Where bold vision meets compassionate action — built for brains that run on emotion, interest and momentum, not willpower alone.
Find your Focus · Ignite your Strengths · Build Real Momentum
Why Dream SMART?
Conventional Goal-Setting vs. The ADHD Brain
Conventional SMART Goals
✕ Outcome-focused only ✕ Assumes consistent energy & attention ✕ No emotional connection required ✕ Binary: succeed or fail ✕ Ignores saboteurs & internal patterns ✕ Often builds shame on failure
Dream SMART
✓ Vision + momentum-focused ✓ Designed for variable energy & attention ✓ Emotional connection is central ✓ Progress over perfection ✓ Addresses saboteurs & uses strengths ✓ Builds self-compassion into the process
01 — Philosophy
Five Founding Principles
01
ADHD is not a deficit to fix
A different brain wiring — not broken, just different.
02
Alleviate, don't eliminate
Reduce the impact of symptoms — not the person.
03
Individual variability
“If you’ve met one person with ADHD, you’ve met one person with ADHD.”
04
Process over perfection
Awareness and adaptive capacity matter more than hitting targets.
05
Self-compassion over self-criticism
Shifting the inner voice from shame to understanding.
02 — The DREAM Layer
Your Why — Vision, Values & Emotional Fuel
D
Dream Visualisation
The Vision
Start with “I see myself…” — Big. Wild. Unfiltered. It should feel slightly too big. This is the emotional destination.
The ADHD brain runs on emotion. The Vision is your fuel.
R
Relevant to Personal Values
Cornerstones
Connect your dream to 2–3 core values. They define who you are becoming — discovered from within, not invented.
Authentic · Actionable · Stable · Aligned
E
Emotionally Connected
The Fuel
A Cornerstone without emotional connection will be abandoned. Does this excite, scare, or deeply matter to you? If none — redesign it.
Emotion is the engine — not a ‘nice to have’.
A
Actionable Steps
Refer to SMART
Steps need detail: WHO? WHAT? WHERE? WHEN? Ambiguity is an ADHD brain killer. Time only exists as NOW or NOT NOW.
“Running Mon, Tue, Thu @ 2pm for 40 min.” Name it exactly.
M
Momentum-Based
Progress
Build momentum by fitting actions into your current lifestyle. Measure direction of travel, not whether the destination was reached.
Consistency at 20% beats perfection at 100%.
03 — The SMART Layer
Your How — Redesigned for the ADHD Brain
S
Specific
Action Design
Define the action so clearly the brain knows exactly what to start. Include WHO, WHAT, WHERE and WHEN.
Not “exercise more” — “walk the block at 7am on Monday.”
M
Measurable
Action Design
Track in a way that feels encouraging, not punishing. “Did I try?” counts as valid data.
Weekly frequency goals — not daily streaks that punish breaks.
A
Achievable
Action Design
Design for your actual energy level — not your ideal self. Start at 20% of what you think you can do.
Write 200 words instead of 2,000. Consistency beats volume.
R
Realistic
Action Design
Honest about capacity. Remove perfectionism from the definition of success. Real beats ideal every time.
Is this realistic on a tired Tuesday? Not for a hypothetical disciplined self.
T
Time-bound
Action Design
Name the specific days and duration. “Every Monday for 30 min” or “3 times this week — Mon, Wed, Fri.”
Time exists as NOW or NOT NOW. Name it exactly or it won’t happen.
KEY ADHD STRATEGY
The Low-Barrier Entry Principle
“What is the SMALLEST possible version of this action I could do today?”
Instead of…
Try this first…
Write for 1 hour
→
Write 200 words
Go to the gym
→
Put your trainers on
Clean the whole house
→
Clear one surface
Meditate 20 minutes
→
Take 3 deep breaths
04 — Awareness Tools
Saboteurs · Character Strengths · Reflect–Change–Implement
The 9 Saboteurs
Internal patterns that undermine progress
Avoider — avoids difficulty; may not have learned to cope with difficult emotions
Controller — hidden fear of being controlled by others or by life
Hyper-Achiever — self-worth conditioned on continual performance
Stickler — perfectionism to quiet the constant voice of self-judgement
Restless — constant search for new excitement & self-nurturing Also: Hyper-Rational · Hyper-Vigilant · Pleaser · Victim
Strategy: Name them in the moment — “That’s my Avoider.” Naming creates choice.
VIA Character Strengths
Your counter-resources
24 VIA Character Strengths — your natural ways of being at your best
Curiosity counters the Avoider — reframe tasks as experiments
Zest counters the Stickler — energy over perfection
Bravery counters Hyper-Vigilant — act despite the fear
Free VIA assessment: viacharacter.org
Map your top 5 strengths to your Saboteurs in the workbook
Reflect · Change · Implement
The TF2 adaptive cycle
1
Reflect
Think · Feel body · Feel mind — what did your Saboteur do?
2
Change
Decide one thing to do differently. Just one thing.
3
Implement
Rewrite actions for next week. Try it for one week.
4
Review
Did it work? Return to Step 1 with new data.
“Like riding a bicycle — you fall left, you lean right. Until you find balance. It’s natural. We just forgot we do it.”
05 — Weekly Practice
The Three Goal Framework
WEEKLY PRACTICE
Three Goals Every Week
Set · Track · Reflect · Adjust
Each week, set three goals — one in each category below. Track daily, note which Saboteurs appeared and which Strengths helped. Use TF2 reflection (Think · Feel body · Feel mind) at the end of the week and adjust for next week. Two supportive goals to one achievement goal is intentional — you cannot build momentum on an empty tank.
Goal 1
Alone Time
Self-care & recovery
Protect time for rest, solitude, and mental processing. Non-negotiable for neurodivergent brains — this is maintenance, not laziness.
Goal 2
Friction Reduction
Remove one obstacle
Identify one thing making life harder than needed and simplify it. Automate a payment. Lay out kit the night before. Small changes compound.
Goal 3
Self-Actualisation
Progress toward Vision
One SMART action connected to your Cornerstone and Vision — the low-barrier, specific, achievable step that moves you forward this week.