How to Set Monthly Priorities Without Overloading Yourself
2 June 2026
Have you ever started a new month feeling motivated, ambitious, and ready to finally get your life together?
You open a notebook, create a beautiful plan, and write down everything you want to accomplish. Exercise three times a week. Declutter the house. Start a new habit. Finish that project. Read more. Drink more water. Organize your finances. Finally answer those emails.
And somehow, by the second week of the month, you’re already behind.
If this sounds familiar, you’re not lazy, unmotivated, or bad at planning. You might simply be trying to carry too many priorities at once.
The Problem With Having Too Many Monthly Goals
Most people don’t fail because they don’t care enough. They fail because they create a list that would realistically require three different versions of themselves to complete.
When everything feels important, nothing truly gets your attention. Your energy becomes scattered. Your focus jumps from one goal to another. And eventually, overwhelm takes over.
This is especially true if you have ADHD or an easily overloaded mind. A long list of priorities doesn’t create clarity. It creates pressure.
Why More Priorities Don’t Create More Progress
It feels productive to have a long list. It gives us the illusion that we’re being organized. But every priority comes with hidden responsibilities.
Every goal requires decisions. Every decision requires mental energy. The more priorities you add, the more your attention gets divided.
Instead of moving forward consistently, you spend the month trying to keep up with everything. And at the end, you often feel like you’ve accomplished very little—even when you’ve actually done a lot.

A Personal Realization
For a long time, I believed the solution was better planning. If I could just find the perfect system, the perfect routine, or the perfect planner, I thought I would finally be able to do everything.
But what helped me most wasn’t planning more. It was choosing less.
The months where I made the biggest progress weren’t the months where I chased ten goals. They were the months where I focused on two or three things that genuinely mattered.
The rest could wait. And surprisingly, life didn’t fall apart.
How to Choose Monthly Priorities That Actually Work
1) Start With a Brain Dump
Before choosing priorities, get everything out of your head. Write down every task, project, obligation, idea, and worry.
Don’t organize it yet. Just unload it. Your brain was never meant to store all of that information at once.
2) Ask Yourself: What Would Make This Month Feel Successful?
Not perfect. Successful.
Imagine you’re at the end of the month looking back. What would make you think: “I’m glad I focused on that.”
Usually, the answer is much shorter than your original list.
3) Choose Three Priorities Maximum
This is where most people struggle. They want five. Or seven. Or ten. But if everything is a priority, nothing is.
Try choosing no more than three main priorities for the month. Not because other things don’t matter. But because your attention is limited. A smaller focus creates more momentum.

4) Break Priorities Into Tiny First Steps
A priority is not an action. “Get healthier” isn’t actionable. Walk for 10 minutes after lunch” is.
“Organize my finances” isn’t actionable. “Review last month’s expenses” is.
The smaller the first step, the easier it becomes to start.
5) Leave Space for Real Life
This is the step most planning advice forgets. Life happens. Kids get sick. Work gets busy. Energy changes. Unexpected things appear.
Your monthly plan should leave room for being human. You don’t need a schedule packed from morning to night. You need a plan that can survive a normal month.
A Gentler Way to Plan Your Month
If you’ve spent years creating ambitious monthly plans only to feel overwhelmed a few weeks later, the problem might not be your motivation. It might be your expectations.
You don’t need more goals. You don’t need more pressure. You probably need fewer priorities and a clearer way to focus on them. That’s exactly why I created the ADHD Monthly Planner.
Instead of encouraging you to do more, it helps you clear mental clutter, choose realistic priorities, organize your month, and focus on what truly matters.
Because progress doesn’t come from doing everything. It comes from knowing what deserves your attention right now.

Final Thoughts
The goal of monthly planning isn’t to squeeze every possible task into your calendar. It’s to create enough clarity that you can move forward without constantly feeling overwhelmed.
This month, try choosing less. Not because you’re lowering your standards. But because you’re finally giving your attention somewhere it can make a difference.

