Context Guide
Decision Fatigue At Work Meetings
Decision fatigue is the deterioration of decision-making quality after making many decisions. For adults with ADHD, this hits earlier and harder because every decision requires more effort. Without strong executive function to auto-prioritize, your brain treats choosing what to eat for lunch with the same cognitive weight as choosing a career direction. The result: you're exhausted by noon from decisions that others make on autopilot. On this page, the focus is at work during meetings, because meetings demand sustained attention to someone else's pace, real-time working memory, and the ability to hold multiple threads without drifting.
What the research says
- Adults with ADHD make an estimated 60% more micro-decisions per day due to difficulty automating routine choices, accelerating cognitive fatigue.— Journal of Cognitive Psychology
- Decision-making speed in ADHD is not impaired, but decision quality drops 47% faster over the course of a day compared to neurotypical adults.— Neuropsychologia
What this actually looks like
It is a 45-minute status meeting. By minute eight, your brain has decided this is not interesting enough to attend to. You are nodding and making eye contact while mentally designing a new organizational system you will never implement. Someone asks your opinion and you have no idea what was just said.
Why this context matters
You zone out for ninety seconds and miss the one thing that was actually relevant to you. Then you spend the rest of the meeting pretending you were following along.
Context pages matter because the same ADHD pattern can look very different depending on where it creates friction. During meetings, the environmental demands shape how the pattern shows up.
How the pattern shows up here
These points translate decision fatigue into the version that tends to matter most during meetings when the search intent is at work.
Meetings friction 1
Feeling paralyzed when faced with too many options In this context, the visible problem is usually the outcome, while the real issue is how much regulation effort the environment demands before the task even starts.
Meetings friction 2
Making impulsive decisions just to stop thinking about it In this context, the visible problem is usually the outcome, while the real issue is how much regulation effort the environment demands before the task even starts.
Meetings friction 3
Avoiding decisions until they become urgent or someone else decides In this context, the visible problem is usually the outcome, while the real issue is how much regulation effort the environment demands before the task even starts.
Meetings friction 4
Mental exhaustion from routine choices (what to wear, what to eat) In this context, the visible problem is usually the outcome, while the real issue is how much regulation effort the environment demands before the task even starts.
Myths that distort the picture
Decision fatigue just means you're indecisive
It's not a personality trait — it's a cognitive resource depletion issue. Your brain uses more energy per decision due to ADHD, so the resource runs out faster.
If you just make decisions faster, you'll have more energy
Speed doesn't reduce cognitive cost. The better approach is to reduce the total number of decisions you need to make, not to make them faster.
Frequently asked questions
Why does decision fatigue show up differently during meetings?
Context changes the presentation because different environments place different demands on your regulation system. During meetings, specific pressures — meetings demand sustained attention to someone else's pace, real-time working memory, and the ability to hold multiple threads without drifting. — interact with decision fatigue in predictable but often unrecognized ways.
How can I manage decision fatigue at work during meetings?
Start by recognizing that the friction is contextual, not personal. Create defaults for daily decisions: a weekly meal plan, a capsule wardrobe, a morning routine. Every decision you don't have to make saves cognitive resources for the ones that matter. Adapting strategies to the specific demands of meetings makes them far more effective.
Is decision fatigue during meetings a sign that my ADHD is getting worse?
Not necessarily. Decision Fatigue often appears more intense during meetings because the environmental demands expose the regulation gap. Changing the environment or adding context-specific strategies is usually more effective than assuming things are declining.