
Plot twist: Your professional organiser has ADHD. Yes, the irony is not lost on me.
I spend my days creating calm, functional spaces for busy families, but often find myself standing in Woolies with absolutely no idea what I came in to buy.
Can hyperfocus through an eight-hour kitchen transformation for a client. Gets home and realises she forgot to take the meat out of the freezer for dinner. Again.
Watch: A GP on why ADHD is finally getting the platform it deserves. Post continues after video.
Regardless of the way your brain works, your environment is either supporting your mental bandwidth or sabotaging it.
The 'doom piles' of washed clothing dotted around your home, the overflowing junk drawer, the cluttered kitchen bench that greets you every morning... your brain sees every displaced item as an unfinished task.
It's sensory overload that sabotages your focus, adding to the feeling of not living up to the 'Supermum' standard — which is a myth, by the way.
If you feel like you're failing at home, you're not — you just need better systems.
Systems so simple, they work even when your brain has 38 tabs open, and you're bouncing between thoughts like a caffeinated toddler.
Enter, the external brain hack.
More than just organising tips, they're ADHD survival tools I've tried and tested in mine and many of my clients' homes.
They work by removing the barriers that make simple tasks feel impossible when your brain is already overwhelmed. They encourage family members to share the mental load.