The systems I built before I knew I had ADHD
Long before I had any vocabulary for ADHD, I was building systems. Lots of them. For my businesses, for my teams, and very quietly, for myself.
The accidental scaffolding
Calendars with colour coded blocks. Templates for every recurring decision. Standard operating procedures for tasks most people would just do. I thought I was being a good operator. I was also keeping myself functional.
The systems I designed for my companies were, in hindsight, ADHD accommodations dressed up as good management.
Why externalising works
ADHD working memory is unreliable. The fix isn't to try harder to remember. It's to stop relying on memory altogether. Put it on a list, in a calendar, in a template, in a checklist.
Anything you can move out of your head is something your brain no longer has to hold while it tries to do the actual work.
Systems for a brain, not a saint
The best ADHD systems are the ones you'll actually use on a bad day. Not the elegant ones you'll abandon in a week. Lower the bar to entry, raise the visibility, and design for the version of you that's tired.
I didn't build my systems because I was disciplined. I built them because I had to. They still work.