ADHS/ADHD

  • ADHD Medication, Wellbeing, and the Weight of Stigma

    ADHD Medication, Wellbeing, and the Weight of Stigma

    Writing about medication still feels exposed. Not because it is controversial in a medical sense, but because it touches something deeply personal: the idea that needing support somehow reflects a personal failure. I want to start clearly and responsibly. I am not a doctor, not a psychiatrist and not a medical professional. This is not…

  • Minimalism Isn’t Aesthetic—It’s Nervous System Care

    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…

  • NeuroSpace Guided Imagination, Part 3: Home – a Space That Holds Me

    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.…

  • NeuroSpace Guided Imagination, Part 2: A School Where I Can Breathe

    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…

  • NeuroSpace Guided Imagination, Part 1: A Workplace That Truly Fits You

    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…