Joined May 2025
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Introducing Focusmo - An all-in-one focus app for ADHD minds All the essential tools to focus, block, track and get things done without breaking the flow in one thoughtfully designed app Most loved out of 15 features: 1. Pomodoro 2. Calendar Sync 3. Web & App Blocking demo ->
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tuesday 8pm. you had one thing to do tonight. instead you answered emails, did the dishes, reorganized a drawer. you were busy for three hours and somehow the one thing is still sitting there. avoidance doesnt look like doing nothing. it looks like doing everything else.
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you said give me five minutes. that was an hour ago. you werent lying. in there, five minutes and an hour are the same size. you dont feel time pass, you find out about it later, usually once its already gone.
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monday 10pm. the brain was fog all day. the second you lie down it switches on. ideas, plans, the perfect line for the email you couldnt write at noon. its not insomnia. its the first quiet it got since morning, and quiet was the only thing it ever needed to start.
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wednesday 11am. 43 tabs open. each one is a task you didnt finish or a thing you were scared to forget. closing one means deciding about it, so you dont. the browser is carrying your whole brain. and when it finally crashes, youll feel weirdly relieved.
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tuesday 8pm. you barely did anything today and youre still wiped. it wasnt the doing. it was the six unfinished things humming in the background of your head since morning, each one drawing a little power. you didnt rest today, you just left everything running.
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you dont work better under pressure. the task that took an hour at 11pm could have taken an hour any day that week. nothing changed but the deadline finally scaring the brain into starting. pressure isnt a superpower, its the only thing that makes starting feel mandatory.
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you looked up and it was dark. you hadnt eaten, hadnt moved, hadnt noticed the room go quiet. for six hours the thing had you completely. people call it a superpower. they leave out that you dont get to choose what it grabs, or when it finally lets you go.
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monday 9pm. you finally stop moving and your shoulders drop two inches. you didnt notice you were holding them up there all day. the brain doesnt tell you its running hot, you only find out when it lets go. by then the whole day already happened in your body.
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you couldnt start it alone all morning. someone sits down beside you, doing their own thing, says nothing, and suddenly you can work. its not accountability, they arent even watching. your brain just borrowed an engine to start the thing it couldnt start on its own.
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friday 7pm. you decided things all week without blinking. now someone asks where do you want to eat and youve got nothing. the easy questions land last, when the tank is empty. its not that you dont have a preference. choosing is the cost, and you spent it all before dinner.
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the task is almost done. it has been almost done for three days. the hard part is over but the last bit has no spark left, so it sits there, finished in every way except the one that counts. you didnt run out of ability. you ran out of what made it interesting.
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friday 5pm. you hand the whole weeks leftovers to weekend-you like theyre a different, more capable person. theyre not. theyre you with worse sleep and a sink full of dishes. the week doesnt end, it just gets forwarded to someone who never agreed to take it.
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a free evening, nothing you have to do, and that is the hard part. you scroll the menu, pick nothing, end up on the same feed as every night. it was never that you didnt want to rest. choosing how to rest is its own task, and that part of the brain already clocked out.
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five minutes of something dull and two hours of something good leave the exact same dent. the clock and the feeling never agree, so you stopped trusting the feeling. youre not careless with time. the gauge everyone else reads it off of, this brain was never issued one.
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thursday, 11am. one thing on the calendar, a call at 3pm. you cant start anything because that call sits in the middle of the day like a rock in a stream. the whole morning bends around a thing that takes 15 minutes. waiting mode ate four hours you werent even using.
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you read the text, wrote the whole reply in your head, and the brain filed it as sent. days later they think you went quiet. you didnt ghost them, you answered them. the reply just never made it past your skull.
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the drawer is where things go to die. you put it away to be tidy and the second its out of sight the brain deletes it. so the important stuff lives in a pile in plain view, because visible is the only memory this brain trusts. its not mess, its the external hard drive.
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10pm. you finally sit down to do nothing, and the brain takes it as a cue to replay every awkward thing youve said since 2014. the quiet isnt rest for this brain. the second the noise stops, it goes hunting for something to chew on.
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someone asks a 30 second question, you answer in 30 seconds. the real cost is the ten minutes after, rebuilding the tower of thoughts you were holding when they walked in. it was never the interruption that broke your focus. this brain just has no autosave.
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the trap nobody warns you about: picture a task fully finished and the brain files it as done. the reward you were meant to get for doing it, you already spent on imagining it. so the real version feels like a rerun. you didnt lose motivation, you cashed it out early.
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