:QUOTE [quotetype:personal] Paper does not send notifications. That is exactly the point. :INFO Analog Systems for ADHD Digital tools can add cognitive load for ADHD brains. Paper planners, physical task boards, and mechanical timers reduce screen time and provide tactile feedback that supports attention and task completion. :COUNTER.half 1 Notebook | :COUNTER.half 15 Minutes :PATH Start Bullet Journaling Description: Use a single dot-grid or lined notebook. Capture tasks with dots, events with circles, and notes with dashes. Migrate incomplete tasks daily to keep your list current and intentional. :PATH Use Physical Timers Description: Place a Time Timer or mechanical kitchen timer on your desk. Set it for your work block duration. The visual countdown reduces time blindness and makes the end of a session concrete. :PATH Build a Task Board Description: Use a whiteboard or corkboard divided into To Do, Doing, and Done. Move physical cards or sticky notes across columns. The physical act of moving a card is satisfying and reinforcing. :CHECKLIST Analog System Setup Checklist [ ] Buy one dedicated capture notebook [ ] Learn basic bullet journal symbols (takes 10 minutes) [ ] Place a visual timer on your main work surface [ ] Set up a three-column task board in your workspace [ ] Do a 15 minute daily review every morning [ ] Weekly migration: move incomplete tasks to next week or drop them :NOTE Analog systems require a daily maintenance habit. Five minutes each morning to review and migrate is the minimum investment that makes the system work.