Home
Book a call
About
Coaching
Blog insights
Resources
Contact

The whooshing sound of deadlines

The whooshing sound of deadlines
Home
Book a call
About
Coaching
Blog insights
Resources
Contact

The whooshing sound of deadlines

ADHD Coaching

Access to Work
Disability funding for 4 months in UK
Business expertise
20 years coaching: 20 years in business
2/3 calls month
50min - time to plan and focus
Admin support
Payments, dates and admin
Voice is best
Landline or WhatsApp work best
Automatic payments
Set up once, monthly debit, no effort

Grey clouds of procrastination

Grey procrastination-clouds have hovered over me for all my life, whether coding programs or writting newsletters, sometimes day, weeks, month and even years pass with that ever nagging feeling that I have to get something done ever present in my mind. I miss deadline after deadline.

My ADHD newsletter was originally planned to be monthly, then down-graded to quarterly and finally became an ad-hoc publication, hey ho! As Douglas Adams (author of the “Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy), once said: “I love deadlines. I like the whooshing sound they make as they fly by”. I am pretty sure Douglas Adams was ADHD himself: his humour, his stance on the environment, love of fast cars and technology and his disrespect for convention and authority, and most importantly his problems with those deadlines – all seems pretty ADHD to me. As Wikipedia notes, Douglas Adams “usually had to be forced by others to do any writing. This included being locked in a hotel suite with his editor for three weeks to ensure that So Long, and Thanks for All the Fish was completed!”

External pressure

Of course it would be easier, though more painful, if I had someone lock me in a hotel room or I had a manager demanding I meet my commitments or else!!! I would have written many more newsletters I am sure, probably writing each one late into the night immediately before its due date. But then I would probably hate my boss, resent having to do their work and be contemplating alternate employment.

Your own boss?

I like the freedom of running my own business, without a boss. The statistics show that people with ADHD are far more likely than “neuro-typicals” (normal people) to run their own business (six times more so, according to the Economist). Certainly a very high proportion of my clients over the years have been entrepreneurs or self-employed. ADHD adults choose to run their own businesses as they tend to be more innovative, creative, risk-embracing and passionate individuals but also because, like me, their maverick nature means they dislike authority, rules and deadlines too.

However the Catch-22 of running a business with ADHD – it’s great not to have a demanding manager insisting upon unreasonable deadlines, now you can work your own way. It seems to be too good to be true and of course it is, we need deadlines and plans to avoid perfectionism, indecision and procrastination. ADHD entrepreneurs can end up frustrated, poorer and miserable with themselves if they fail to set, plan and achieve their goals.

Some help for your ADHD

So it makes a lot of sense if you struggle with these issues to engage an ADHD Coach, not so that the coach becomes your new boss, but to help you become your own boss. To help you set realistic achievable goals; work in a style and a pace that suits you; to discuss, define and connect with your future plans and dreams.

I guess I need to have a chat with my own coach about my very fuzzy plans for my next newsletter!
Andrew Lewis, ADHD Coach UK

Andrew Lewis

Andrew Lewis is an Adult ADHD Coach, writer and founder of SimplyWellbeing. He has over 16,000 hours of experience in coaching over 600 adults with ADHD, including many ADHD business professionals and ADHD creatives. Andrew ran a major ADHD support group and even an ADHD diagnostic clinic for a while. Andrew is an adult ADHD Coach backed with business expertise from a twenty years career in software, from roles in programming, through marketing, sales and to running a few software start-ups. 

ADHD at work
A TED talk on the experimentally confirmed results that confirm happiness brings us success. 
ADHD at work
Understand your own ADHD by seeing it reflected in others
ADHD at work
The UK government supports adults with disabilities at work, this includes fully funding ADHD coaching
ADHD at work
What else can I do to help my delicate ADHD brain?
ADHD at work
We don't inhibit our ADHD emotions, so life is usually a roller coaster
ADHD at work
A tale of two procrastinators, Douglas Adams and Leonardo himself
ADHD at work
One of my weirdest ADHD strategies
ADHD at work
Probably the most important vitamin of all is for some of the year the hardest to get naturally.
ADHD at work
It’s not easy finding the right job if ADHD. It's not money or status, but novelty, creativity and passion
ADHD at work
Concerns about labels don't outweigh the benefits that a label brings
ADHD at work
The perfect teacher, for a connected mind
SimplyWellbeing logo
Copyright © 2025 SimplyWellbeing
Website designed, written and created by Andrew Lewis, using Wordpress and Oxygen
49 Station Road, Polegate, East Sussex, BN26 6EA
linkedin facebook pinterest youtube rss twitter instagram facebook-blank rss-blank linkedin-blank pinterest youtube twitter instagram