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Smart Tools for Smart ADHD
Episode 418th April 2024 • Smart ADHD Podcast • Ian Anderson Gray
00:00:00 00:32:31

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Have you wondered if there are any tools or gear that can help you be more focused, remember things more and help you grow?

In this episode, we delve into a variety of tools and apps designed to help those with ADHD enhance their focus, organization, and overall productivity. We explore everything from noise solutions to digital tools for creating a 'second brain', discussing how these resources can transform challenges into opportunities for growth and creativity.

Summary

●     [00:00:00] Welcome to the Smart ADHD Podcast

●      [00:01:08] Exploring Smart Tools for ADHD Management

●      [00:02:08] Diving Into Focus Apps and Noise Solutions

●      [00:03:54] The Power of Brain.fm for Focus and relaxation

●      [00:07:12] Exploring White, Pink, and Brown Noise for Concentration

●      [00:16:40] Creating a Second Brain with Notion

●      [00:22:43] Decluttering Your Brain with AI and ChatGPT

●      [00:25:16] Real-World Item Tracking with Apple AirTags

●      [00:29:01] Getting Stuff Done: Focusmate and Virtual Assistants

●      [00:31:46] Wrapping Up and Looking Ahead

Transcripts

Ian:

Hello, I'm Ian Anderson Gray, and this is the smart ADHD podcast.

Ian:

Now if you're a smart, creative entrepreneur or business owner

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navigating your life with ADHD, This is the podcast for you.

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Now, I'm no ADHD expert, but I'm eager to share my story on what I've learned

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by talking with experts, as well as digging into the personal ADHD stories of

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successful creatives and entrepreneurs.

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I was diagnosed at age 46, and it answered so many questions in my life.

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But of course, that was in many ways, only the start of my journey.

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So let's learn together.

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Smart stories, smart strategies, smart ADHD.

Ian:

Hello and welcome to the smart ADHD podcast.

Ian:

I'm Ian Anderson Gray.

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And in this episode, I'm going to be exploring some smart tools for

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ADHD, whether you are a business owner, a creator, or an entrepreneur.

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These tools have helped me with lots of different things like focusing

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and organization, remembering things like having a second

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brain, all that kind of stuff.

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Now, these are some of the tools that I use.

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But there are so many, and we all have different circumstances, different

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things that we struggle with, different things that we excel at.

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And so I'd love to hear from you.

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What you think are the best tools.

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What tools have you used?

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Pop them in the comments.

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If you're watching on YouTube, or wherever you are consuming this, whether

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you're listening, you can email me at Ian at smart ADHD dot me as well.

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There are loads of things that can help us and to help us manage

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our daily lives more efficiently.

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And the first section, the first segment, of apps and tools are

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focus apps that help you focus.

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Now, for me, I need to Be in different places.

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I, if I get stuck in the same place, I get frustrated.

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It stops my creativity.

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So I love being in my studio where I currently am, but.

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I also like to be somewhere else.

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I may go downstairs with my laptop or I may go to, for example, like a

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coffee shop or something like that.

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Now, the problem with coffee shops is, I find coffee shops work really well for me

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in that there are other people there and it helps me almost be more accountable.

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I know that sounds really weird because it's not like the people in

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the coffee shop are checking up on me, but I'm around other people and

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I'm And so I, it helps me focus on what I'm doing and be more creative.

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Now, the problem is though, with working somewhere that is there are

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lots of distractions that are happening.

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There are noises, that's the coffee machine making, the gushing

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noises or whatever it does.

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And, and so like I find listening to, either white noise, brown noise,

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or, some kind of music that helps me focus really makes a big difference.

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One of the best purchases that I've ever got are noise canceling headphones.

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So I'm wearing some at the moment.

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These are the Bose quiet comforts, headphones, and these are amazing.

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I also have my Apple.

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What are they called?

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AirPods.

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they are amazing.

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They've got the AirPods Pro 2.

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They're noise cancelling.

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So for me, noise cancelling headphones, they cut out a lot of the noise.

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But still, I find this app here called Brain FM makes a massive

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difference to helping me focus.

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Because what this does is it, and apparently this is, there's a lot

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of science that backs this up.

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they have different types of music.

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Now I could use that in inverted commas, Because for

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me, playing music distracts me.

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If the music is, can draw me away because I'm starting to analyze the music.

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But this is more sounds, ambient sounds.

