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You came here to read things longer than a caption? In this economy? I love that for us.
Your screen time report thanks you in advance.
I used to think I was broken.
Every productivity system I tried worked for exactly three days before my brain found something shinier and the whole thing collapsed. Notion boards half-built. Planners abandoned by February. Color-coded spreadsheets that made perfect sense at midnight and zero sense by Tuesday morning.
Sound familiar?
Here’s what nobody told me: I wasn’t failing the system. The system was failing me.
If you’ve ever struggled with staying organized, following through on ideas, or making traditional productivity systems work for your ADHD brain, you’re not alone. Most productivity tools weren’t designed for visual thinkers or nonlinear minds. They were built for people whose brains work in straight lines. Which is exactly why so many high-achieving women with ADHD feel like they’re constantly falling behind, no matter how hard they try or how many new systems they build.
What I needed wasn’t more discipline. It was an ADHD-friendly productivity system actually built for how my brain processes information.
Enter my current obsession: aesthetic dashboards that think the way you do.

I will always be the last one to understand something.
Not because I’m not paying attention. Or because I don’t care. And not because the information isn’t interesting to me. But because my brain needs to SEE the full picture before any of it clicks, and most of the tools the world hands us are just words on pages or spoken words in rooms, and neither of those has ever been how I learn.
I spent a long time thinking this made me slow. Behind. Undisciplined. The person who had to ask for the explanation twice, who needed the diagram when everyone else was fine with the paragraph, who had seventeen tabs open and a Notes app that looked like a crime scene and still somehow couldn’t find the one thing she was looking for.
What I actually was? A visual thinker in a world that defaults to text.
And the system I needed wasn’t more discipline or a better planner or another productivity app I’d abandon by Thursday. It was a dashboard – a visual ADHD productivity system that finally made everything click.
Specifically: a beautiful, organized, aesthetic Notion dashboard that holds my entire life plan, every idea I’ve ever had, every goal I’m working toward, and every task that needs to happen – all in one place, all visible, all making sense in a way that feels exciting to open instead of exhausting to face.
I absolutely hoe out to a good dashboard. I need you to know that about me before we go any further.
Something nobody in the productivity space wants to admit about being an ambitious, idea-heavy, visually-driven woman with an ADHD brain: you do not have a motivation problem. You do not have a discipline problemor a focus problem.
You have a system problem.
The systems most productivity gurus sell were not built for brains like yours. They were built for linear thinkers who can work through a numbered list from top to bottom without getting distracted by the brilliant idea that just occurred to them on step three. Designed for people who find blank pages inspiring instead of paralyzing. Or built for people whose ideas come one at a time, in a reasonable order, with logical next steps attached.
That is not us. Our brain looks more like this:
The problem isn’t that you’re undisciplined. The problem is that no one ever showed you a system that actually matches how your brain works.
Let’s clear this up fast, because the word “dashboard” can send a visual thinker spiraling into overwhelm before she’s even started.
Think of it as the place where your mood board, your vision board, and your to-do list get married and create the most functional, beautiful life plan you’ve ever seen. It’s the visual identity of the life you’re building, and when it looks like that life, your brain starts believing that life is actually possible.
When your system is ugly, generic, or overwhelming, your brain actively avoids it. When your system is beautiful, your brain wants to engage with it.
Say you’re dreaming about a slow, sun-soaked lifestyle – think flamingo pinks, turquoise, emerald greens, palm trees, a house full of your favorite people and the best snacks. Your dashboard can LOOK like that life. Warm colors. Soft layouts. A visual palette that makes you feel the dream every single time you open it. Not because it’s decoration. Because when your system reflects the life you’re building, it stops feeling like a task manager and starts feeling like proof that you’re already halfway there.
Aesthetic is not frivolous. For visual brains, aesthetic is functional. The way your dashboard looks directly affects whether you’ll actually use it.
I’ve built dashboards for things I never thought to put in a system before – my cross-country move from California (every task, every logistics decision, every timeline, all in one place instead of seventeen panicked texts to myself), my online business strategy, and the personal lifestyle I’m actively designing. I built mine in Notion, but this kind of ADHD dashboard can work in any tool, as the key is having a visual productivity system that keeps everything in one place.
