If you’ve ever felt like your brain is simultaneously racing and frozen, like you desperately want to get things done but something keeps getting in the way, like you’re anxious about being anxious and somehow that makes everything worse — we want you to know something.
You are not alone in that feeling. Not even close.
For so many people, ADHD and anxiety aren’t two separate experiences living side by side. They’re tangled up together, feeding each other, making each other louder. And when you don’t have a name for what’s happening, it can feel like you’re just… failing at life. Being too much. Not enough. Both at once.
You’re not failing. Your brain is working really hard in a world that doesn’t always make it easy.
Let’s talk about what’s actually going on.
What Does ADHD With Anxiety Feel Like?
Here’s the thing about ADHD and anxiety together — it doesn’t always look the way people expect.
It might look like someone who seems fine on the outside. Who shows up, gets things done, holds it together. But on the inside? There’s a constant low hum of dread. A running commentary of what did I forget, what am I missing, why can’t I just focus, everyone must think I’m a mess. An exhaustion that comes not just from doing things, but from the sheer effort of managing the fear of not doing them.
It might look like procrastination that people around you call laziness.
But it isn’t laziness. It’s a nervous system that’s so overwhelmed by the size of a task, so convinced that failure is inevitable, that starting feels genuinely impossible. ADHD and anxiety together can make the gap between intending to do something and actually doing it feel like a canyon.
It can look like perfectionism, strangely enough. Spending so long trying to get something exactly right that it never gets finished. Avoiding things you’re not immediately good at because the anxiety around failing feels unbearable. Replaying conversations from three years ago at two in the morning.
It can feel like your body is always slightly braced for something. Like you’re waiting for the thing you forgot, the mistake you made, the disappointment you caused. That low-level physical tension that never quite leaves.
ADHD and anxiety together is exhausting in a way that’s hard to put into words. But we hope some of that felt familiar. Because familiar means you’re not imagining it.
What Is the ADHD Anxiety Loop?
Oh, this one. This one is so important to understand, because once you see it, you really can’t unsee it.
The ADHD anxiety loop is exactly what it sounds like — a cycle where ADHD symptoms trigger anxiety, and anxiety makes ADHD symptoms worse, and around and around it goes.
Let us walk you through it.
It starts with something ordinary. A task that needs doing. An email that needs sending. A form that needs filling out. For someone with ADHD and anxiety, that task — however small — can feel like it has a gravitational pull of dread around it. The ADHD brain struggles to start. Time feels slippery. Focus won’t come.
So the task doesn’t get done. And the anxiety moves in. Why didn’t I do that? What’s wrong with me? Now it’s even later, now it’s worse, now everyone is waiting. That anxious spiral makes it even harder to focus. Which means the task still doesn’t get done. Which means the anxiety gets louder.
And then sometimes, right at the last possible second, the panic gets big enough that the ADHD brain finally fires — the deadline is now, the adrenaline kicks in, and somehow it gets done. Which feels like relief. But it also quietly teaches the brain that panic is what gets things moving. So next time, the loop starts earlier. Gets louder faster.
Living inside the ADHD anxiety loop is genuinely draining. It can damage self-esteem, strain relationships, and make even simple daily tasks feel loaded with weight they shouldn’t have to carry.
But understanding the loop is the first step to interrupting it. And that — we promise — is possible.
What Is the 10 3 Rule for ADHD?
You might have come across the 10 3 rule while looking into strategies for managing ADHD and anxiety, and wondered what it actually means in practice.
The idea is beautifully simple. For every 10 minutes of focused work or effort, you take 3 minutes of genuine rest. Not scrolling. Not a quick task. Real rest — something that lets your nervous system actually decompress before you ask it to focus again.
For ADHD brains, sustained attention is genuinely costly in a way it isn’t for everyone.
Trying to push through without breaks doesn’t build focus — it drains the reserve faster and makes the anxiety louder. The 10 3 rule works with the ADHD brain instead of against it, creating a rhythm that makes focus more sustainable and the whole experience of working a little less overwhelming.
It sounds almost too simple, doesn’t it? But that’s kind of the point.
When ADHD and anxiety are both present, the bar for getting started needs to be as low as possible. Knowing that you only have to focus for 10 minutes — that rest is already built in, already guaranteed — removes some of the dread that makes starting so hard.
It won’t be the right tool for every person or every situation. But if you or someone you love is struggling to get going, it’s absolutely worth trying. Small rhythms, consistently kept, can quietly change a lot.
How to Combat ADHD Anxiety?
We want to answer this one honestly, which means saying upfront: there’s no single fix. No trick that makes it all disappear. But there are real, meaningful things that help. And you deserve to know about them.
Getting the right diagnosis matters enormously. ADHD and anxiety are both treatable. But they respond to different things, and treating one without understanding the other can make both worse. If you’ve only ever been treated for anxiety without anyone looking closely at ADHD — or the other way around — it might be time to ask for a more complete picture. A thorough assessment from someone who understands how these two things interact can be genuinely life-changing.
Medication is worth an honest conversation. For some people, treating ADHD directly reduces the anxiety significantly — because when the brain can focus and follow through, there’s so much less to be anxious about. For others, anxiety needs to be addressed alongside ADHD. This is a conversation worth having with a professional who really listens, not a one-size-fits-all answer.
Therapy that understands both. CBT can help with the anxious thought patterns that ADHD fuels. But ADHD-informed therapy goes further — it understands that the anxiety isn’t just thoughts, it’s a nervous system that’s been running hot for a long time. Therapy that holds both pieces at once is the kind that tends to actually help.
Structure that feels like safety, not punishment. For brains navigating ADHD and anxiety together, a little predictable structure can be deeply calming. Not rigid, overwhelming schedules — just gentle anchors in the day. A morning routine that’s simple enough to actually stick to. A way of capturing tasks so they don’t have to live in your head. Systems that reduce the cognitive load so your nervous system can breathe.
And please — self-compassion. We mean it. The inner voice that narrates ADHD and anxiety is often so cruel. So quick to call things failure, weakness, laziness. Learning to speak to yourself the way you’d speak to someone you love — that’s not soft, that’s not optional. It’s actually one of the most powerful things you can do.
At Acacia, we understand how tangled ADHD and anxiety can get. How one feeds the other. How exhausting it is to live inside that loop, especially when you’ve been doing it for years without anyone really seeing what’s happening.
We see it. And we know that with the right support, things can genuinely shift.
If this resonated with you — whether you’re navigating this yourself or trying to support someone you love — we’re here. You don’t have to keep untangling this alone.
We’re so glad you found us.