Escape Rooms, ADHD & The Dopamine Game
This week's guest is David Middleton, game designer and founder of Bewilder box Escape Rooms. David has created over 40 immersive experiences and worked with some massive names including Horrible Histories, Peaky Blinders, Paddington, and Black Sabbath. He's also got ADHD, and it turns out building escape rooms might just be the perfect job for a brain that runs on dopamine.
* The Dream Job Hidden in Plain Sight: Escape rooms are basically a dopamine delivery machine. Every puzzle solved, every player delighted is a hit your ADHD brain was built to chase.
* Coasting at Work (On Purpose): David's honest take on surviving the nine to five: he deliberately didn't go all-out at work because if he had, he'd have burnt out completely. Saving energy isn't laziness, it's survival.
* The Side Project Safety Valve: Bands, quizzes, weird creative schemes. Having something creative on the go in the background was what allowed David to keep showing up to the normal job. The side project wasn't a distraction, it was the release valve.
* Keep it Simple, Seriously: After trying every complicated productivity app going, the winner is a basic digital to-do list mirrored across phone and computer. If the system is too complicated, you won't stick to it.
* OneNote as a Brain Extension: Dumping everything into a digital notepad means you can search for it later. David regularly uncovers notes from years ago he'd completely forgotten writing, and says he finds "absolute gold" in there.
* Gamify Everything: From tracking streaks on the NHS quit smoking app to ticking off tasks, the ADHD brain responds to visible progress. Find the game inside the task and you're halfway there.
* Swallow the Frog: A tip from David's productivity coach. Do the thing you're most dreading first. The relief of getting it done makes everything else feel more manageable, and gives you an actual win to feel good about at the end of the day.
* The Dishwasher Trick: Can't face the whole job? Just put one glass away. Then another. Breaking a low-dopamine task into tiny pieces lowers the dread of starting, and once you've started, you'll usually just crack on and finish it anyway.
* Know Your Peak Hours: Without a boss setting your schedule, it's on you to protect the hours when your brain actually works. Fighting against your natural rhythm is a losing battle.
* Accountability as an External Brain: Agreeing to do something with or for another person adds just enough outside pressure to make following through more likely. Sometimes an audience of one is all you need.
* ADHD Looks Different on Everyone: Delayed diagnosis often happens because people compare themselves to someone else's experience and conclude "that's not me." Years of masking and finding dopamine in different ways, whether that's exercise, creativity, food, or less healthy things, shape how the symptoms actually show up.
* Imposter Syndrome Doesn't Go Away: Working on Paddington at County Hall, with a full cast and set, was genuinely exciting. But stepping into bigger projects still brings that nagging voice asking whether you're actually good enough for it.
* Ask for Help Early: When you go from employee to business owner you suddenly have to do everything yourself. David learnt very quickly that needing support isn't a weakness, it's just sensible.
David's path from office worker to escape room designer to working on major licensed IP shows what happens when you stop fighting your brain and start working with it instead. And if nothing else, if your job involves people screaming with delight every time they solve something you built, you've probably found the right career.
* Play David's Escape Rooms: bewilderbox.co.uk [http://bewilderbox.co.uk/], featuring sci-fi themed adventures with Norman Lovett from Red Dwarf.
* Explore David's Creative Work: rebelbrain.co.uk [http://rebelbrain.co.uk/]
* Follow David: @RebelBrain on Instagram
Join the ADHD Creative Club community at https://theadhdcreative.club for more tips, tricks and real talk on getting on as a neurodivergent creative entrepreneur.