I’ve always been the ideas person.
Even in everyday situations — meetings, group projects, volunteer stuff, family logistics — my brain starts rearranging things automatically. I notice what’s inefficient, what’s clunky, what could be better. Ideas don’t just show up — they flow. One leads to another, and another, and another.
The Blessing and the Curse
For a long time, I thought that was my strength.
It is.
And it’s also been a curse.
Because when you have too many ideas, direction becomes slippery. Narrowing down what to work on — or how — can feel impossible. Instead of momentum, I end up with paralysis. Not because I don’t know what to do, but because there are too many valid options pulling at me at the same time.
The ideas aren’t the problem.
They never were.
I’ve carried notebooks full of half-started ideas for years.
Coming up with ideas is what excites me. It’s what motivates me. It’s the part of work and life that makes me feel alive. But it’s also the thing that gets me stuck — spinning, overthinking, second-guessing, unable to move forward in any one direction.
Naming the Pattern
Two years ago, I was diagnosed with ADHD.
That diagnosis didn’t suddenly fix anything, but it gave me language for something I’d been wrestling with my whole life. Since then, I’ve been trying to figure out how to work with my brain instead of against it — how to capture ideas without being overwhelmed by them, how to focus without killing the excitement that ideas give me.
Why I’m Writing This
For a long time, I tried to solve this quietly.
I kept ideas in my head. I let them pile up in notes, half-built projects, and mental to-do lists that never quite turned into anything. I assumed that if I just found the right system, the right amount of discipline, or the right burst of motivation, things would finally click.
They didn’t.
What I’ve learned is that my problem isn’t a lack of ideas — it’s the absence of a place for them to land. A place where they can slow down, be examined, and connect to each other instead of competing for attention.
This site is my attempt to make that place.
This post is part of a collection I call adhdmazing.
Not a productivity system.
Not a personal brand.
Not a promise that I’ve figured things out.
It’s an attempt to work with my brain instead of against it — to make my thinking visible, to notice patterns over time, and to see what happens when ideas are given structure instead of pressure.
I don’t know exactly where it leads.
I just know that keeping everything locked inside hasn’t worked.
For a long time, I kept most of this to myself.
That turned out to be its own problem.






Thanks for being so honest about your process. I don’t know what this will lead to, but I’m very curious to find out!
Would love to see if there is a way for more of us to connect and work out our own processes- maybe it’s making websites like this one. Thanks again!
Thank you! And I think you might be onto something. 🤔 For me, it’s all about getting the thoughts out of my brain so I can get out of my own way.
Nicely stated. I believe there many people who can relate with your words…. I do! Thanks for taking the time to shed a light on ADHD and sharing your ideas of how these traits can become a person’s genesis zone. I look forward to your next post.
Thank you!
That is an excellent article. Very well written.
Thanks!
I need producers, project managers, and deadlines to make me stick to an idea and work on it until it’s “good enough”. It’s never finished, but there comes a time to pry it from my fingers.
That’s been the biggest hurdle for me to get this project underway. I function best when I’m given a framework and freedom to be creative within that system. Creating my own framework, deadlines, and keeping myself from getting lost in the woods or focusing on good, but nonessential tasks… that’s a whole different story.