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The Sight Side

Podkast av James H

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The Sight Side is a podcast Pioneering the Field of Applied Neurodivergence. Applied Neurodivergence is the deliberate and systematic application of neurodivergent cognitive abilities—bottom-up processing, advanced pattern recognition, systems thinking, and detail-oriented analysis—to solve complex organizational and human problems that neurotypical approaches routinely miss. Hosted by James Hickey—AuDHD systems architect, Licensed Peer Recovery Supporter, and founder of PathWays Collective—the show explores how neurodivergent cognition actually functions in work and in life, and why bottom-up processing and pattern recognition are becoming essential in a world obsessed with credentials, optics, and performance theater. If you’ve been filtered out by hiring systems that don’t measure real capability, built shadow systems to keep organizations running, or watched your peers progress while you seemed to be treading water, this podcast is for you. We explore topics like: Why “show your work” often punishes pattern recognition Shadow systems as undocumented innovation The overlap between neurodivergent cognition and AI Late diagnosis and what changes when you understand your own architecture The coming credential collapse—and what replaces it Career paths for people who can’t tolerate traditional employment James was diagnosed with autism and ADHD in his 40s, after decades of being labeled unfocused, underperforming, or “not living up to his potential.” The problem wasn’t capability—it was context. Now he helps organizations see their blind side: the friction, revenue leakage, and risk that top-down systems consistently miss. No scripts. No polish. From friction to flow. New episodes bi-weekly.

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7 Episoder

episode Road to Revolution | James Adams cover

Road to Revolution | James Adams

The Sight Side continues with James Adams, founder and CEO of Revolution Trucking, a certified Disability-Owned Business Enterprise he built in 2019 after more than three decades in supply chain, logistics, and transportation. Revolution runs three connected companies, Revolution Trucking on the asset side, Revolution Transport in brokerage, and Revolution Supply Chain as the digital booking interface, and it operates in the mission-critical, no-fail space, the high-value, high-risk freight most carriers will not touch. James and Jim connected as fellow Ohio-based DOBEs, and this episode is the conversation that came out of that. This one runs from the operational to the personal and back. Jim traces the path that got him here, mechanical engineering, product development for a Fortune 500, supply chain consulting, building a private-equity-backed fleet to roughly 1,800 assets before it sold to ArcBest, then global logistics across about 90 countries, and finally getting the band back together to start Revolution in 2019. He talks about why he wanted to live in a no-fail environment, why he named the company Revolution to change how the industry operates, and the philosophy underneath all of it: that drivers are partners, not numbers, and that removing the mundane is how you keep good people from burning out. James and Jim get into what neurodivergence actually looks like inside logistics, not as a thing to accommodate but as a thing that wins. Jim describes a regulated-fleet manager he did not know had ADHD who started running circles around the company's data analyst and is now its leading quantitative mind, a driver whose consistently top safety scores turned out to be a different way of processing risk rather than just good training, and team members with dyslexia on both the sales and driving side and what changed once they felt safe enough to disclose. The conversation turns toward AI and bottom-up processing, predictive risk management on the road, and an honest, often blunt read on what the DOBE certification actually does, what it does not, and why the value is in the human introductions and almost never in the portal. Jim is direct, candid, and generous with the stories, and that comes through. Some moments worth flagging: The fleet manager who "does not come across as a very analytical guy" and became the most quantitatively powerful person in the company The ADHD driver with the top safety scores, and the moment the team realized it was not the training, it was that "his mind thinks differently" "I even hate the word employees. They're partners." "No one is going to burn out at our company." The pilot analogy: 99% boredom, 1% terror, and you do not know when the 1% is coming "Tell me your last onboarding of a DOBE service provider," the question that stops procurement teams cold The 1-in-20 conversion rate, and "we don't want to dress up and play house" The network math from Revolution's own first shipment forward: 50% preexisting relationships, 45% referrals, 5% cold Why the value of certification is in the warm introduction, never in the set-it-and-forget-it portal About James Adams: James Adams is the founder and CEO of Revolution Trucking, which he started in 2019 after more than thirty years in supply chain, logistics, and transportation. Revolution operates three connected companies, Revolution Trucking, Revolution Transport, and Revolution Supply Chain, specializing in mission-critical, high-value, no-fail freight, and is a certified Disability-Owned Business Enterprise. Jim's DOBE status traces to a period of kidney failure that led him to the certification when he founded the company. Find Jim: Revolution Trucking — https://www.revolutiontrucking.com [https://www.revolutiontrucking.com] About the host: James Hickey is the founder of PathWays Collective and host of The Sight Side. He is an AuDHD systems architect, Licensed Peer Recovery Supporter, and author of Cyberspace Psychosis and the Virtual Reality Blues. He was identified as autistic and ADHD in his forties, after decades of being labeled unfocused, underperforming, or not living up to his potential. Website — https://pathwayscollective.net/the-sight-side [https://pathwayscollective.net/the-sight-side] LinkedIn — www.linkedin.com/in/james-hickey-9b8ab43a2 [http://www.linkedin.com/in/james-hickey-9b8ab43a2]