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So we've got different categories here.

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We've got focus, relax.

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If you're into meditation, it's got that.

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And we've also got sleep, which helps you sleep.

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And, I'll come back to that in a minute, but the, focus ones.

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So for example, we've got here, this, is more of a relaxing one.

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so if you'll, if you're trying to relax, you can play that, which is really nice.

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So that's a.

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A relaxing sound, but focus ones.

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So let's have a look here.

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We've got, if it goes to focus, got deep work, creative flow,

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study and read and light work.

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So if I'm really getting into the zone, if I want to get into the

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zone, I'll choose deep work and then it will pick a track for me.

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So this has got the breath of life.

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It's got a high neural effects there, which means that it's on the left.

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It kind of pans around and, that's particularly useful in

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for people with ADHD, I find.

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that's electronic, but we can change that as well.

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if we prefer something else, this is called cognition.

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Now, I'm not going to play any, much of these because I don't

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want to get into trouble for copyright or whatever, but Brain.

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fm is fantastic, that helps you focus on those things.

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Let's try, for example, Creative Flow or maybe let's try Lightwork actually.

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Oops.

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that's quite good.

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Or there is, Lightwork.

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So maybe you're checking your emails or something like that.

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now for me, this is really useful because it just helps me get in the zone.

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Get the stuff done as well and at the end of that if you want to then relax and just

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get your heart rate down which is I think a really important thing for people with

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adhd because As I was speaking with dr.

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Tamar azir about this actually one of the things that Often we

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struggle with is getting our nervous system back to, relaxing mode.

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So I find things like having a bath, having a walk, breathing

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exercises really work, but Brain.

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fm really is amazing when it comes to all of those things.

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It helps you focus.

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Now it's not free.

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You have to pay a monthly fee.

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I, in, in all honesty, I got this ages ago.

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I just paid a one off fee when they were doing a special deal years

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and years ago, but I use this.

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So if you find music distracting, but you want to work it in somewhere a

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coffee shop or somewhere where there's a lot of noise and a lot of things

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happening, then that really helps.

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It helps you focus on stuff.

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Now, that's not going to be for everybody.

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there are other ways of driving out the sound.

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And for me, that is, like a white noise, white noise option.

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So there's loads of different apps for this.

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You can also go to YouTube, Apple Music, whatever.

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You'll be a search for white noise that will help you.

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Now, what white noise is, it basically plays all the frequencies

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of the spectrum from low to high.

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And so it really plays.

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Drowns out background sounds that's what white noise is and it can really help you

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focus now I personally find white noise a little bit too harsh, but This is a this

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is an app called white noise for ios.

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There is options for android as well So this is what white noise sounds like and

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I think you'll probably agree with me.

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This is quite abrasive quite harsh

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So yeah, that's that is white noise The one I prefer, okay, before I get into

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the one I prefer, this is pink noise.

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So pink noise, what this does is it accentuates the higher frequencies.

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So this is in my mind even, harsher.

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I wouldn't personally recommend this.

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That's weird.

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It actually seems like that's the lower frequency, but I believe pink

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noise should be the higher frequency.

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The one I like I'm going to go back to gray noise in a minute, but the

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one I really like is brown noise.

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So this is slightly lower frequency and I just find this a little bit more relaxing.

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Or less abrasive, I should say.

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So that's got a much deeper, sound.

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So grey noise, what grey noise does is it gets rid of the middle

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frequency, so it's low and high.

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Yeah, I don't mind that.

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So anyway, these apps can really help you focus on what you're

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doing, particularly if you're wearing noise cancelling headphones.

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A lot of these apps also have other things like, this is ocean waves crashing, which

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is very good if you're wanting to relax.

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Heavy rain pouring.

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I don't need.

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I don't need that one because I live in Manchester.

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It's always raining here.

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Extreme rain pouring.

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so you've got all these different, things here.

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Now, what's really interesting here is that, Dr.

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Russell Barclay, who is he's co, co wrote one of the big, books that has influenced

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so many of us, driven to distraction.

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he recently did a YouTube video.

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This was when was this?

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Yeah, this was on this was a few months ago as I record this and

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This was does white pink brown noise improve attention in adhd?

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And I definitely recommend if you're interested in this I definitely recommend

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watching It's only eight minutes long and it goes through some studies on

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why this might Make a difference and apparently there are meta analysis

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studies on whether white noise or other types of noises work So but basically

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the what he was focusing on does it actually help you focus in of itself?

