Executive Function
Working memory
Why too many open loops can make a simple task feel impossible to hold, sequence, or complete.
Last updated: May 31, 2026. Editorial status: internally reviewed for educational scope, non-diagnostic framing, and source transparency.
SEO focus
ADHD working memory
Best entry point
Ask the AI to unload the task into one visible thread.
Related resources
Resistaa working memory overload guide, ADDitude executive function resources
What this means in daily life
This topic often shows up as a gap between intention and action. The useful question is not whether someone cares enough. It is what kind of friction is blocking the first visible move, and what support can reduce that friction without turning the task into a bigger system.
For Resistaa, this page connects education with practical support: a short explanation, transparent references, related ADHD topics, and an AI experience that turns the idea into a smaller next action.
Practical strategy
Use a smaller entry point.
Instead of solving the whole topic, choose one observable action: open the relevant file, name the task, write the first rough line, pick the first object, or ask for one preparation step. The goal is contact, not completion.
Related ADHD topics
Cognitive overload
How competing demands crowd working memory and attention until the next action disappears.
Organization
Support for organizing spaces, files, thoughts, and tasks without assuming a neurotypical system will fit.
Finishing tasks
Support for returning, closing loops, reducing perfectionism, and defining what finished means.
Full article
Read: ADHD and Email Paralysis
→Try it with AI
Ask the AI to unload the task into one visible thread.
Open ResistaaSources and references