realised my PDA identity, it’s very tempting to explore this and see if it helps me. A common role play is one of being filmed performing care tasks. I think I would role play that I am a carer for someone else perhaps.
- Telling myself to ‘do the opposite’ so the PDA brain says ‘No I will do it’
- Reminding myself I can change my mind and stop when I want to
- Distracting my thoughts from the demand
- Making a list, and avoiding it with other tasks
- Limiting the demands I meet each day
- Adding novelty to the demand
- First, then
- Immediacy