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What I felt that video didn't talk about was Does it stop the distractions?

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And for me, I, I'm going to get distracted if there are lots of things happening.

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There's, too many, quite often with ADHD, you get overwhelmed with

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too much stimulation happening.

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So what I find these apps do, the white noise, brown noise,

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all those kinds of things.

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It just stops all of those distractions and helps you focus.

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I don't think it's.

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The noise in of itself that helps me for example at the moment in my studio

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If I was working on my own I probably wouldn't put on white or brown noise

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on because it's already pretty quiet.

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I would use brain fm though for that.

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So Interesting.

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I'd love to know what you think about that.

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now what's interesting Is if you have an iphone, let me see if I can get this up.

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Yeah, so if I You if you go to accessibility on this, so if I, on, I

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think this is called mission control.

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When you, scroll down and you have all the options, there is an option for

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background sounds, which I'm going to click on here and then you've got options.

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So you've got.

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Balanced noise, bright noise, dark noise, ocean, rain, and stream.

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And so I can then just click on this, and that is an ocean sound.

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Balanced noise?

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So balanced noise, that sounds, that's that's like white noise,

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but that's balanced noise.

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I need to look into that because I actually quite like that sound.

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Background sound settings.

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Yeah, you've got all of these different options here.

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You can you can even have it while media is playing and I highly

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recommend that is that's built in to ios So definitely check that out.

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There are loads of other apps out there.

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There's my noise is a good one.

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There's dark noise, but I found with dark noise in order to get

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anything really, you have to pay.

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so definitely check that out.

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Okay.

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Other things that you could do in terms of helping you focus, there's, an app called

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forest, which is an interesting one.

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So forest, what this does, I've not used this for a while, but basically

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you, it helps you grow like a virtual forest and the only way to grow the

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forest is by not using your phone.

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I can plant this, let's plant a tree.

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and I've got, it's saying I've got 120, Minutes of non screen time.

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So currently the this is giving me a little little seedling here You can see

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some little green leaves the problem is if I give this up if I have to toggle and go

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to another app like facebook or Instagram or something that plant dies And this

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kind of does weird things with your head.

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obviously we know this isn't true.

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It's not an actual plant dies, but, yeah, it, really helps.

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So if I go away from that now, is this going to, let's see if I go, I

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might not have set this up properly.

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I haven't, but if I give up, there will be four withered trees

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in your forest, it's saying.

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let's not do that.

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That, would be awful.

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I don't want any withered trees.

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there you go.

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some things to think about there.

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Noise cancelling headphones, forest app.

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there's other apps that you could check out.

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There's Rescue Time, there's Focus at Will.

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Loads of things like that.

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next segment is more to do with, relaxing and particularly at the end of the day,

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I think this is important, we're on the go all the time I've mentioned brain FM.

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I think really works.

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but things that were going to help our nervous systems.

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Calm down and one of those ways which I was a little bit dubious about is

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breathing and Box breathing can really help but I found that this actually

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really does Help me calm down exercise, of course really helps as well.

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So going for a walk Going to the gym, but at the end of that Calming down

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the app that I used to help me with.

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This is called iBreathe.

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So if let me click on this and there's different settings here.

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This is, thing I like about iBreathe is it's a really simple app.

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So we can change the voice.

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Do we want a voice?

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Do we want, haptic feedback?

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All of those kind of things.

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So if I click on breathe, I'm currently, yeah, I want intervals.

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I'm on four, seven and eight.

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So what it's going to do.

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It's going to, I think I breathe in for four, hold for

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seven, breathe out for eight.

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there's box breathing, there's a few different ones here.

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So if I go to breathe now, click on the breathe, click on start.

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What it's going to do is, so it's going to start in three seconds.

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So I'm inhaling for eight cycles.

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Eight and then after the eight it's going to then tell me to exhale I can't

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really do this now while i'm recording the podcast, but hopefully this gives you

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the idea And this is this gives you eight of these And I don't know about I don't

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know about you, but this really helps.

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It really helps me Relax at the end of this Okay, I'm not

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going to do any of that, now.

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But, iBreathe is a really cool app.

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It's just really simple.

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there we go.

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Anyway, that's, I'm sure there are other things that I should

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be looking at with the relaxing and the breathing side of things.

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I'd love to know from you.

