A Neurodivergent Freelancer’s Guide to Independence, Sustainability, and Sanity
So the Platforms Let You Down. Now What?
As a neurodivergent person, such as myself, you get these glimmers of realization. You then understand that it’s not you who’s the problem. It’s the system. And when the platforms we rely on start failing—through burnout, scams, algorithm shifts, or just plain inaccessibility—it’s time to reframe the situation.
1. Start with Your Digital Home
Key Message: Your website is your storefront, portfolio, and professional hub.
Even if every platform were to vanish tomorrow, your website would remain, a testament to your control and independence. It doesn’t need to be extravagant—it just needs to be yours, a digital home you have complete authority over.
- Choose a platform you can manage, such as WordPress (our personal favorite), Carrd, Squarespace, etc.
- Include: A clear portfolio (published clips or polished samples)
- “Work With Me” page with transparent rates, turnaround times, and boundaries.
- About/Bio + contact form (with a voice that reflects YOU)
- Blog (optional, but powerful for SEO and showing your voice)
- Make it accessible—visually, cognitively, and emotionally. Use plain language where you can. Use image alt text. Keep formatting clean.
Your digital home is not just for clients. It’s a home base for you.
2. Use Social Media Strategically
Key Message: You don’t need to be everywhere. Just be consistent somewhere.
If you’re neurodivergent, social media can be both a tool and a trap. So choose wisely:
- Pick 1–2 platforms you actually enjoy or can tolerate: LinkedIn, Bluesky, Tumblr, Instagram, Mastodon, etc.
- Use them to: Share your blog posts, recent work, and micro-wins
- Talk openly (when safe) about your journey as a writer
- Connect with other ND writers, editors, and freelancers
- Batch your posts or use scheduling tools when executive dysfunction strikes
This isn’t about being viral—it’s about being visible enough.
2.5 Building a Blog
Key Message: A blog is a natural magnet for visibility, consistency, and voice.
Your blog is your stage, a platform for your voice to resonate and share your thoughts. It’s a space where you can shape your message, manage your SEO presence, and share meaningful content on your terms.
- Choose a platform that feels intuitive, such as WordPress, Blogger, Substack, or Medium.
- Set your own schedule—weekly, biweekly, or whatever you can sustain.
- Use your blog to: Post updates and thoughts
- Publish case studies, testimonials, and writing samples
- Drive traffic to your shop, newsletter, or freelance services
- Build trust, slowly and honestly
Bonus: WordPress offers auto-posting to major social platforms if you’re on a paid tier. If not, use free sharing widgets to post manually.
3. Build a Referral System That Loves You Back
Key Message: Word-of-mouth matters more than algorithms.
Referrals are golden. And often, they’re how most freelancers stay afloat.
- Tell happy clients you welcome referrals
- Offer a small incentive if you want (like a discount or bonus for referred projects)
- Keep a Google Doc of testimonials—use quotes on your site or in pitches
- Don’t be afraid to check in with past clients. Just be respectful.
- Team up with other freelancers. Refer each other when a job’s not a fit.
You’re building a web of trust, not a follower count.
4. Create Passive Income Streams You Control
Key Message: Don’t wait to be discovered—make something small that sells.
We don’t all have the spoons for major product launches. But that’s okay.
- Turn blog posts into zines, guides, or ebooks
- Sell printables, templates, or journaling prompts on Ko-fi or Gumroad
- Open a Redbubble or Society6 shop for your art, poetry, or slogans
- Keep it low-cost to start. Repurpose what you already have.
Make your store neurodivergent-friendly: opt for a simple design, use gentle fonts, display transparent pricing, and avoid FOMO pressure. By ‘neurodivergent-friendly’, we mean a design that is clear, straightforward, and free from unnecessary distractions, which can help your potential customers feel more comfortable and make informed decisions. Small things add up. One sale at a time.
5. Workflows that Actually Work for You
Key Message: Burnout is not a badge of honor. Build workflows that support your needs.
The best system is the one you’ll actually use—even if it’s unconventional.
- Use Notion, Trello, or even color-coded sticky notes
- Build templates for: Client onboarding emails
- Blog formats
- Proposals and invoices
- Set office hours that reflect your energy, not society’s clock
- Track your capacity, not just your time
Your process is valid, even if it appears chaotic to others.
6. Invest in What Feeds You
Key Message: Not all investments are financial—some are energetic or emotional. For instance, taking classes that inspire you, following creators who validate rather than drain you, or using AI tools to support (not replace) your creativity are all investments that can feed your passion and growth.
- Take classes only if they light you up
- Follow creators who validate, not drain you
- Let AI tools support (not replace) your creativity
- Know your values—center them in your work and community
When you spend wisely—on time, energy, and support—you grow from a place of strength, not scarcity.
Conclusion: Your Empire, Your Rules
It won’t be fast. It won’t be flawless. But it will be yours.
You deserve to write on your own terms, build systems that fit your brain, and thrive without begging platforms to see your worth.
Your work is valuable. Your voice matters. The empire you’re building doesn’t need to look like anyone else’s.
It just needs to look like yours.
TL;DR: The Shortcut Version
| Section | Key Takeaway |
|---|---|
| Digital Home | Build your own site—keep it clear, accessible, and central. |
| Social Media | Stick to 1–2 platforms you enjoy. Stay consistent. |
| Blog | Use your voice to attract your audience. Repurpose and share. |
| Referrals | Word-of-mouth > algorithms. Build community and ask. |
| Passive Income | Make small, useful things. Start with what you already have. |
| Workflows | Customize systems to suit your brain and energy. |
| Investments | Spend energy and time only where it truly serves you. |
This is your roadmap. Adjust as needed. Take what works. Leave what doesn’t. And never forget—you don’t have to play by anyone else’s rules when you’re building your own empire.



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