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Why I Watch Home Alone 2: Lost in New York Every Year
At first glance, it may seem banal to watch the same film again every year. But rituals rarely arise by accident. They serve functions deeply rooted in human needs: orientation, identity, and anchoring oneself within one’s own biographical space. Home Alone 2: Lost in New York has become exactly such a ritual for me—interestingly, only in young…
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Gen Z and Mental Self-Care 2025: Thoughts on Mindfulness on Social Media
Zwischen Vergleichen, Chaos und kleinen Lichtblicken: Wie ich über Social Media nach und nach gelernt habe, achtsam zu bleiben – und was das für mich bedeutet.
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Minimalism Isn’t Aesthetic—It’s Nervous System Care
For a long time, I thought minimalism was about taste. The right shade of beige, clean lines, curated objects. Something sleek, tidy, and slightly out of reach. The kind of room that looks perfect on Instagram but doesn’t feel lived in. But then I started noticing something deeper. When I entered a space with less—less…
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NeuroSpace Guided Imagination, Part 3: Home – a Space That Holds Me
It is evening. You close the door behind you—and with it, the weight of the day slips from your shoulders. No more masking. No silent expectations. No overload. Just you. In this guided imagination, NeuroSpace leads us home. Not into a perfectly styled Instagram living room, but into a space that truly belongs to you.…
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NeuroSpace Guided Imagination, Part 2: A School Where I Can Breathe
When we talk about school, many people think of rigid schedules, inflexible rules, noise, and performance pressure. Of constant comparison. Of the feeling of being “wrong” because you’re too loud, too quiet, too slow, or simply too different. For many neurodivergent people, masking begins right there: during school years. Early on, we learn that our…
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NeuroSpace Guided Imagination, Part 1: A Workplace That Truly Fits You
Imagine going to work—and your nervous system exhales. Not because you’re forcing yourself to hold it together, but because this place was genuinely designed for you. Not as a neurotypical norm with a colorful diversity sticker attached, but as a space where your way of thinking, feeling, and working is taken seriously. The day begins…
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Queer Joy: The Small Moments That Matter
Wenn wir über queeres Leben sprechen, erzählen wir oft Geschichten von Schwierigkeiten. Vom Coming-out. Davon, missverstanden zu werden. Davon, für grundlegende Rechte kämpfen zu müssen. Und versteht mich nicht falsch – diese Geschichten sind wichtig. Sie müssen gehört werden. Sie sind Teil unserer gemeinsamen Geschichte. Aber sie sind nicht die ganze Geschichte.
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Neurodivergence and Loneliness: The Kind No One Talks About
There’s a kind of loneliness that isn’t loud. It doesn’t always look like isolation. Sometimes it’s just the slow, quiet ache of feeling misunderstood. Like you’re slightly out of tune with the world. Not broken—just… playing a different melody. If you’re neurodivergent, chances are you’ve felt that. That feeling of being on the edges. Of…
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Queerness & Neurodiversity: When the World Doesn’t Fit, We Create Our Own
I’ve been thinking a lot about what it means to move through the world as both queer and neurodivergent. Not in the sense of fitting into neat definitions, but more like: what happens when your brain and your identity both push against the so-called “norm”? Spoiler: it’s exhausting. And also kind of powerful. There’s this…
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Welcome to ADHme… soon-ish…
As a person living with ADHD, I am always driven to do „something“ that lets my brain have a dopamine rush 🙂 Right now, that’s making an app for people with ADHD. With the help of ChatGPT and my rudimentary knowledge of Swift and XCode I’m building ADHme, an app for people living with ADHD…