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What you think because i'm going to be coming back to some

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of these in the future okay.

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The next segment is creating a second brain now I don't know about you, but

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I tend to forget things very easily.

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I just Struggle sometimes with short term memory And even long term memory.

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So for example, i've been to events and i've Forgotten where I first met a person

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and so I have decided to, I decided quite a few years ago to make a note

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of all the people I met at each event.

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and I use a tool called Notion.

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Now you don't have to use Notion.

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You could use whatever tool you like, but I particularly like

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Notion because it just helps me.

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Create a system that works for me the problem with notion I think for a lot

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of people a notions free by the way, and there are apps for iphone android and

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on desktop as well the problem I find with a lot of people find with notion

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is that they overcomplicate it and As soon as I said, okay, I'm just going

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to start simply and build it over time.

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I'm not going to focus on making it look beautiful or anything like that.

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If you watch any YouTube videos, they're all about how to make

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these things look beautiful.

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that's all great, but it's not actually going to help you get stuff done.

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So, I have here is, so if you're, listening to the podcast, you can

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watch this if on the video as well.

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So if you're interested in that, so this is my travel database and I'll

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explain what I've got here on the screen.

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I basically, if I ever, I go on a vacation holiday.

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I don't know, like a trip, a business trip, an event, that kind of thing.

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I put it in here.

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In fact, actually we've just come back from Wales, a lovely family trip.

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I need to put this in here.

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I haven't done that yet, but I was at an event back in March called Uplift Live.

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And if I click on this, I've got a little image of this.

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It says Uplift Live 2024.

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If I click on that, I can see this was a business trip.

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I, this was in Birmingham.

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So I've listed the place, which is in a different database.

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I was staying at the Easy Hotel because I always think like, why

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stay at a posh hotel if it's just me?

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It's just a kind of nice, basic hotel.

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I ate at these restaurants.

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So there was an amazing Indian street food restaurant, which I went to.

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So I can remember that and I can click on that.

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And that will take me to a little bit more information about that.

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and it was the Uplift live conference.

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Now, the really important thing for me is the list of people.

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And so I can see at this event, I met Tim Lewis, Lenker, Kopparvaar,

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Jane Eggers, lots of people here.

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And the cool thing is, for example, if I click now on Richard Tup, who is who

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I saw there, I can also then see the other events that I have seen him at.

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Now, I'm not entirely sure.

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I think this probably needs updating.

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So it's not perfect, but I can see here that I met him at new media, Europe, 2015,

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new media, Europe, 2016, you print a 2018.

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And in fact, what I need to do there is put also put uplift live in there and

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that add that in, but, I'm pretty sure I'm also sort of other events, some social

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media marketing and things like that.

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I also know that the preferred method of communication with

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him is on Facebook messenger.

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So I know that.

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But I can go back and I can re I can remember all these things.

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I can remember my trip to Orlando where I hung out with my friends

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Jeff C and some other people there and I can go all the way down.

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So this is amazing.

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the other thing that I've got is I've got a learning centre.

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So in there I've got all the books that I'm reading, podcasters that I'm

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listening to, and all that type of stuff.

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So I list all of that in there as well.

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so I've got my CRM, which is that got a learning center database and travel.

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And I'm going to come back to Notion in one of the other, sections later

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on, but there are lots of other tools that you could use those tools

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like Trello, there's Evernote, just find a tool that works for you.

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Now the learning center, uses a service called readwise and readwise is really

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cool if you have adhd because what this allows you to do it synchronizes

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with your highlights on kindle so if you're highlighting little you're

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reading a book or listening to your book You can highlight little segments

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of the book so you can remember later.

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But the problem with that is you then forget about it and you

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just, you never look back at it.

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What, Readwise does, it will take those from your Kindle and then post them

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into Notion or Evernote or whatever.

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And it helps you remember those things.

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So it's not just your Kindle, but it also use, you can, if you use Instapaper

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or Pocket, it also synchronizes with certain podcast apps as well.

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So if there's a podcast that you're listening to and you're really interested

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in one little snippet in there, you can, save that bit and then that will be added.

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to your learning center or your second brain in Notion.

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It's pretty amazing.

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So that really helps you recall information and something that my

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daughter was learning at school is the whole idea of, now what, I'm going to

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probably forget this, but it's the learn, I think it's called the learning curve.