19. mai 2026 - 1 h 9 min
episode The Best-Kept Secret in Disability Inclusion cover

The Best-Kept Secret in Disability Inclusion

The Sight Side continues with Cami Turcotte, Senior Director of Supplier Inclusion at Disability:IN, the global business network advancing disability inclusion across the workplace, supply chain, and marketplace. Cami oversees the DOBE certification program, the Disability-Owned Business Enterprise certification, and the entire network of certified businesses behind it. James met Cami after his consulting firm, PathWays Collective, earned DOBE certification and became part of the network, and this episode picks up a conversation the two of them have been having across several one-on-ones since. This one runs from the personal to the structural and back. Cami traces almost fifteen years with the organization, from a pilot program with ten or fifteen certified businesses to what she calls the behemoth it has become in 2026. She talks about the shift in how she sees the world since she started this work, from an uncle in a wheelchair who was just her uncle, to noticing every gap, every missing button, every place the world was built for some people and not others. She and James get into what a DOBE actually is, what the certification does and does not do, and why she still calls Disability:IN the best-kept secret. James and Cami get into the invisible disability question, the off-stage moments that trip up neurodivergent professionals while the technical work comes easy, the difference between leading with your accommodations and leading with what you are great at, and why that same principle applies whether you are in a job interview or pitching your business to a Fortune 500. The conversation turns toward the numbers coming for every workplace, the contract cycles disabled business owners have to learn to read, AI as a leveling tool, and an honest read on whether inclusion and accessibility are actually heading the right direction. Cami is frank, transparent, and warm about it, her words, and James's, and that comes through. Some moments worth flagging: * The 2040 stat: 40% of professionals projected to identify as neurodivergent, and 53% of Gen Z already do * Why "the sky is purple" is how Cami describes the people who will not see what is in front of them * The certification is a tool in your toolkit, not a guarantee of business * Why you lead with what you are great at, not your list of accommodations * The square peg problem, and why there are five or six ways to document a disability * "We don't need medical records, and we don't want them" * Reading the contract cycle, and why the hard question is the valuable one * Why you probably need to start your application today if you want to be certified before Dallas About Cami Turcotte: Cami Turcotte is the Senior Director of Supplier Inclusion at Disability:IN, where she has worked since 2012 and has led the supplier inclusion program since 2024. She works with disability-owned business enterprises and corporate partners alike, connecting both sides of the network and helping certified business owners leverage the resources, relationships, and seat at the table that certification provides. Find Cami: * Disability:IN — https://disabilityin.org [https://disabilityin.org] * Email — Cami@disabilityin.org [Cami@disabilityin.org] * DOBE certification — https://disabilityin.org/what-we-do/supplier-diversity/get-certified [https://disabilityin.org/what-we-do/supplier-diversity/get-certified] * Disability:IN Global Conference & Expo, July 27-30, 2026, Dallas — https://disabilityin.org/conference [https://disabilityin.org/conference] About the host: James Hickey is the founder of PathWays Collective and host of The Sight Side. He is an AuDHD systems architect, Licensed Peer Recovery Supporter, and author of Cyberspace Psychosis and the Virtual Reality Blues. He was identified as autistic and ADHD in his forties, after decades of being labeled unfocused, underperforming, or not living up to his potential. * Website — https://pathwayscollective.net/the-sight-side [https://pathwayscollective.net/the-sight-side] * LinkedIn — www.linkedin.com/in/james-hickey-9b8ab43a2 [http://www.linkedin.com/in/james-hickey-9b8ab43a2]

