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#186 10 executive dysfunction tips and tricks to help people who hoard, whether we have ADHD or are neurodivergent or not - Hoarding Awareness Week 2025

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Manage episode 483088424 series 2903216
Content provided by That Hoarder. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by That Hoarder or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://ppacc.player.fm/legal.

For Hoarding Awareness Week 2025, I’m focusing on executive function - the brain’s control centre for planning, starting, and finishing tasks - and the small, practical hacks that can make a genuine difference for people who hoard, whether or not we have ADHD or are neurodivergent. I talk about real-life tips for breaking the overwhelm, managing perfectionism, building momentum, and overcoming shame, all with the aim of making progress sustainable and achievable in your day-to-day life. This episode is all about honest advice that actually works, whether you’re in the thick of it or just looking for a few smarter ways to approach this.

  • Hoarding Awareness Week 2025 and its theme: Hoarding & Executive Function
  • Recognition that executive function challenges impact both neurodivergent and neurotypical people
  • Executive Function and Hoarding
  • Previous podcast episodes relating to executive function, ADHD, and hoarding
  • Importance of using effective hacks and techniques, regardless of neurotype
  • Emphasis on finding what works personally for each listener
  • The Realities and Challenges of Tackling Hoarding
  • Overwhelm and daunting feelings about dehoarding
  • Breaking tasks into small, manageable parts
  • Focus on actionable, day-to-day strategies rather than long-term, rigid planning
  • Understanding Executive Function
  • Explanation of what executive function is (control centre for planning, focus, and impulse control)
  • Factors that can impair executive function (neurodivergence, mental health, stress, lack of sleep, etc.)
  • Universality of executive dysfunction - everyone struggles at times
  • Emotional Barriers: Perfectionism and Shame
  • The cycle of shame and self-blame in executive dysfunction and hoarding
  • Societal judgment around hoarding, and its paralysing effects
  • Strategies for stepping back, naming emotions, and cultivating self-compassion
  • Core Executive Dysfunction Tips and Hacks
  • Breaking Tasks Down
  • Setting realistic micro-goals
  • The concept of “towards” vs. “away” moves in progress
  • Tracking Progress
  • Counting bags/items leaving the house
  • Caution against tracking becoming burdensome for some
  • Using Timers
  • Setting short (e.g., 5-minute) timers to help with task initiation
  • Use of voice assistants to avoid distraction
  • Reverse-timer technique to use end of music/podcast as a cue for action
  • The Two-Minute Rule
  • Limitations and personal adaptations of rule
  • Identifying Motivations
  • Creating visual or written reminders of why you want to dehoard
  • Acceptance of some tools working only temporarily, and switching when necessary
  • Reward Systems
  • Small, non-material rewards for completing tasks
  • Linking listening to desired media (like the podcast) with decluttering activities
  • Non-Negotiable Rules
  • Creating routines to reduce decision fatigue (e.g., charity bags leave home immediately)
  • Body Doubling
  • Doing tasks alongside others (physically or virtually, like in the host’s Zoom sessions)
  • Emotional/moral support of parallel accountability
  • Alternative ways to body double if group support isn’t accessible
  • Time Blocking and Scheduling
  • Using calendars and reminders to schedule decluttering sessions
  • Flexibly adapting this strategy based on personal response
  • Habit Stacking
  • Linking a new task to an established routine (e.g., unloading dishwasher while kettle boils)
  • Using “add-ons” for frequently-visited spaces (e.g., clearing five things each time you enter the bathroom)

Links

Subscribe to the podcast

  continue reading

198 episodes

Artwork
iconShare
 
Manage episode 483088424 series 2903216
Content provided by That Hoarder. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by That Hoarder or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://ppacc.player.fm/legal.

For Hoarding Awareness Week 2025, I’m focusing on executive function - the brain’s control centre for planning, starting, and finishing tasks - and the small, practical hacks that can make a genuine difference for people who hoard, whether or not we have ADHD or are neurodivergent. I talk about real-life tips for breaking the overwhelm, managing perfectionism, building momentum, and overcoming shame, all with the aim of making progress sustainable and achievable in your day-to-day life. This episode is all about honest advice that actually works, whether you’re in the thick of it or just looking for a few smarter ways to approach this.

  • Hoarding Awareness Week 2025 and its theme: Hoarding & Executive Function
  • Recognition that executive function challenges impact both neurodivergent and neurotypical people
  • Executive Function and Hoarding
  • Previous podcast episodes relating to executive function, ADHD, and hoarding
  • Importance of using effective hacks and techniques, regardless of neurotype
  • Emphasis on finding what works personally for each listener
  • The Realities and Challenges of Tackling Hoarding
  • Overwhelm and daunting feelings about dehoarding
  • Breaking tasks into small, manageable parts
  • Focus on actionable, day-to-day strategies rather than long-term, rigid planning
  • Understanding Executive Function
  • Explanation of what executive function is (control centre for planning, focus, and impulse control)
  • Factors that can impair executive function (neurodivergence, mental health, stress, lack of sleep, etc.)
  • Universality of executive dysfunction - everyone struggles at times
  • Emotional Barriers: Perfectionism and Shame
  • The cycle of shame and self-blame in executive dysfunction and hoarding
  • Societal judgment around hoarding, and its paralysing effects
  • Strategies for stepping back, naming emotions, and cultivating self-compassion
  • Core Executive Dysfunction Tips and Hacks
  • Breaking Tasks Down
  • Setting realistic micro-goals
  • The concept of “towards” vs. “away” moves in progress
  • Tracking Progress
  • Counting bags/items leaving the house
  • Caution against tracking becoming burdensome for some
  • Using Timers
  • Setting short (e.g., 5-minute) timers to help with task initiation
  • Use of voice assistants to avoid distraction
  • Reverse-timer technique to use end of music/podcast as a cue for action
  • The Two-Minute Rule
  • Limitations and personal adaptations of rule
  • Identifying Motivations
  • Creating visual or written reminders of why you want to dehoard
  • Acceptance of some tools working only temporarily, and switching when necessary
  • Reward Systems
  • Small, non-material rewards for completing tasks
  • Linking listening to desired media (like the podcast) with decluttering activities
  • Non-Negotiable Rules
  • Creating routines to reduce decision fatigue (e.g., charity bags leave home immediately)
  • Body Doubling
  • Doing tasks alongside others (physically or virtually, like in the host’s Zoom sessions)
  • Emotional/moral support of parallel accountability
  • Alternative ways to body double if group support isn’t accessible
  • Time Blocking and Scheduling
  • Using calendars and reminders to schedule decluttering sessions
  • Flexibly adapting this strategy based on personal response
  • Habit Stacking
  • Linking a new task to an established routine (e.g., unloading dishwasher while kettle boils)
  • Using “add-ons” for frequently-visited spaces (e.g., clearing five things each time you enter the bathroom)

Links

Subscribe to the podcast

  continue reading

198 episodes

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