The BrainDump Journal
Writing on mental clarity
Thoughts on cognitive load, working memory, and why carrying everything in your head was never sustainable.
- Why writing things down helps — but isn’t enoughCapture provides relief. But clarity needs separation: today, later, and “just needed to be said.”
- The hidden cost of unfinished thoughtsOpen loops quietly consume attention — even when you’re not consciously thinking about them.
- ADHD and mental clutter: why structure helpsExternalizing thoughts reduces cognitive demand. Structure becomes support, not pressure.
- Your brain was never meant to store everythingWorking memory is limited. Unfinished thoughts compete for attention and quietly exhaust us. Here’s why mental overload is a capacity issue, not a discipline problem.
- Stop organizing. Start capturing.Organization assumes clarity. Capture assumes reality. Your system should start where you are.
- Brain dumping: what it is and why it worksCapture lowers pressure. Your mind stops rehearsing and starts processing.
- Decision fatigue is real — and it adds upWhen everything is priority, nothing is. Reducing decisions restores focus.
- A simple end-of-day habit for mental clarityFive minutes of capture prevents mental spillover into tomorrow. Small habit, big relief.
- Why your to-do list keeps getting longerLists blend urgency with importance. Your brain is doing triage all day.