16. mai 2026 - 1 h 8 min
episode Neurodiversity in the Classroom | Theresa Falk cover

Neurodiversity in the Classroom | Theresa Falk

Season two of The Sight Side opens with Theresa Falk, a Honolulu-based author, educator, and 31-year veteran of the classroom. Theresa currently teaches 8th grade English and women's literature at 'Iolani School, where she advocates for gender equity and neurodiversity. James met her at the Slowdown Summit in Columbus, Ohio, where she was a speaker, and this episode is a continuation of the conversation that started there. This is a wide-ranging one. Theresa traces how neurodivergence has emerged across three decades of teaching, from a time when the vocabulary did not exist in education to the present moment where her students self-organize around it. She talks about the two branches of how she came to this work, professionally through the kids in front of her and personally through her own neurodivergent son. She talks about Kainoa, a former student who asked her to help him build a club for neurodivergent kids, and about what it cost him to write a perfect email. James and Theresa get into the buzzword problem ("everybody's ADHD these days"), the difference between a state and a condition, the cost of being undiagnosed for four decades, and why kids who were told audio books "do not count as reading" end up doing better in public schools than private ones. The conversation turns toward AI, the credential collapse, what Gen Z is going to have to build because the institutions handed them holes instead of bridges, and Theresa's direct call-out to her own generation: we hold the power right now, and we cannot walk away from this work. Theresa is a writer, a poet, a performer, a teacher, and someone whose career is in education, but whose life path is in healing. That comes through. Some moments worth flagging: * Why the moment a vocabulary word enters a school is the moment a student becomes visible * The Einstein and Spielberg Club, where 20 kids showed up to the first meeting * "I teach a child, not a subject" * The take-a-lap story, and why five sweaty middle school boys gave the best presentation of the day * What it actually costs a neurodivergent student to do what everybody else does * Why "what's wrong with you" is the wrong question * Theresa's call-out to Gen X and the Boomers About Theresa Falk: Theresa Falk is a Honolulu-based author, educator, and creative who has spent more than three decades guiding students to discover the power of their own stories. Her work centers on voice, identity, and connection, both in the classroom and on the page. She currently teaches 8th grade English and women's literature at 'Iolani School, where she is an advocate for gender equity and neurodiversity. Find Theresa: * Substack: Rewriting the Lead — https://theresafalk.substack.com/ [https://theresafalk.substack.com/] * LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/theresa-falk-a27534368/ [https://www.linkedin.com/in/theresa-falk-a27534368/] About the host: James Hickey is the founder of PathWays Collective and host of The Sight Side. He is an AuDHD systems architect, Licensed Peer Recovery Supporter, and author of Cyberspace Psychosis and the Virtual Reality Blues. He was identified as autistic and ADHD in his forties, after decades of being labeled unfocused, underperforming, or not living up to his potential. * Website — https://pathwayscollective.net/the-sight-side [https://pathwayscollective.net/the-sight-side] * LinkedIn: www.linkedin.com/in/james-hickey-9b8ab43a2 [www.linkedin.com/in/james-hickey-9b8ab43a2] Audio note: Some technical issues during recording resulted in James's audio being quieter than Theresa's. Transcript available on the website if it helps you follow along. New episode Thursday: James gets into Cyberspace Psychosis and the Virtual Reality Blues: what the book is, what it argues, and why he wrote it.

