this post was submitted on 11 Jul 2025
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ADHD

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Had this issue for years now, meds nuke hunger and I'm terrible at eating breakfast by the time I get back from work they've worn off and I have zero motivation. Fallen into the diet of nearly always having ramen, energy drinks and a beer here and then with a muti vitami.

Tried planners, can never get them to work my job having constantly changing shift patterns probs contributes to that, even tried one of those meal recipe box thingies stopped due to it A: being expensive and B: still didn't really work.

I'm not even a bad cook either just cannot force my brain to bloody do it.

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[–] Pacattack57@lemmy.world 2 points 3 hours ago

This is most likely a symptom of something. Maybe get a in depth physical, some blood work; and possibly see a licensed professional to check for signs of depression.

Lack of energy is a symptom of a lot of things so I wouldn’t rule anything out.

[–] FarraigePlaisteach@lemmy.world 2 points 6 hours ago* (last edited 6 hours ago)

Simplicity was important for me. I started with just getting breakfast right: something I like, that's healthy, every day. Boring, but I can do it.

Once you have that nailed, do something similar for lunches.

This plan doesn't account for nutritional needs at all. It's just something I can do.

Edit: meals you can make in a slow cooker or large pot are ideal. I turn the temperature off low and can take breaks to play computer games or whatever to break things up. Once I've everything chopped and added, I turn on the heat. It takes me quite a while this way, but I can make enough for a few days.

[–] squinky@sh.itjust.works 9 points 11 hours ago (1 children)

Mostly by being an ingredient-only house. If there’s nothing too convenient around and you’re hungry enough, you might be more inclined.

Also you can make big things that you can pick off of throughout the week. I used to make giant pot roasts, which are great because you just dump stuff on top of a roast and pop it in the oven for a couple of hours without having to fuss over it, and eat that for a day or so, get bored with it and make tacos with the meat, etc.

[–] Madzielle@lemmy.dbzer0.com 3 points 11 hours ago (1 children)

I cook a pot of spicy beans and use it throughout the week with tortillas, chips, toast, or rice.

Cook one day, eat for 5. Finding a meal you like, and can do this with is pinnacle imo, I agree

[–] AngryCommieKender@lemmy.world 2 points 10 hours ago* (last edited 10 hours ago)

Kidney beans and rice with kielbasa. Though in the portions I cook it in, it's more like cook for one day, and have at least 3 weeks of food to shove into the deep freeze.

[–] TwoBeeSan@lemmy.world 14 points 16 hours ago (2 children)

Keep your work cloths on when you get home until you've made a meal.

I've found if I quit the "work mode" and get cozy my odds decrease exponentially. If I don't have someone to cook for (which is easier than cooking for self).

Trick your brain.

Get some ready to eat meals from Costco. Most the time youre just heating in a pot for good food that can be jazzed up as needed for minimal effort.

Heb has meal simples that are incredible one portion oven meals for like $10

[–] prole@lemmy.blahaj.zone 3 points 13 hours ago

This is probably the one thing that would work for me, but I'd have to get out of the habit of immediately taking my pants off when I get home lol

[–] disco@lemdro.id 3 points 15 hours ago

This is the trick, as soon as you shower after work, shit ain't getting done.

You gotta keep the work clothes on until all your shit is done.

[–] pishadoot@sh.itjust.works 2 points 10 hours ago

If you don't mind eating the same food as a main meal for a bit this method works:

Make a big entree of something on an off day. Chili, lasagna, slow cooked food, whatever.

Have some stuff ready to go as sides that require very minimal effort (sides like rice, frozen bagged veggies or fresh - fresh is best but if apathy takes hold then frozen is fine

In the evenings microwave some leftovers from your big entree and supplement it with a quick and easy side. It helps break up the monotony if that matters to you, and it's easy

[–] AmazingAwesomator@lemmy.world 7 points 15 hours ago

i used to work from the office. i would get home from work, turn on the oven, then go get dressed into evening clothes.

this forced my to think about what i was gunna put in the oven and got me in the habit of thinking about dinner every night before i got hungry.

