CLEAR ALL
When it comes to space, we're always separate. When it comes to time, we're always together. Step with me into time and out of space. ---- Subscribe: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCM3foQCmdNo-xrYSRhqBMrg?sub_confirmation=1 ---- Most Recent Video: https://www.youtube.
Membership in my community Divergent Design Studios is now open for enrollment, and the theme for the month of December 2021 is Spiral Time!
If time and space held no constraints upon you — what would you change? who would you protect? what would you be willing to sacrifice? Welcome to A Neurodivergent Guide to Spacetime.
For me, the worst part of ADHD isn’t being fidgety or hyper-focused; it’s under-discussed symptoms such as time blindness and impulsive spending—which have made my finances a constant struggle.
If you have ADHD, time-blindness is as intentional as colorblindness.
As Neurodivergent people, our differences in executive functioning skills such as focus and attention, emotional and impulse control, working memory, planning, and organization can all be linked to our distinct perception of time.
Put off the essay, forget your laundry, and stop puttering around your apartment for no reason. Come to the Strand, and hear Professor John Perry talk about his book, The Art of Procrastination, a smart, offbeat look at how putting things off can mean getting things done.
The average human lifespan is absurdly, insultingly brief. Assuming you live to be eighty, you have just over four thousand weeks. Nobody needs telling there isn’t enough time.
WARNING: This book is not for the fain of heart, fawningly polite, or desperate to be liked.
But if you’re a procrastinator, next time you’re wallowing in the dark playground of guilt and self-hatred over your failure to start a task, remember that the right kind of procrastination might make you more creative.