Why Big Plans Feel Productive — and Leave You Stuck
When ADHD planning spirals into a comfort zone, AI can help you shrink your vision into something doable, without killing the dream.
Curio is deep in a planning trance. She’s surrounded by papers, tabs, and highlighter marks. She’s got a color-coded vision board, a 3-phase timeline, and 5 detailed options for a future project she hasn’t even started.
She tells herself this is progress. But when she closes the laptop, there’s a pit in her stomach. Nothing’s actually moved.
She’ll probably redo it tomorrow — maybe in a better app.
What’s Actually Happening
This is productive procrastination — a common ADHD defense against ambiguity and fear of failure. Planning feels like action. It’s neat. It’s in control. But the brain is avoiding the messiness of starting.
In ADHD, struggles with sequencing and prioritization make it harder to turn ideas into doables. Planning becomes performance. Starting becomes terrifying.
The Reframe
Planning isn’t the problem. But a plan with no intention to act becomes a trap.
Instead of scaling your energy to your dream, scale your dream to your available energy — just for now.
AI can help you do this without erasing the vision. It can propose a minimum viable version that fits the moment.
New Vignette with AI Support
Curio types:
“I’ve been planning this new workshop all week but I can’t seem to actually start. It’s turned into a huge concept and now it feels too big. Can you help me shrink it into a doable version without losing the idea?”
AI replies:
"Absolutely. Let’s preserve your core idea but simplify delivery. How about:
A 1-hour version instead of 3.
Fewer handouts — just a guided worksheet.
One main outcome: Clarity on their next step.
Would that feel like a win if it got done next week?"
Curio exhales. It’s smaller, yes — but suddenly it’s real.
Why It Worked
AI didn’t challenge the dream. It respected it. But it offered structure and proportion — something ADHD brains often lose track of.
Now the dream has a doorway.
Suggested Prompt:
"Can you help me shrink this big plan into a small, doable version that keeps the spirit but fits my current energy?"
When to Use This Prompt:
You’ve planned something 3+ times and still haven’t started
The scope keeps ballooning every time you revisit it
You feel pressure to make it perfect before it begins
Tips to Improve This Prompt:
Add context: “This is for my business,” “This is personal,” etc.
Describe your current energy level: “I’ve got about 2 hours of focus today”
Ask for tiers: “Can you give me a 20%, 50%, and 80% version?”
Ask for outcome alignment: “Make sure the small version still feels meaningful”
Level Up:
“Can you help me schedule this smaller version into next week so I actually get it done?”
When This Prompt Doesn’t Work:
If you’re overly attached to perfection, even the small version might trigger resistance — try reframing success first
If your dream lacks clarity, ask AI to help define why it matters before shrinking it
Copyable Prompt:
“This plan has gotten way too big. Can you help me shrink it into a doable version that still feels meaningful and aligned with what I want to create?”