After telling someone to throw out yet another useless book of advice for neurodivergent people clearly written by someone who isn’t neurodivergent I have one tip re developing a habit w ADHD: make it really easy to implement. Kids dropping wrappers on floor? Put out more trash cans in those areas
Adam Savage's book "Every Tool a Hammer" explicitly gives you permission to get a second x-acto knife and a second pair of pliers and leave a set at each spot you need them rather than wander around looking for where you last left The Tool and omg it is LIBERATING.
This is one of the things holding me back from getting an electric one. Unless I can somehow place it so it's grabbable from both sink and shower, something is going to suffer for it.
My next house I just might sidestep the whole issue by installing a small shelf with an outlet below it just on the dry side of the shower so it's reachable from both locations.
I mean, I get it, I've been a prof for years but I still spend money as if I'm a grad student, and it is remarkably difficult to for example buy the blueberries I'd prefer if the blackberries are on sale this week, but I'm happy to brainstorm ways for others to get around these types of blocks.
I could, it's more convincing my brain that yes it is perfectly reasonable to have two mildly expensive appliances within about 6' of one another. Also the power and charging problem. I am as yet unconvinced by battery models.
OK, so, alternative: get one for either the shower or the sink -- whichever you think you'd make more use of -- and use that as a test run about whether that particular model does what you want?
And, if it doesn't, it's easier to let yourself buy a different one for the other place?