Your Curiosity is the Key to Unlocking an Autonomous Life

The digital revolution allows a unique opportunity for ADHD to be our greatest advantage by sharing our curiosity with the world.
Why Friction Is Your Digital Note-Taking Friend

ADHD brains are always busy but we can slow them down by adding friction to our information captures instead of making another overloaded inbox to manage.
Build a Value Creation Engine for Free with a Zettelkasten

Leverage your ADHD curiosity by investing your time and energy into generating valuable intellectual assets that compound in the knowledge economy.
How to Turn ADHD Into a Digital Advantage

A second brain is like a secret weapon especially for those who struggles with the executive function challenges that come with ADHD in day to day life.
Your Message Is the Medium

It is your creative energy and curiosity that produces the medium of your message itself. That means your communication medium is you. Nobody else can express your message the way that you do, which makes your medium of communication a personal monopoly.
Flip the E vs E Ratio to Enter the Top 20%

How do the most successful people in the world consume digital media without getting helplessly sucked into mindless scrolling?
How to Write Your Own Future in the Creator Economy

How to turn mindless consumption into mindful content by extracting value from social media and synthesizing it through writing efforts.
Don’t Follow Your Passions. Follow This instead.

You know who says “just follow your passion”? People who are already rich. And if you just do a little digging, you’ll find that they also didn’t get rich from following their passion. This kind of conventional wisdom is especially damaging to those of us with ADHD.
Synthesize Your Way to a Life of Curious Freedom

We are on the verge of a massive cultural shift that will highly favor divergent thinkers and those of us with curious ADHD minds.
Learn Anything Insanely Fast By Ultralearning

Writer Scott Young is famous for teaching himself the entire 4 year MIT computer science in under a year.
He calls this concept ultralearning, which he defines as “a strategy for acquiring skills and knowledge that is both self-directed and intense”