Why Notion works for ADHD brains, and the smallest possible place to start
A soft Sunday read for the woman who has tried every planning tool and is quietly wondering if it is her, or if it was never going to fit.
Hey love. I want to tell you about a sentence that gave me full-body chills π«£
I was voice-noting my way through some origin-story work a few weeks ago (my brain processes so much better out loud than through typing, it is a whole thing), and at one point I heard myself say something I had not quite put together this way before.
Notion wasn’t the business. Notion was the intervention.
I stopped talking. Just sat with that for a minute, kettle going somewhere in the background, the cat doing her usual mid-morning judgement from the windowsill π
Because I knew, the second the words landed, that this was the true version of the thing. Not the polished version, not the here’s-my-brand-story version. The one that made my whole nervous system go oh.
Before Notion, I was in a managed-chaos situation. Tabs everywhere, ideas with nowhere to land, planning apps that were either too rigid or too basic to hold my actual brain, post-it notes on every available surface, context-switching that cost me hours every single week. The tools I was trying to use were built for someone else’s brain entirely, and I was spending so much energy trying to make myself fit them that there was not much left over for the actual work (a feeling I am guessing some of you know in your bones π«Άπ»).
Pour something warm. This one is a sit-down read.
The tool question, and the better one underneath it
If you have ADHD, or you live somewhere on the neurodivergent spectrum, or your brain just runs hot and squiggly in the way creative-coded brains tend to do, you have probably tried more planning systems than you can count. Asana, Trello, Todoist, ClickUp, the bullet journal era, the first-Notion era (before it quite clicked), the going-back-to-paper era, the maybe-Apple-Notes-is-enough era π€¦ββοΈ.
And every time a new tool let you down, the story you told yourself was probably some version of I just need to try harder, be more disciplined, finally commit this time. When the truth, the actual truth, is that the tool was never going to fit. Most productivity software is built around an assumption of a brain that runs linearly, holds context easily, and likes to do one thing at a time. Mine does not. Maybe yours does not either.
The shift that changed everything for me was when I stopped asking which tool is best? and started asking which tool fits the brain I actually have?
That second question changes the whole game π‘
What ‘intervention’ actually means
When I say Notion was my intervention, I do not mean it in a dramatic way. I mean it in the quiet, specific way the word actually works.
An intervention is the thing that gets between you and the pattern that has been hurting you. It interrupts the loop. It gives the broken cycle somewhere else to go.
For years my loop went something like this: have brilliant idea β lose brilliant idea in 47 tabs and three notebooks β feel like a personal failure β start over on Monday with renewed willpower β repeat for a decade π«£.
The intervention was finding somewhere safe to put everything. Where the scattered pieces had somewhere to land. Where the right context was always already there when I needed it, without me having to remember where I last put it. It did not change my business overnight. It changed my brain first. And once my brain had somewhere safe to work from, the business started making sense in a way it never quite had before.
That is what an intervention does. It does not optimise the loop. It interrupts it π
Why Notion specifically (for brains like mine)
I am not going to write you the 47-reasons-Notion-is-better post, tbh. That post exists everywhere and it is exhausting. The thing nobody seems to explain clearly is why Notion lands so hard for ADHD and neurodivergent brains, and it is worth slowing down for.
It is the shape of it.
Notion lets you build the structure around your actual brain, instead of forcing your brain into someone else’s structure. You can open a page on a Tuesday with no clear idea of what it is yet, let it grow sideways for three weeks, and then quietly turn it into something useful when you finally know what it wanted to be. That is exactly how my brain works.
Your context lives where the work lives. The brain dump from last Thursday is still right there, on the same page as the offer outline you started in March, three clicks from the meeting notes that triggered the whole thing. Nothing gets lost. Nothing needs re-explaining. The cognitive cost of remembering where you put things drops to almost zero, and your brain finally has room to do the thing it is actually good at, which is having ideas worth catching π‘.
For a brain that loses energy fast on context-switching (which most neurodivergent brains do, even when we are good at the switching itself), that nothing-needs-re-explaining layer is the actual magic. It is not a productivity hack. It is nervous-system relief π«Άπ».
How to start (the low-friction daily capture way)
This is the part where I want to invite you in gently, because the worst thing you can do with Notion (or any tool) when your brain is already tired is start by trying to build the perfect system.
Every member who joins my room with that nervous I-want-to-do-this-right energy gets the same first instruction from me. Start with one page. One simple, low-friction daily capture page. Not a dashboard, not a database, not seventeen connected workspaces (please, for the love of your nervous system π«£). One page where everything lands when your brain hands it to you, no matter how messy or unfinished it is.
That single page is your intervention point. It is the spot in the loop where you stop losing things. Once that page is reliable for a few weeks, the rest of the system can grow around it slowly, in the actual shape your brain wants instead of the shape a YouTube tutorial promised you.
This is exactly why I built the Focus & Flow Mini-Planner. β¬9. One Notion template. Three quiet pages: a daily capture, a weekly priorities page, and a monthly goal overview. Nothing fancy, nothing overwhelming, nothing that requires a Saturday to set up. Just the smallest possible system that actually holds on a hard Tuesday π.
It is the version of Notion I wish someone had handed me ten years ago, when I was downloading my fourteenth template and quietly losing faith that any of this would ever click.
Build from your interventions
If you have read this far and felt your shoulders drop, I want you to do one tiny thing.
Find a quiet five minutes today and ask yourself this:
What tools or systems in my life feel like relief when I open them? Not the ones I am supposed to use. The ones that feel like oh, there you are.
Those are your interventions. Build from those.
For me, that thing is Notion. It might be something else for you (a paper notebook that has lasted ten years, a particular kind of voice-memo workflow, a kitchen ritual that resets your whole brain). Whatever it is, protect it. Build around it. Stop apologising for needing it. Your brain found something that fits, and that is not a personality quirk, that is a real relationship with a system that is actually serving you π.
Come start small with me
If you want a soft, low-friction place to begin with Notion, my Focus & Flow Mini-Planner is the smallest, calmest version I could possibly build. β¬9, one cozy template, no overwhelm. Open it, plug in today’s brain dump, set your weekly Top 3, and let it hold what your head has been carrying π«Άπ».
It is the one-page-start practice made real, and it is the door I would walk every Softie through if they were standing in my kitchen asking where do I even begin.
π [Get the Focus & Flow Mini-Planner β] (Mini-Planner sales page link goes here at publish)
If this is the year your brain finally gets a system that fits, we can take it deeper inside the Soft Systems Society after, with the rest of the women building calm businesses around brains that work nothing like the productivity-bro internet assumes. The Mini-Planner is the door. The Society is the room behind it π.
Pour the kettle. Open the page. Let your brain breathe π«Άπ»
xo,
Jacky π

