
Anna Keyter wrote Online Therapy for ADHD Burnout. She is currently a member of the British Psychological Society and the National Council of Integrative Psychotherapists.
Introducing Online Therapy for ADHD Burnout
As an online psychologist, I see many bright, capable adults struggling with a particularly exhausting form of burnout. After attending the Global Burnout Summit 2026, I gained valuable insights into why online therapy for ADHD burnout is becoming increasingly important.ADHD burnout is different from regular burnout. It often feels more intense, confusing, and shame-inducing. This article explores why it happens and how online therapy for ADHD burnout can support real, sustainable recovery.
Understanding ADHD Burnout in the Age of Overload
We live in an era of constant input — notifications, algorithms, short-form videos, and information overload. For people with ADHD, this environment is especially draining. At the Global Burnout Summit 2026, experts explained that ADHD brains often have lower baseline dopamine, which affects motivation, focus, planning, and emotional regulation.
Many people with ADHD end up relying on stress as fuel — using cortisol and adrenaline to power through tasks at the last minute. While this can work short-term, it is toxic fuel. Over time, it leads to nervous system dysregulation and burnout.
A common pattern is the “I’m broken” cycle: difficulty with executive function → procrastination → last-minute panic → temporary success through stress → exhaustion and shame → repeat.
Online therapy for ADHD burnout helps break this shame cycle by providing understanding, practical strategies, and nervous system support.
Why “Trying Harder” Usually Makes ADHD Burnout Worse
For many neurodivergent people, trying harder increases burnout. When someone with ADHD feels shame or external pressure, they often push themselves more, which activates fight-or-flight. This further depletes dopamine and exhausts the nervous system.
Key challenges include sensory overload, difficulty filtering stimuli, and the brain comparing itself to neurotypical people. Low dopamine affects motivation and executive function, making “simple” tasks feel impossible.
How to Function Optimally While Burnt Out with ADHD
Recovery from ADHD burnout is not about forcing yourself back into high performance. It’s about working with your brain. Here are practical strategies:
Dopamine Regulation Strategies:
- Use body doubling (working alongside someone, even virtually)
- Gamification and interest-based motivation (tie tasks to something you care about)
- Movement breaks and physical activity to naturally boost dopamine
- Protein-rich meals and stable blood sugar (blood sugar crashes worsen ADHD symptoms)
- Short, timed work sessions (Pomodoro-style, but flexible)
- Celebration of small wins to create natural dopamine hits
Executive Function Challenges & Support:
- Reduce decision fatigue by creating routines and systems
- Break tasks into tiny, specific steps (e.g., “open laptop” instead of “start project”)
- Use external tools: timers, visual planners, voice notes, apps
- Accept that executive function fluctuates — plan around your best times of day
- Lower the bar dramatically during burnout phases. If you only have 40% capacity, 40% is your 100%
Daily Practices That Help:
- Mindful walking in nature (especially effective for ADHD brains)
- Short grounding exercises (5-4-3-2-1 technique)
- Accepting numbness and fatigue as valid states instead of fighting them
- Building in recovery time without guilt
- Creating a supportive environment with reduced sensory input when needed
Online therapy for ADHD burnout is especially useful for creating personalised systems that match how your brain actually works, rather than forcing neurotypical strategies.
The Role of Community and Self-Compassion
Feeling “I’m the only one” is very common. The summit highlighted the power of community support. Being honest with trusted people and asking for help reduces shame dramatically.
The most important shift is moving from self-criticism to self-compassion: “My brain works differently, not wrongly.”
Online Therapy for ADHD Burnout: Taking the First Step
If you have ADHD and feel burnt out, exhausted, or stuck in cycles of shame and over-effort, know that you are not broken and you are not alone. Your brain works differently — and it needs different support.
Online therapy for ADHD burnout offers a compassionate, flexible approach tailored to how your brain actually functions. Recovery is possible through understanding, self-compassion, pacing, and the right strategies.
References
Brignoli, P. (2026). Human performance and sustainable ambition. Presentation at the Global Burnout Summit 2026, Virtual.
Ruppert, P. (2026). The power of community in anxiety and burnout recovery. Presentation at the Global Burnout Summit 2026, Virtual.
World Health Organization. (2019). Burn-out an “occupational phenomenon”. https://www.who.int/news/item/28-05-2019-burn-out-an-occupational-phenomenon-international-classification-of-diseases
Related articles to online therapy for adhd burnout
- Online Burnout Therapy: Revive and Refresh with Effective Remote Counselling
- Online Communication Counselling: Master Better Connections with Best Online Therapy
- Understanding Online Cognitive Behavioural Therapy: How it Works and Why it’s a Game Changer
Feel free to get in touch if you want to learn more about online therapy for ADHD burnout:
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