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And it's all the, thing of being able to, learn it, wait a few days, and

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then learn it again, and it's all about recalling it, and, I need to talk to my

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kids about it, because they're learning loads of cool stuff about that at

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school, so definitely check that out.

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Okay, we're now on to the next segment, which is decluttering your brain.

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And so what I find really helps here is I'm a verbal processor.

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So talking with other people about my day and what I've achieved really helps.

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But if there isn't another person there, I, or if I'm not wanting

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to bore my wife, then sometimes AI can help here and with chat GPT.

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chat GPT has for iPhone and Android has this really cool thing.

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If I just put in chat, search for chat GBT, I can start a voice conversation.

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this is great if I'm walking out, walking about, and I just

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want to try and summarize my day.

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So I could say, please can you summarize my day from what I'm about to, tell

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you, and then I'll talk about my day.

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So today I went for a walk with Helen, And then I talked with my dad

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about business, and then I recorded my smart ADHD podcast episode.

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and, you could go through all of those things and you can then get

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it to summarize that, into a list.

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Now there are more kind of fancy ways of doing this.

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There is Thomas Frank has created this amazing System where you can, just

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record on your phone and then it will summarize it and send it to Notion.

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There were loads of cool things, but just using the ChatGPT app on your

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phone to help summarize really works.

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You could also use your voice app, voice recording app on your phone and then

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just feed that into the likes of, there were lots of transcription softwares out

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there and then just get to summarize it.

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And for me, that really helps.

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It helps me manage my thoughts and also my tasks as well.

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So you can use, whether it's, the voice assistants on your phone, I

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won't mention any of them, don't want to trigger them for you.

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but that's, that really, works very well, I think, for, me at least.

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so yeah, decluttering your brain is always good.

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Now, about, how about you?

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Are you forgetting things?

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This is segment five.

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Are you a person that kind of loses your keys or your, watch or whatever?

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In this modern age There are, it is arguably more and more difficult

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for people with ADHD because the life is traveling so fast.

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There's so much data that we have to deal with, but technology can really help here.

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And I use Apple AirTags to help me.

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Now you don't have to use Apple AirTags.

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You could, if you're an Android user, you could use other, Tags that will

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help you but this is for real world items I never really use my lose my

Ian:

iphone because I can always find it using Find my which is apple service

Ian:

for this and it's the same with my Apple airpods The my headphone my earphones.

Ian:

I never lose those because again I can track them and I can Make

Ian:

them ping a sound which is great.

Ian:

But what about real world items?

Ian:

So I have my wallet.

Ian:

I have my keys I have my sunglasses all with air tags so I can find them later

Ian:

and that really helps me It's absolutely brilliant but you can't put air tags

Ian:

on everything and something that I got really frustrated with is The fact that,

Ian:

for example, cables, there's a specific cable that I need, it might be like an

Ian:

HDMI cable, and I'm pretty sure I have it, but I have no idea where it is.

Ian:

what I'm about to show you is gonna be, is gonna, you're gonna think

Ian:

this is completely over the top.

Ian:

And, yes, you're right, I went into a complete, how would you say it, like a

Ian:

complete, Hyper focus mode with this, but this has changed so much for me.

Ian:

And again, I'm using notion for this, but this is my items database.

Ian:

So in here, I have a list of a lot of stuff that I own, not everything.

Ian:

I've even got clothes in here.

Ian:

So I've got my super dry t shirt here.

Ian:

Now, I've even got things, I've got the URL of, I've got the, email that I ordered

Ian:

it with, I've got the, I think I've got the receipt in here as well somewhere,

Ian:

but I've also got Jack Tofono adapters.

Ian:

Now, the cool thing about this is, so I might need these particular adapters,

Ian:

but I don't know where they are, but I can see here that it's in my studio and

Ian:

it's in box four, which is really cool.

Ian:

there might be my Apple pencil.

Ian:

Now, the only problem with this is I need to keep this up to date and I

Ian:

don't always do that, but, this really, helps me, keep on top of things.

Ian:

And like with my son is looking for a particular adapter.

Ian:

I can look in the database and we can find it.

Ian:

that has really made a massive difference.

Ian:

Other thing, other apps that you can use, to help you remember

Ian:

things, Google Calendar.

Ian:

We've got a whole family on Google Calendar.

Ian:

So we all know what we're all doing.

Ian:

That really helps.

Ian:

I also use a, an app for my Mac and my iPhone called Fantastical, which is

Ian:

basically Google Calendar on steroids.