[–] RBWells@lemmy.world 3 points 12 hours ago

It's really hard to have a routine when your work schedule is irregular. I don't think you are wrong to rely on easy to prepare stuff but you need more nutrition, yes? My kids say I have ADD, and most of them do, my second to youngest was having trouble because Adderall so I got her some easy things.

Bagged salad packs with the dressing.

Packaged Hummus from the grocery, on Triscuit crackers, has a lot of calories with fiber & nutrition from the hummus.

Apple with sliced cheese or peanut butter

Do you like tuna? Make tuna salad at the beginning of the week, or a can dumped on one of the aforementioned bagged salad mixes.

Hard boiled eggs last a long time in the fridge, also an egg dropped into your ramen would add nutrition.

Keep your work schedule in your phone calendar and set an alarm for dinner.

For breakfast cold fermented oatmeal is amazing, we call it summer oatmeal. Mix rolled oats with yogurt, coconut water and/ or kombucha/kvass/tepache if you have it, juice or water if you don't. Mix in dried fruit and nuts and seeds, even chocolate if you want. It should start a little sloppy as the oats will take up the liquid. Taste and adjust, sweeten if you want, I don't. Put it in the fridge and each morning take a little for breakfast.

And also, don't stress about eating regularly if you don't have weight issues. If your body is feeling ok and staying in a healthy size you don't need to force yourself.

[–] bluGill@fedia.io 3 points 13 hours ago (1 children)

When I get off work I go to the kitchen and look at what perishables I have in the fridge, then search for "perishable recipes" and read a few results until I find something that sounds interesting, I have the other stuff for, and doesn't take too long. Then search for side dishes that would go with it. I also read the reviews from people who have made it as they often suggest substitutions that make work or don't. Then I start cooking.

You quickly learn which recipe sites have recipes and which are just blog about grandma, the dog, and everything else before they get to a recipe that probably won't even turn out, since the only point was to get you to look at the ads. (I wish there was a way to not see those in search results...)

Once in a while I see something that looks good but takes too long so I do it next week planning ahead. This is rare though - I'm not good at planning a head.

I need to eat so this is just what I do every day. After a lot of practice I can now make some great meals at home, I can rarely find any place to eat out that isn't a disappointment - I can make a much better meal for a lot less money.

[–] Madzielle@lemmy.dbzer0.com 1 points 11 hours ago (1 children)

Most recipes I come across online have a "jump to recipe" button. If the recipe is still being annoying, I'll click "print recipe" and work off the preview.

[–] bluGill@fedia.io 1 points 6 hours ago

it is an anti pattern that I want to discourage though

[–] givesomefucks@lemmy.world 6 points 16 hours ago (1 children)

You don't need to jump straight to cooking full meals.

Stuff like rice/beans with some sauce can be made in like 2 minutes. Like, with as much effort as ramen.

But that stuff will stay in your stomach and slowly get digested, so you'll need less energy drinks at the end of the day.

But cooking is like anything, start out small and easy and then just slowly start adding stuff. Once doing the small things feels natural, add an extra step or two. Like just throwing a chicken breast in a pan.

Even if you used to be a good cook, it sounds like you need to go back to basics and work yourself up to the fancy stuff.

[–] LifeInMultipleChoice@lemmy.world 1 points 15 hours ago (2 children)

Rice in 2 minutes? This is where I realize maybe I've never bought precooked rice before. How can it take so little time though? The water still needs to boil right, or is it a microwave thing?

[–] whats_a_lemmy@midwest.social 4 points 14 hours ago (1 children)

There's microwave rice too. Check your local Korean store

[–] LifeInMultipleChoice@lemmy.world 3 points 14 hours ago

I'll have to check local grocery stores, maps showed my closest Korean Grocery store was 59 miles away, haha. I'm sure Kroger or Aldi should have something. I've just always bought 5-10lb bags of rice so I never thought about it being quicker some other way. Although when I moved in 2016 I left my rice cooker for a friend, and I never replaced it for some reason, miss that thing

[–] givesomefucks@lemmy.world 3 points 15 hours ago

Those 90 second pouches...