5. mai 2026 - 1 h 5 min
episode The High-Performer’s Wall cover

The High-Performer’s Wall

Guest: Genie Love, M.Ed. (Founder of NeuroAutonomy) EPISODE SUMMARY In our first guest episode, James sits down with Genie Love to pull back the curtain on the "High-Performing until suddenly they’re not" pattern. With 25 years of experience spanning special education and executive coaching, Genie explains why traditional productivity advice fails neurodivergent brains and how both individuals and organizations can move toward Applied Neurodivergence—treating unique cognitive wiring as an asset rather than a liability. KEY DISCUSSION POINTS 1. The Late-Diagnosis Lens: The difference between early support and discovering your neurodivergence in your 40s or 50s, and the process of "looking back" to forgive your inner critic. 2. The Duck Metaphor: Understanding masking fatigue—the cost of appearing calm and "neurotypical" on the surface while pedaling furiously underneath. 3. Executive Function Breakdown: Why smart, capable professionals suddenly hit a wall, and how "tripping over the pebble" of small daily frustrations leads to total overwhelm. 4. Discarding Generic Productivity: Why "eating the frog" or the "two-minute rule" can actually be detrimental for ADHD and Autistic brains. 5. Bottom-Up Systems: Genie’s approach to building personalized scaffolding, including her color-coded regulation system for managing overstimulation in real-time. 6. The ROI of Retention: Why it is cheaper and more effective for organizations to coach and retain neurodivergent talent than to let them burn out and face the costs of turnover. NOTABLE QUOTES 1. "You always trip over the pebble on the path; you don't trip over the mountain." 2. "They've been working their whole lives to meet us where we want them to be... maybe we can meet them a little more where they are." RESOURCES & LINKS 1. NeuroAutonomy: neuroautonomy.com [https://neuroautonomy.com] 2. Connect with Genie on LinkedIn: Genie Love, M.Ed. [https://www.linkedin.com/in/genie-love-beyond-coaching/]

20. jan. 2026 - 56 min
episode Methods Over Results and the ND Friction Point cover

Methods Over Results and the ND Friction Point

I got written up once for trying to solve a customer's problem. Not for failing—for trying the wrong way. And here's the thing: the problem never got solved. The customer left without ever getting what they needed. But I still got the write-up. Because the process mattered more than the outcome. In this episode, I break down one of the biggest friction points between neurodivergent talent and the organizations we work in: the NT obsession with methods over results. I share the casino story that still makes me salty twelve years later, and offer practical strategies for navigating hierarchy when your brain is wired to see answers directly. Key quote from this episode: > "Does this need to be said? Does this need to be said by me? Does this need to be said right now?" TOPICS COVERED 1. The casino anecdote: written up for trying to solve a problem the wrong way 2. NT method obsession vs. ND results orientation 3. Why being right doesn't protect you if you're right the wrong way 4. The pattern recognition penalty 5. Circumspection: the skill late-diagnosed ND people learn the hard way 6. Practical strategies for communicating with supervisors 7. Reframing accommodation as communication protocol FIVE STRATEGIES FOR NAVIGATING HIERARCHY 1. Lead with the outcome, not the problem — "I want to make sure we hit [goal]. I noticed something that might get in the way." 2. Frame it as a question — "Have we considered..." gives room to engage instead of defend. 3. Document in writing — Creates a paper trail and gives you processing time to choose your words. 4. Find the person who can hear it — Sometimes the chain of command is the problem. 5. Know when to let it go — If you've raised it and documented it, you've done your part. Protect yourself. LINKS 1. PathWays Collective: https://pathwayscollective.net [https://pathwayscollective.net] 2. Linkd In: James Hickey [www.linkedin.com/in/james-hickey-9b8ab43a2] Have a story about being punished for solving problems the wrong way? I want to hear it. Reach out on LinkedIn or leave a comment. The Sight Side Pioneering the Field of Applied Neurodivergence From Friction to Flow

15. jan. 2026 - 14 min
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