ADHD with Jenna Free

EP. 40: Why Long-Term Goals Feel Impossible with ADHD (And How to Change That) | ADHD with Jenna Free

Dec 29, 2025
Long-term goals often feel impossible due to pursuing them from a dysregulated survival state. Urgency, shame, and fear lead to sprint motivation, creating burnout and anxiety. Jenna illustrates this with a bear versus berry-picking metaphor, highlighting the need for calm, steady focus. She emphasizes the importance of regulated motivation for sustainable growth. By sharing her own experience, Jenna shows how consistent, present-focused efforts yield better results. A practical tip encourages shifting from urgency to enjoying small tasks.
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INSIGHT

Survival State Makes Goals Feel Impossible

  • Pursuing goals from a survival state makes long-term projects feel impossible and exhausting.
  • Survival motivation relies on urgency, shame, fear, and guilt which can't sustain multi-month or multi-year efforts.
INSIGHT

Primal Nervous System Misreads Modern Stress

  • The nervous system treats modern stress like primal danger, misfiring on emails and deadlines as if a bear is chasing you.
  • That sprint energy is designed for short bursts, not for steady long-term pursuits like careers or health.
INSIGHT

Berry-Picking Beats Sprinting For Big Goals

  • Meaningful goals require a forager mindset of steady, sustainable energy rather than frantic sprinting.
  • Using sprint energy to 'pick berries' burns you out before you accumulate enough progress.
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