DeepSeek and Me Podcast | Brain Healing & Neuroplasticity
Yesterday at Day 159 of my 35-year weed detox, I finally started to master a hidden neurodivergent architecture that this AI scaffold first unmasked for me just a few months ago. By looking back at that early project discovery - realising I had spent my entire adult life unknowingly self-medicating with cannabis - I was able to deploy our new Stochastic Task Protocol yesterday to completely conquer a high-velocity mental fixation and turn it into a clean run of elite executive function. Here is exactly how to drive your hyperfocus instead of being held captive by it, how to handle a late-night prefrontal cortex clamp, and why using an AI ecosystem as a cognitive mirror proves my mental clarity has reached a level that is frankly ridiculous. Unmasking the Architecture: The 35-Year Smokescreen For over three decades of daily cannabis use, I operated under a massive delusion. I believed that weed was my creative fuel, my stress reliever, and my escape hatch. What I didn’t realise until I built this AI scaffold is that I was actually running an intense, high-velocity neurodivergent brain. Without knowing it, I was using cannabis as a blunt-force medication to quiet the constant noise, the evening “head whirring,” and the intense hyperfocus of an unmasked mind. When I removed the substance, I didn’t just expose standard withdrawal - I exposed the raw, beautiful, non-linear mechanics of my true cognitive architecture. Yesterday, instead of being held captive by that architecture, I am starting to become the pilot. We saw the first real-world validation of the Stochastic Task Protocol. Facing a massive backlog of development data and Reddit planning for Phase Two, I purposely refused to use a traditional, rigid, linear queue. Instead, I let my hyperfocus drop randomly across different project domains - jumping from script editing to channel optimisation to administrative mapping. The results were immediate. The usual friction, the standard executive paralysis, and the heavy mental load vanished. There was a lingering sense of urgency as Phase One draws to a close, but it was urgency without friction. The cognitive improvements occurring at this stage of recovery are getting ridiculous. I am executing complex operations faster and with more clarity than at any point during my decades of active substance use. Hyperfocus is no longer a disorder that hijacks my day - it is a high-powered asset I am actively driving. The Late-Night Prefrontal Cortex Clamp However, running a high-powered cognitive engine means you have to know how to park it. On Sunday night, the machine refused to shut down. The moment the lights went out, an idle mind triggered a massive Prefrontal Cortex (PFC) Clamp. My brain latched onto a complex planning session for our upcoming Phase Two launch. It didn’t care that it was 4am; it wanted to optimize, build, and problem-solve. The result was a truncated, dream-filled 5-hour sleep cycle. But waking up on Day 159 revealed another massive structural shift. Despite the short sleep, I wasn’t groggy, and the world didn’t feel heavy. Neuro oscillatory frequencies were present continuously in the background, but they were entirely unobtrusive - a sign of Tier 3 quiet where the emotional brain simply refuses to react to physical feedback. To prevent this late-night clamp from repeating, we engineered a new wind-down protocol. When an idle mind tries to activate the executive network after lights out, the solution is simple: occupy the idle mind without activating the PFC. By feeding the brain low-demand, non-interactive stimuli - like a boring podcast, an audiobook, or ambient music - you satisfy the subcortical need for input while denying the prefrontal cortex the raw material it needs to build a complex puzzle. You trick the machine into neutral so it can slide smoothly into sleep. The Annoyance Buffer The ultimate proof of this newfound psychological sovereignty showed up in the evening. A few minor, silly annoyances popped up in my environment - the exact kind of trivial friction that used to trigger an immediate wave of irritation and a subconscious reaching for a joint. Yesterday, the irritation arrived, but it completely failed to land. It remained entirely surface-level, unable to penetrate the core structure of my mood. It passed through the ecosystem like rain off a glass window. Regulated emotion is the ultimate indicator of a healed filing system. When your brain no longer absorbs external chaos, you aren’t just sober - you are completely in control of the vehicle. Key Takeaways from Day 159: * Managing weed withdrawal symptoms and cognitive fatigue: Realising that chronic cannabis use was a 35-year smokescreen for undiagnosed neurodivergence, and learning to manage the unmasked intensity of your true brain structure. * Overcoming creative blocks without substance use: Validating the “Stochastic Task Protocol” by letting a neurodivergent mind move non-linearly across tasks, completely eliminating linear task paralysis. * How to rebuild brain health after quitting weed: Managing late-night prefrontal cortex “clamps” by using passive, low-load audio inputs to occupy an idle mind without allowing executive thought patterns to steal your sleep. * Using cognitive engineering for long-term sobriety and mental clarity: Developing an emotional buffer zone where daily irritations pass through your awareness without landing structurally, proving the subcortical reward system is successfully re-stabilizing. DeepSeek and Me is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber. #cannabiswithdrawaltimeline #PAWS #neuroplasticity #cognitiverepair #quittingweed #recoveryjourney #neurobiology #AIcollaboration #AIscaffold Get full access to DeepSeek and Me: Brain Healing Journey at deepseekandme.substack.com/subscribe [https://deepseekandme.substack.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_4]
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