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Gratitude That Actually Works for ADHD Minds
If you’ve ever been told to “just keep a gratitude journal” and immediately felt bored, guilty, or resistant—you’re not broken. You’re just wired differently. Traditional gratitude practices assume consistency, linear thinking, and quiet reflection. ADHD brains often thrive on movement, novelty, emotion, and external cues . So instead of forcing gratitude into a journal you’ll forget exists, let’s talk about gratitude that actually works for ADHD minds . Reframing Gratitude:

Gretchen Pound, PhD
Jan 162 min read
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