Most ADHD planner guides point you toward complex PDF templates or AI-powered scheduling apps. But if you’ve tried those and still can’t stick with a system, the problem might not be you — it might be the tool. Planning with ADHD means fighting a brain that distorts time, resists boring tasks, and loses interest in systems the moment they feel like work. You don’t need more features. You need fewer decisions. That’s the argument for a different kind of iPad…