Each one has its own visual identity. Each one makes me genuinely want to open it. None of them live in a Notes app that makes me want to slam shut my laptop and stress-eat Trader Joe’s snacks.
Before you open Notion or any other tool, start with buckets. Not features, not templates, not someone else’s system that you’re trying to retrofit onto your life. Just the categories your specific brain needs.
For most high-achieving, idea-heavy women, those five buckets look like this:
Structure first. Design second. Always in that order.
Once your buckets exist, give everything a home. Every idea, every task, every half-formed thought that’s currently living rent-free in your brain gets moved into the dashboard. Not because you have to act on all of it, but because once it’s somewhere visible and organized, it stops taking up mental space.
Then separate your front row from your back room:
The result: clarity that used to feel impossible. Not because your life got simpler – it didn’t. But because your system can now hold the complexity without dumping it all on you at once.
Productivity in sobriety looks different, especially for women with ADHD. When you get sober, your brain wakes up. Fully. Sometimes overwhelmingly (and if you’re in that phase right now, I broke down what the rebuild actually looks like in this blog post).
The fog lifts and suddenly you can see everything – all the ideas you had but never executed, all the goals you set but never followed through on, all the things you wanted to build but couldn’t quite get out of your own way long enough to start. Sobriety gives you access to the full bandwidth of your brain, possibly for the first time in years.
For women with ADHD, that full bandwidth can feel like standing in front of a firehose.
The rebuild that comes after quitting drinking generates an enormous amount of mental material:
All of that needs somewhere to go. Without a system, it just circles. It takes up space, exhausting you before you’ve even started. It makes the rebuild feel harder than it needs to be.
A dashboard gives all of that material a home. And when your rebuild has a home – a visible, organized, beautiful place where the whole plan lives – it stops feeling like chaos and starts feeling like momentum.
An ADHD productivity system isn’t about doing more…it’s about creating a structure that makes it easier to follow through on what actually matters.
The fastest way to start is embarrassingly simple:
That’s it. That’s the whole first step. Don’t design it yet. Or optimize it. And please do NOT watch fourteen YouTube tutorials about the perfect Notion setup. Just get your stuff out of your head and into those five buckets.
Within 24 to 48 hours, something shifts.
The mental clutter that was living in seventeen different places…the Notes app, the voice memos, the sticky notes, the back of your brain at 2am…has a home. Your brain can stop holding all of it. And when your brain stops holding all of it, you can actually think. Like, really think. It feels a little unreal the first time.
From there, you refine. You design. You pick your palette:
Whatever it is, make it yours. Make it feel like the life you’re moving toward, not the chaos you’re moving away from.
Tasks start feeling like something you want to do instead of something you keep bumping down the list. Because the path is visible. And your goals are right there. The system is finally working with your brain instead of against it.
What is the best productivity system for ADHD?
A visual system like a dashboard works best because it allows you to see everything in one place instead of relying on linear lists.
Do ADHD dashboards actually work?
Yes, especially for visual thinkers who struggle with traditional planners and task lists.
Can I use Notion for ADHD productivity?
Yes. Notion is one of the most flexible tools for building a custom ADHD dashboard. It’s what I use and I love it!
You don’t need more discipline. You don’t need to simplify your life or quiet your ambition or stop having so many ideas. You need a system that can actually hold everything you’re carrying and make it feel manageable instead of overwhelming.
That system exists. It’s visual, it’s organized, it’s beautiful, and it works specifically for brains like yours, the ones that think in floods, that need to see the whole picture, that have been told their whole lives that they just need to try harder when really they just needed a different tool.
I’ve spent years building and refining my own dashboard system in Notion, and it is genuinely one of the most impactful things I’ve done for my productivity, my clarity, and my ability to actually execute on the life I’m rebuilding in sobriety.
I go full geek mode with aesthetic dashboards. And damn proud of it.
I’m currently building out my exact Notion dashboard templates, the ones I use to organize my entire life, business, and sobriety rebuild. If you’ve ever wanted a system that actually works with your brain instead of against it, this is it.
So if you want to be the first to know when I share my actual systems – the templates, the frameworks, the exact Notion setups I use to hold my entire life plan – the newsletter is where that happens first. Every Tuesday, straight to your inbox. Join the House of Hypegirl newsletter and get on the list. When the dashboards drop, my subscribers get access first.

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