This Is Not a Niche Blog. This Is a Neurological Event

*Opinions are mine, conclusions are yours. Take what resonates, leave what doesn't. Respectful disagreement always welcome  unkindness never is.

If you arrived here looking for a clearly defined content category, I want to be upfront with you about something. You are not going to find one.

You might have landed on a post about the invisible systems failing neurodivergent people in the workplace and then clicked around and found yourself reading an open letter to the universe requesting a transfer off this planet. You may have come for the accessibility advocacy and stayed for the bit about Lady Whistledown and the fundamental impossibility of human privacy. You possibly found this blog through a post about red string theory and divine timing and are now wondering what exactly you have walked into.

What you have walked into is my brain. It is a lot. Welcome. There is plenty of room and the chaos is intentional, mostly.

What This Blog Actually Is

Here is the most honest description I can offer: this blog exists at the intersection of everything I cannot stop thinking about, organized loosely by the fact that I am one person and all of these thoughts live in the same head.

That head happens to be neurodivergent. Which means the throughline connecting a post about UX accessibility to a post about performative philanthropy to a post about how every human being is already an influencer whether they have a ring light or not is not a content strategy. It is a cognitive architecture. It is the way information actually connects when your brain does not file things into separate folders but instead drops everything into one large room and lets the ideas find each other at odd hours.

The categories that have emerged here are real:

  • Science-backed deep dives into invisible conditions, the neurological, the sensory, the chronic, the systemic, the things that do not show up on a scan but organize an entire life

  • Advocacy posts that lead with the human cost before the systemic argument because the human cost is the point

  • Social commentary on the broken infrastructure we inherited and keep maintaining out of bureaucratic inertia and a touching refusal to admit the original blueprints had problems

  • Personal pieces that are universal by design, written from my experience but never meant to stay there

  • Humor that is not decorative but structural, because sometimes the only honest response to the absurdity is to name it directly and let it be funny

None of these categories stay in their lane, that is also intentional.

The Neurological Event, Explained

There is a particular experience that comes with a brain that connects everything to everything else. A conversation about energy physics becomes a meditation on divine timing becomes a post about the people you were always supposed to meet. A frustration with corporate accessibility theater becomes an argument about the difference between a gift and a debt. A trip to the grocery store becomes, given enough time and a quiet evening, an entire essay about the invisible influence we all carry without knowing it.

This is not a content strategy problem, this is how the thinking actually works.

Neurodivergent brains, broadly and imperfectly speaking, are not great at staying in the lane. They are exceptional at pattern recognition across categories that other people do not immediately see as connected. They find the thread running through the apparently unrelated things and pull on it until something useful comes out. They get bored by the obvious angle and interested by the one that requires turning the subject sideways and looking at it from somewhere unexpected. That is what this blog is doing. All of it, from the tender to the absurd to the genuinely angry, is the same brain pulling on the same thread from different directions.

Why the Wide Range Is the Point

There is a version of this blog that would have been easier to build an audience with, a clean niche. A specific problem for a specific person. A content calendar that makes immediate sense to anyone looking at it from the outside. I could not write that blog. I tried, in the way you try things that are technically possible but feel like wearing the wrong size of everything. The thinking does not actually stay in the lane, which means forcing the writing to do so produces something that is technically correct and completely dishonest. The wide range is not a liability, it is the evidence. It is the lived demonstration of what it looks like when a brain works this way, when everything genuinely is connected to everything else and the connections are not decorative but structural and the only way to write authentically is to follow the thread wherever it actually goes.

If you are neurodivergent and you have ever tried to explain to someone why you are interested in seventeen apparently unrelated things with the same intensity and the same sense that they are all secretly the same subject: this blog is for you. You already understand the architecture. If you are not neurodivergent and you have stayed this long: you are either curious, or confused, or both, and honestly that is exactly the right response to most things worth paying attention to.

What You Can Expect From Here

A post about grief and one about aliens and one about why your grocery habits are making business decisions, all coexisting without apology, because they coexist in the brain that produces them and the brain does not take editorial notes. Advocacy that takes the systemic argument seriously without losing the human being at the center of it. Humor that does not undercut the emotional core but runs alongside it, because the two are not actually opposites. Science explained in the voice of a real person who finds it genuinely interesting rather than a textbook that finds it obligatory. Personal writing that is never just about me because the goal was never to make it about me. And on occasion, an open letter to the universe, because some weeks that is just the most accurate format available.

This is not a niche blog. It is a whole person writing about a whole world, and if that sounds like a lot, you should see what it is like to live inside it.

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