Living in the present moment with ADHD can feel both natural and misunderstood. This is especially true in a world that prioritises planning, productivity, and protecting a future that isn’t guaranteed.
We talk about the future as if it’s certain. We plan for it, protect it, and exhaust ourselves for it. And then we often delay rest, joy, creativity, and connection, all in service of a later that may never arrive.
In reality, the only thing we ever truly have is this moment. We only have now. Everything else is either memory or imagination.
“Now or Not Now”
ADHD expert Dr Edward Hallowell is credited with coining this phrase, and I think it captures the relationship with time with stark clarity.
Not soon, eventually or when I’ve earned it.
Just now, or not now.
This isn’t carelessness or immaturity. It describes a fundamentally different experience of time.
For many people with ADHD, the present moment is vivid, immediate and alive. By contrast, the future can feel distant or abstract… until suddenly it isn’t.
When Living in the Now Gets Misunderstood
Society often labels this as irresponsible. We’re encouraged to override the present in favour of the future, which can lead to us:
- pushing through exhaustion,
- delaying what matters, and
- tolerating what drains us.
However, the future we’re protecting is never guaranteed and, when we live entirely for not now, we. might notice:
- connection to self,
- awareness of needs, and/or
- alignment with values
beginning to erode.
For neurodivergent people, the cost can be even higher, especially when we are constantly adapting to systems that don’t fit.
Presence Is Not the Same as Impulsivity
This is where the conversation needs care and clarity.
Living in the present moment does not mean being impulsive. That distinction matters because impulsivity can have real consequences.
Many people with ADHD know what it’s like to:
- act in a split second,
- speak before thinking, or
- make decisions that feel right in the moment but land heavily later.
Often, it’s not the desire that’s the issue, but the speed. So the question becomes:
Is this presence, or is this impulse?
An Important Distinction
Impulsivity often feels like:
- urgency,
- pressure,
- emotional intensity, and/or
- needing relief now.
Presence often feels like:
- groundedness,
- clarity,
- alignment, and/or
- a quieter sense of “this fits”.
One useful question can be:
If I pause for five minutes, an hour, a day, or maybe a week… does this still feel true?
Presence can wait. Impulse usually can’t.
When Living in the Now Is Safer
Living in the present moment is more supportive when:
- your nervous system is relatively settled
- your choice aligns with your values
- you are not trying to escape discomfort
- your future self is not carrying the cost alone
It’s less supportive when the decision is driven by overwhelm or shame, the aim is immediate relief at any cost, or the impact lands heavily on the “later you”.
Living in the now isn’t about ignoring tomorrow; it’s about not abandoning yourself in either direction.
An Important Truth About ADHD and Impulsivity
There is something else that needs to be said clearly.
When you have ADHD, impulsivity can be so strong that there is no moment to think.
There is no chance to pause, no space, and, in that moment, it feels like there is no choice. The action happens, and awareness follows afterwards.
This is not a lack of effort or a failure of responsibility. It is neurology. And it’s unlikely that any reflective tool will reach every one of those moments.
But Not Every Moment Is Like That
This is where possibility lives, because impulsivity is not constant.
There may well be moments, albeit small ones, where:
- awareness flickers,
- the urge rises, but doesn’t immediately take over, and
- something inside you hesitates.
With knowledge comes recognition. And with recognition comes the possibility of mastery. By mastery, I don’t mean perfect control, but a different relationship with impulsivity.
Over time, you may begin to notice patterns, recognise triggers, spot earlier signals, and create just enough space to think again and choose differently. Even a small pause can be meaningful.
When the Pause Doesn’t Happen
Some moments arrive too quickly, and impulsivity has already taken over before you have a chance to think.
What matters most at these times is what happens next. Will it be:
- understanding instead of shame?
- reflection instead of blame?
- learning instead of self-criticism?
Sometimes the growth is in recognising the pattern afterwards.
A Different Kind of Responsibility
Living in the present moment with ADHD isn’t about abandoning the future. It’s about:
- grounding the now,
- slowing the moment, and
- anchoring choices in values.
The future, if it comes, will be made from these moments. If those moments are lived in constant self-abandonment, the future rarely feels like somewhere we want to arrive.
If this resonates and you would like to start recognising those moments when impulsivity is about to take hold, coaching can help. I offer a free 30-minute discovery call to explore if we’re a good fit to work together, with no pressure to book sessions.
A Final Thought
What if living in the present moment could be seen as honest rather than irresponsible?
What if more of us lived:
- aware that time is not guaranteed,
- connected to what matters,
- willing to pause when we can, and
- show compassion when we can’t.
Not reckless or impulsive, but present. Because this moment is the only one we can truly call ours.