Like I said, start as simple as possible and build on it.

[–] peregrin5@piefed.social 4 points 15 hours ago* (last edited 9 hours ago)

when I don't feel like cooking anything and can convince myself to stay home to eat here are my go tos:

  1. get a rice cooker. an Asian one you get from the Asian supermarket or invest in a Zojirushi (white people rice cookers suck). they are super easy to use. you throw the rice in with some water and about 15-30 minutes later you have a fresh pot of rice. go watch a show while it finishes. if you can remember you can even start a pot before work or eat the rice from the previous day (as long as it was in the keep warm setting). it can also cook brown rice, other ancient grains, beans, lentils, etc.
  2. eggs. fry the eggs and throw them on the rice with some soya sauce. takes like two minutes. my hack here is i have a Japanese tamagoyaki pan. it's small and perfect to cook a portion for a single person so i don't have to deal with and clean a giant skillet. i just rinse it out (if i remember) and leave it on the stove top for the next time I use it since I use it so often.
  3. toaster oven chicken thigh. i get like those ten packs of chicken thighs at the supermarket. throw one on with some salt and pepper (and other spices if you feel like it) onto a small sheet pan. drizzle with olive oil and stick it in my toaster oven (which is a convection toaster oven) for 30 minutes at 350degF and you get delicious roast chicken. the toaster oven is a great hack for lots of foods actually (including toast) since you don't have to deal with preheating a huge oven. i don't even usually preheat it at all. takes about the same time as the rice so i can take 5 minutes to start both at the same time go watch an episode of DanDanDan and have a chicken and rice dinner ready when it's done.
  4. salad mix and premade dressing. get kale mixes. they take longer to go bad. they are prewashed. all you do is throe dressing on and you're good. adding more toppings is up to you.
  5. those tiny tomatos. rinse them and eat them on their own or on your salad.
  6. cucumbers. again in the no-cook veggie category. just rinse and chop roughly. top with soya or vinegar and salt. get english or persian cucumbers since the skin on normal cucumbers isnt very nice. they now even have tiny ones you probably don't even need to cut through the power of science.
  7. roast broccoli/cauli/other veggie in the toaster oven. when you do your chicken break off a few florets of broccoli and throw it on the pan with the chicken when you're seasoning and oiling. voila, roast broccoli done at the same time as the chicken.

i don't do all of these everyday. some days i just have energy to do one like make rice and top it with dried seaweed or cheese. still better then eating out or ramen everyday (though I still eat ramen sometimes -- but it's usually more effort since i usually fancy it up with eggs and kimchi [another hack i forgot-if you like kimchi-buy a jar of the stuff and throw it on rice. great meal on its own])

and visit your Asian supermarket once a month. their frozen sections are filled with premade crap you can just microwave but are still good quality like potstickers or scallion pancakes and they are usually cheaper to shop at

[–] Zorsith@lemmy.blahaj.zone 2 points 13 hours ago* (last edited 13 hours ago)

I dont know and i actuallu like cooking. I also don't have a routine of consistently eating meals at a set time. Dinner can be anywhere from 4PM to midnight. Or never. Or gorging on snacks for the entire evening and hating myself.

[–] protojefe@lemmy.ca 4 points 16 hours ago

Crockpot/slow cooker meals. Especially ones that are good as leftovers. I do everything from beef stews to pulled pork bbq to shredded chicken etc. I also find it’s so much easier to eat healthy and still feel full which makes me less interested in beer and snacks.

[–] Kyle_The_G@lemmy.world 4 points 16 hours ago (1 children)

I had no idea how to cook so I just got meal kits like hello fresh and they've got me in a decent routine now, I actually really enjoy it.

