This planner is made for people who work in corporate and business environments — the kind of people who sit in meetings, manage projects, juggle deadlines, and are quietly managing a brain that works differently from most of the room.
On the outside, it looks like a normal professional business planner. Classic cover, serious look. No cartoon brains, no neon colours, no 'YOU'VE GOT THIS!' plastered across the front. You can leave it on your desk in any boardroom, and no one will give it a second glance.
Inside, it's a different story. Every page is structured to help you get through a real business day — not an idealised, Pinterest-perfect version of productivity, but the actual messy, non-linear, frequently interrupted experience of doing meaningful work with an ADHD-type brain and anxiety disorder.
Easy to pick up. Easy to use. Easy to actually stick with.
Most planners fail people with ADHD and anxiety, not because they're badly designed, but because they're designed for a different kind of brain.
They have too many sections. Too many prompts. Too many empty fields that sit there, blank and accusatory, every single day. And if you know anything about ADHD and blank pages, you'll know that a half-filled planner quickly becomes an abandoned one. Because the gap between what you intended to fill in and what you actually filled in starts to feel like evidence of failure.
This planner was built to avoid that entirely. Every section is there because it earns its place. Nothing is included because it seemed like a good idea in theory. The result is a page that feels manageable at 8am on a Monday, not overwhelming.
Inside you'll find:
→ 2026 & 2027 calendar for planning
→ Monthly planning pages (6 monthly pages)
→ 150 structured daily pages
→ Brain dump & notes pages at the back
→ Hidden colouring pages — for long meetings, video calls, or moments when your hands need something to do (no one will know)
Each daily page includes only what actually matters:
→ Reminders & follow-ups — capture what you're waiting on so it stops circling your brain
→ Scheduled tasks & meetings — your non-negotiables, at a glance
→ Priority tasks with MoSCoW rating (Must Do / Should Do / Can Do) — honest about what's actually getting done today
→ Tick boxes on every task — because completing things should feel satisfying
→ Daily motivational quote — a small nudge to start the day well
→ Hydration, mood & energy trackers — spot your patterns over weeks, not just days
You open your phone to check one thing. Twenty minutes later, you've forgotten what it was.
This is not a you problem, and not a discipline issue. This is ADHD + technology doing exactly what it's designed to do.
Digital planners fail ADHD brains because:
Every app is a doorway to every other app
Notifications break focus before it even builds
The phone itself is the distraction — regardless of what's on it
Paper fixes all of that. No notifications. No tabs. No temptation. Just your plan, right in front of you.