Can tracking energy reduce shame associated with ADHD ups and downs
Many people with ADHD experience cycles of high focus and deep fatigue that trigger guilt or shame about being “inconsistent.” According to the NHS and NICE guidance, tracking energy patterns can help turn these emotions into self-awareness. Recognising natural variability as part of ADHD helps people approach their days with understanding rather than self-criticism.
Why energy tracking helps emotional regulation
Research in Frontiers in Psychiatry (2025 review) shows that monitoring daily energy and focus improves emotional regulation in ADHD. The Oxford Health NHS Foundation Trust explains that self-awareness reduces frustration and allows people to plan work and rest more effectively. By observing how energy fluctuates with stress, sleep, or overstimulation, individuals can better prepare for dips rather than feeling guilty when they occur.
Tools that make patterns visible
Energy-tracking journals, rating systems, or digital apps help people document and visualise their energy and focus. These tools make invisible effort visible, showing that progress and fatigue both have valid roles in ADHD management. As Neurodivergent Insights notes, recognising patterns supports pacing, matching tasks to energy levels and reduces the internal narrative of “I should have done more.”
Turning shame into self-compassion
Tracking also helps separate identity from energy levels. When individuals see that dips are cyclical rather than personal failings, shame often gives way to compassion. The Change Mental Health resource highlights that understanding and accepting ups and downs improves resilience and prevents burnout.
NHS and NICE guidance on self-monitoring
Both NHS and NICE NG87 recommend self-monitoring, psychoeducation, and mindfulness to help people manage ADHD-related variability. Structured tracking fosters awareness and supports self-acceptance, aligning daily routines with genuine capacity rather than expectation.
Key takeaway
Tracking energy does more than record productivity, it builds self-understanding. For people with ADHD, it replaces shame with knowledge, guilt with planning, and inconsistency with compassion.