[–] Acamon@lemmy.world 3 points 15 hours ago* (last edited 9 hours ago) (1 children)

I used to work as a chef, but I still find it hard to cook for myself because of all the little tasks of deciding and shopping and so on. For a good while I used hello fresh just because it made things easy and uncomplicated week nights, and then at the weekend I'd cook fun or more elaborate stuff.

They're not as cheap as cooking for yourself, but adhd's poor planning and impulse control led to a lot of wasted food and expensive takeout. So in the end it didn't feel like to changed my overall expenses, and at least I was eating a cooked meal with meat and veg, not just eating instant ramen or ordering unhealthy deliveries.

Edit: fixed some typos

[–] Madzielle@lemmy.dbzer0.com 2 points 10 hours ago

My husband is a chef and doesn't cook literally anything, ever, at home. I feed him graciously, as I totally understand why he doesn't want to cook at home, and I love to cook. That's my motivation to cook, I've others to feed, so it's routine. People will joke he must cook for me all the time, but nothing is further from the truth lol

The man would live off crackers and pb&j if he could.

[–] Nick@mander.xyz 1 points 12 hours ago

If you lose motivation because of the amount of time that you'd spend cooking, you should consider using days off to prep building blocks that can be used for different meals. Keeping the initial cook simple can give you a broad canvas to change things up on the spot so that you don't get fatigued over the flavor. You can salt a large chunk of meat like a pork shoulder or chuck roast and use a long cooking method like a braise or a roast. The longer cook times will make these cuts extremely tender, and you'll only have to do it once. Use them throughout the week in whatever application you feel like on the day, even if that means just adding it to your ramen. Since it's just salted, it's versatile enough to adapt to whatever seasonings or sauces you add to it. If you're using store bought ingredients, you can put together pasta, bbq sandwiches, or quesadillas pretty quickly.

As far as vegetables go, you can also prep individual portions of things like a mirepoix a week ahead of time, to cut down on the work you have to do every day. You could even freeze it in ice cube trays to make them last longer if you have the space. You can mince garlic ahead of time and store it in a neutral oil. If you don't mind acidity, pickling and lacto fermenting your vegetables is a good way to both preserve them and have something that's ready to go on demand. Some vegetables like broccoli can be parcooked without sacrificing texture to reduce the amount of time you have to spend cooking on the day of.

Meal kits may not have worked for you because they simplify the shopping, not the actual cooking process. It still takes the same amount of time to cook a meal kit, which doesn't exactly help when you're hungry and exhausted. I think that prepping pieces of a meal in advance will give you the tools to throw something together almost as quickly and easily as ramen, which might lead to you cooking more often. I hope this helps, and I'd be happy to expand on anything that was vague or otherwise lacking!

[–] Death_Equity@lemmy.world 2 points 15 hours ago* (last edited 15 hours ago)

A constantly changing schedule would be detrimental to me cooking, that might be the case for you as well. I need the oppressive clock to say it is time to cook dinner and if the time when I need to cook dinner keeps changing, I will forget to cook dinner and end up doing a quick meal of BS just so I can sleep.

You can also try meal prep, that is just to give you a meal that is as convenient as ramen during the week with a low daily time commitment. The idea of it may be kind of daunting, but it is just a bunch of smaller steps that you can AD4K off between without much issue.

[–] rowinxavier@lemmy.world 1 points 14 hours ago

Slow cooker, put 2kg brisket and ~120ml water in, low setting, 8 hours. Put brisket on rack, coat with a mix of tomato sauce, BBQ sauce, and mustard. Into oven at 200°C for about 20 minutes. Take it out, wrap in foil, cool until near freezing, then slice thin.

This is cheaper for 4 days of lunches than one day of takeaway for me. No nursing the food, just set a reminder and forget.

[–] Vitaly@feddit.uk 1 points 15 hours ago

That's the thing - you don't, live on edge😎