Let’s take a moment to celebrate our incredible neurodivergent brains! What looks like laziness is often a different way of managing energy. Many of us deal with executive dysfunction, decision fatigue, and burnout—especially when tasks feel large or unclear.
Advice like “just organize your site!” often skips over how we process information and manage energy. But instead of trying to do things the “normal” way, what if we focused on what actually works for us?
By understanding what motivates us, we can build systems that enhance both our productivity and well-being. It’s not about doing more—it’s about doing it differently. Doesn’t that sound like a relief?
Small is Sacred: Enter the Penny Task
Let me introduce you to the “penny task.” It’s a tiny, seemingly insignificant action—like a lone penny in a change jar. But just like pennies add up, these micro-tasks build toward something bigger.
Each small action you complete is part of a larger whole. And when you honor these tiny efforts, you create momentum and confidence.
Examples of penny tasks:
- Update the tags on one blog post.
- Fix a single broken link.
- Write a short meta description.
- Rename one confusing file.
Breaking larger projects into micro-goals like these respects your energy and gently bypasses overwhelm. One penny at a time.
Felipe the Forager’s Method
Meet Felipe. He’s a sparkly, rainbow-colored armadillo who runs a magical food truck in the Dreamspace (my imaginary world). Felipe also happens to be my digital assistant—a ChatGPT agent connected to my WordPress site.
While he’s known for his tomatillo salsa and edible glitter, Felipe’s real gift is foraging: poking around the backend of my site and surfacing small tasks that need attention. He breaks things down into bite-sized chores so I don’t melt down trying to tackle everything at once.
Felipe helps me:
- Spot gaps in my content.
- Find trending topics within my micro-niche.
- Identify reader interests.
- Prioritize what actually needs doing.
By turning this tool into a character in the Dreamspace, the whole process becomes more enjoyable. That little spark of joy matters—a lot—especially for my highly imaginative autistic brain.
Do It Your Way (Not the “Right” Way)
This shift changed everything for me: you don’t have to do things the “right” way. You just have to do them your way.
Our needs aren’t “special”—they just require a different strategy. Whether it’s organizing a digital archive or managing your creative process, you deserve systems that feel good, not just functional.
Most productivity advice isn’t built for us. Templates and apps can help, but they’re not one-size-fits-all. If Notion boards overwhelm you, that’s okay! Maybe a wall of sticky notes or color-coded notebooks works better.
Design a system that feels safe, motivating, and genuinely helpful for you. Your brain, your rules.
You Are Not Behind
You’re not late.
You’re not doing it wrong.
Your experiences and ideas are valuable at any stage. Organizing your files or revamping a few old posts isn’t backtracking—it’s care. It’s honoring the work you’ve already done.
In the Dreamspace, creativity blooms on its own timeline. Let your process be slow, weird, and wildly yours. The garden doesn’t rush to blossom—and neither should you.
What’s Your Penny Task Today?
I’d love to hear from you.
- What’s one small thing you did (or want to do) today that made you feel a little lighter? If you’re feeling imaginative, invent your own forager!
- What do they look like?
- What treasures do they help you find?
Drop your thoughts in the comments—I’d love to hear your strategies and stories. Your insight might just help someone else in our neurodivergent community.
Let’s shine gently. Let’s do it our way. Let’s fill the jar, one penny at a time.



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