Ian:

And it works with other calendars as well.

Ian:

The other app that I use is Todoist.

Ian:

Todoist is really cool.

Ian:

It's, it's a basically a to do app.

Ian:

that's all it is.

Ian:

I'm not going to show you my list of things because it's got some personal

Ian:

information in there, but, basically, and I have a virtual assistant who

Ian:

goes through my emails and then, Puts makes basically converts those into

Ian:

actionable items in my to do list and then I can mark them off as well.

Ian:

Now the important thing here is though to Make sure that they are

Ian:

actual tasks because quite often we Actually will mark a project down here.

Ian:

So for example, I need to buy a new camera, you know For example

Ian:

that I don't need to buy a new camera, but that's an example.

Ian:

that's actually many tasks So I'll need to do some research for the camera.

Ian:

I'll need to then Go to amazon I might need to check if i've got enough money

Ian:

in my business account to buy it and there's All those different things

Ian:

so you need to be careful about that.

Ian:

But Todoist really helps.

Ian:

Okay, the next segment, we're nearly at the end, is getting stuff done.

Ian:

Now, I don't use this next app because the idea of it makes me a little bit

Ian:

anxious, but I know some people who do use it and it is called Focusmate.

Ian:

Now what so what I said before that one thing that I like to do

Ian:

is go to a cafe And I feel I have a sense of accountability there.

Ian:

because there are other people there but focus mate does is it puts you together

Ian:

with some random person in the world?

Ian:

Who is wanting to get stuff done?

Ian:

So you book a slot in the day and then focus mate matches you with somebody

Ian:

else you're on Ideally you're on camera and microphone And you talk to each

Ian:

other right at the start of say the hour and you say I want to get this

Ian:

done I need to reply to 10 emails in this next hour and the other person

Ian:

says I need to write an article.

Ian:

I at least need to plan my article you then basically Get on with your stuff.

Ian:

You're you've got your video there.

Ian:

They can see you I mean, you're not looking at each other, but

Ian:

you're getting on with the stuff.

Ian:

And at the end of the hour, you just basically then say to each other,

Ian:

so did you get your stuff done?

Ian:

And they'll say yes, hopefully.

Ian:

And that's it.

Ian:

Now, I think this is a genius idea.

Ian:

The only thing that I feel about this is I feel a little bit anxious about being

Ian:

put together with some random person.

Ian:

It doesn't really work for me, but it might for you.

Ian:

So Focusmate is definitely something to check out.

Ian:

Now, I have a virtual, I have two virtual assistants who help me in my business.

Ian:

And actually they sometimes will do exactly that.

Ian:

So we'll spend half an hour together.

Ian:

my VO will say, okay, you've got some emails to reply to.

Ian:

I'll say, can I just get on with that now?

Ian:

And okay.

Ian:

I know I'm paying her for that time, but the fact that I'm paying her and she's

Ian:

on the call and she's waiting for me to do it means that I do it and I will get

Ian:

the stuff done because for me, it's those little boring tasks that I will just

Ian:

put off and put off That really helps.

Ian:

Timers as well.

Ian:

So the time timer, I don't know whether you're going to be able to

Ian:

see this, but, if I go over there.

Ian:

I've got this time timer on the wall over there.

Ian:

So that works.

Ian:

so set myself like 10, 15 minutes or half an hour to get something done.

Ian:

also I find just working somewhere else again, that really helps.

Ian:

And also artificial deadlines.

Ian:

So like I do a lot of waiting around in car parks, waiting for my kids, they've

Ian:

got different activities and I find that if I've got 45 minutes in the car, that's.

Ian:

Artificial time limit means that I just do stuff.

Ian:

I just get it done, which really helps So that is it.

Ian:

Those are all the tools and gear and all that kind of stuff that I wanted to

Ian:

mention that's what helps me, but i'd love to hear from you What tools do you use?

Ian:

any of the ones that I mentioned new to you?

Ian:

Do you think you're going to use them?

Ian:

Let me know in the comments below or send me an email to ian at smartadhd.

Ian:

me.

Ian:

I'd love to hear from you.

Ian:

We'll be back with another episode soon.

Ian:

I've got some other experts planned, to come onto the show as well.

Ian:

But until next time, I encourage you to get smart with your

Ian:

ADHD and I'll see you soon.

Ian:

Toodaloo!

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