My Weird Prompts
When Daniel picked up a Dremel to engrave tool labels after a month of fragmented moving chaos, he discovered something counterintuitive: the demanding, repetitive task felt like rest, while the easy day of unpacking felt like psychological torture. This episode unpacks the neuroscience behind why ADHD brains experience task-switching as metabolically expensive, how flow states provide dopamine regulation rather than euphoria, and why mildly boring repetitive tasks often induce flow better than exciting ones. We explore the concept of "flow debt," the cortisol cost of micro-interruptions, and the actionable insight that front-loading fifteen minutes of flow before a chaotic day can pre-regulate your dopamine system for hours.
300 episodes
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