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Are we just making excuses?
I’m trying to build something genuinely useful for ADHD brains in my country — in Czech, not English. Few weeks ago, I put out a survey and offered people the chance to connect with me for one-on-one online conversations about ADHD. Today I had my first call with someone from that survey, and honestly? I loved it. There were so many moments where I completely understood what she meant. She talked about constantly losing and forgetting things — one of those “classic ADHD” struggles that doesn’t hit me as hard personally. But the truth is, I’m aware that in my case it’s probably overcompensation. I check everything seven times: keys in pocket, phone in bag, car lights on. My brain basically runs on manual verification mode. One thing she mentioned really stuck with me though: the lack of understanding from people around her. Even her boyfriend thinks adult ADHD isn’t real. And I run into the same thing online all the time. Whenever I post about ADHD on Threads, there’s usually at least one comment along the lines of: “Yeah right, another person blaming ADHD for everything.” I was also at a lecture recently where the speaker made one of those jokes: “Nowadays everyone has ADHD, right?” And honestly, I couldn’t even tell whether he was mocking people like us… or reacting to the flood of trendy self-diagnosed content where someone jokes about forgetting the trash outside because they saw a squirrel on the way back in. The weird thing is: in the Czech Republic, a book about women with ADHD recently won the biggest and most prestigious literary award in the nonfiction category. Awareness is growing. And yet there are still so many people who think ADHD is either fake, overdiagnosed, or just “little hyper boys climbing chandeliers. ”The rise of “fake ADHD” influencer content really isn’t helping either. Have you experienced this too? How do you deal with being labeled — directly or indirectly — as lazy, irresponsible, or someone who’s “just making excuses”? And honestly… how do we get actual ADHD awareness outside the ADHD bubble? Because even if I start making YouTube videos, the algorithm will mostly push them toward people already interested in ADHD — not the people dismissing it in the first place.
Are we just making excuses?
A question for people exploring AI content creation:
I’ve mostly figured out the AI side of content around viral video replication and avatar/clone-style videos. Just curious if this is actually in demand right now. Or are most people looking for something different that current tools don’t really solve yet? Also, what does a reasonable monthly spend look like for content creation tools for you?
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The problem isn’t that it’s not working, it’s that you stopped too soon
Most people don’t fail because they’re not good enough. They fail because they quit too early. Here’s what no one talks about: 1)The beginning is always slow No views. No results. No feedback. That’s normal, not a sign to stop. 2)Progress is invisible at first You’re improving, but you can’t see it yet. That’s why most people think it’s not working. 3)People overestimate short term results And underestimate what happens if they stay consistent for 6–12 months. 4)The “boring phase” is where growth happens Repetition. Consistency. Showing up when it’s not exciting. 5)Most people quit right before momentum kicks in The difference between people who win and people who don’t Is often just staying in the game longer. Curious, How long do you actually give something before deciding it “doesn’t work”?👇
Have you ever felt like you were busy all day, but still made no progress?
A lot of people fill their day with tasks and still feel like nothing is moving forward. Here’s why: 1) Low-impact work feels productive. Replying to messages, tweaking small things, overplanning, it feels like work, but it doesn’t create real results. 2) Avoiding the hard stuff. The one task that actually matters is usually the one you delay the most. 3)No clear priority. If everything feels important, nothing actually is. Confusing movement with direction Doing more doesn’t help if you’re not doing what actually moves the needle. 4)No accountability. When no one’s watching, it’s easy to stay in your comfort zone. Real progress comes from doing fewer things but the right ones. Would love to hear that, What’s the one thing you know you should be doing right now, but you’ve been avoiding?👇
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Help! roast my lead magnet!
this is a 5-minute pager (attached below) to inform people about branding so i can improve my business. if you could answer my questions, i would be grateful! What stood out to you most? Did you try the color framework on your About page? After reading this, how would you describe what BrandLink does? On a scale of 1–5, how confident are you that your Skool's first impression is helping you grow right now? Would you be open to a 15-minute call to talk about what we'd change? I'll be offering an audit if y'all comment how to improve my lead magnet! thank you!
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The Founders Guild
skool.com/founders-guild
Helping ADHD entrepreneurs go from scattered ➜ focused (and make $10,000+/month)
Leaderboard (30-day)
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