During this conversation we hear from a number of voices, not only from
Speaker:Matthew, but also Dan and Kim who have all had varying experiences are being
Speaker:Euro diverse who have also gone down.
Speaker:The track of being diagnosed to different extents.
Speaker:And it's fascinating to hear the overlaps and was well as the differences and
Speaker:the diversity within that experience.
Speaker:If you have the feeling that life is just a bit more difficult than it needs to be.
Speaker:And those people around you seem to be weathering it much more easily
Speaker:and you feel there's something.
Speaker:Different in the way you think, and the way you experienced the
Speaker:world, that many people don't seem to understand or resonate with.
Speaker:And you feel that you can bring something to the table that others can't, but you
Speaker:just haven't been given the opportunity to do so then I recommend listening
Speaker:on, because I think there's a lot here that you'll really find useful.
Speaker:Not only in terms of.
Speaker:And education as to what neurodiversity is, but also potentially a validation
Speaker:in terms of how you're looking at the world and realizing you're not alone and
Speaker:actually being different and doing things differently and thinking differently can
Speaker:actually be a benefit to those around you.
Speaker:The businesses you work for.
Speaker:The people in your community and yourself.
Speaker:Enjoy.
Speaker:At the moment, well, what Aiden now do is I really w what is that?
Speaker:I nurture curious approaches to deep rooted complex issues
Speaker:which is in some ways, a way of describing what I've always done.
Speaker:But what inactive now do is I guidance support people with up fundamentally
Speaker:unconventional perspectives and the organizations that want to
Speaker:benefit from those perspectives.
Speaker:And I specialize in working with the unique talents of neurodivergent
Speaker:professionals, academics and entrepreneurs and also in using new technology to
Speaker:establish generative approaches or regenerative approaches rather than
Speaker:a transactional point approaches.
Speaker:It all kind of ties together in its own way.
Speaker:And I came to this.
Speaker:I certainly came to this.
Speaker:Well, I came to this particular description this morning, which is
Speaker:the nature of my work is kind of constantly iterative and changing
Speaker:uh, and is often the case with other people that I work with as well.
Speaker:But yeah, so I've always been interested in these things.
Speaker:I had a dyslexia diagnosis as a child, never felt it was a perfect explanation.
Speaker:And a few years ago I had a ADHD diagnosis as well.
Speaker:In the meantime, I studied psychology as an adult.
Speaker:Like a lot of people with ADHD.
Speaker:I, I did reasonably well in in education until I absolutely didn't.
Speaker:Um, until, until it, until it actually involved, you know, applying
Speaker:myself in a way that I couldn't do uh, or wasn't inclined to do
Speaker:when I came back to studying as an adult and and studied psychology.
Speaker:So, that kind of emerged as a whole load of as a way of working with this stuff
Speaker:in a way of understanding this stuff.
Speaker:The other side of my, kind of my personal work has been around consciousness
Speaker:and my own consciousness practices.
Speaker:And on some level, I think that feeds really interestingly into
Speaker:this, because when we're talking about people who experience the world
Speaker:differently, that's on a fundamentally, really quite fundamental level.
Speaker:It's about that conscious experience of the world in quite a different way to the
Speaker:way that most other people experience it.
Speaker:And so understanding my own has been very helpful in understanding how that might
Speaker:differ or be similar to other people's.
Speaker:I was curious about that, what you said about alright education, what
Speaker:seemed to work well until it didn't.
Speaker:Yeah, so, so one of the reasons I work with the people that I do is actually,
Speaker:there's been some interesting conversation in the WhatsApp, in the Happy Startup
Speaker:WhatsApp group about this is that I tend to work with people who get diagnosed late
Speaker:or haven't been diagnosed partly because they've been able to mask or camouflage,
Speaker:they've been able to adapt essentially.
Speaker:One of the reasons that they can adapt is because they're gifted.
Speaker:In other ways, they have a talent to be able to do something that allows
Speaker:them to be able to kind of get by.
Speaker:Very often that experience.
Speaker:Manifests in education or in, in pretty much any domain of kind of
Speaker:being able to cruise along without really applying oneself very much.
Speaker:And then when you actually do have to apply yourself, it becomes
Speaker:very difficult very quickly.
Speaker:And so you have this this is the space of the kind of formerly gifted
Speaker:as this is sometimes described.
Speaker:It's, It's hitting, hitting an unexpected barrier because actually you've kind of,
Speaker:you've not really been engaging in quite the same way everyone else has because you
Speaker:didn't first of all, because you didn't have to, and second of all, because it
Speaker:wasn't very interesting for you to do so, so you've just kind of cruised a bit
Speaker:done your own thing, and then when you're suddenly required to do something more.
Speaker:It becomes really quite challenging.
Speaker:sounds like within education there's a lot of people know they come up
Speaker:against a barrier because of how they're trying to they're coping.
Speaker:It sounds like the coping mechanisms stop working at some point.
Speaker:You, for you at a personal level, how did that work when it came to work and
Speaker:getting, because you know, I, when I first met you, I can remember you're
Speaker:working in IT and then it sounded like, you know, pretty full on job.
Speaker:How were you able to cope there?
Speaker:Well, you know, w was that job suited to you at the time, or I'm just
Speaker:curious as to your awareness of the way you interacted with the world and
Speaker:then how that coupled with the work that you were doing and then what
Speaker:challenges they were, or what benefits
Speaker:So I kind of ended up in it, partly because I'd always used computers.
Speaker:It was a, it was like with the dyslexia diagnosis, one of the recommendations was
Speaker:okay, well, you know, computers can help.
Speaker:And so I'd always use them.
Speaker:And I ended up actually just working with that.
Speaker:I started my it career as an assistive trainer, is that really helping
Speaker:people with assistive technology.
Speaker:And I'm kind of moved through a whole load of different things.
Speaker:But in the end, what happened is I.
Speaker:I met both of the awareness that I got to a certain level, and I had no
Speaker:interest in continuing in that vein.
Speaker:So I was like, I looked at all of the jobs around, like above the next level.
Speaker:And I was like, I'm not interested in any of that.
Speaker:Don't want that.
Speaker:Then I looked kind of sideways and I was like, I don't want
Speaker:either any of that either.
Speaker:And that coincided with really kind of burning out actually with realizing
Speaker:that I was not in a place that felt good or that could last for very
Speaker:long and with having really quite negative consequences on my health.
Speaker:And so looking at around and then changing some of that was really the starting off
Speaker:point of reconsidering this from scratch.
Speaker:And I think related to.
Speaker:Being neurodivergent is really, I'd always assumed that everyone found some of the
Speaker:things I found as difficult as I found them, and that turned out not to be true.
Speaker:And I think that understanding that actually my, the amount of energy,
Speaker:the amount of effort I had to extend expense to do things other people
Speaker:found relatively straightforward, really did kind of challenge my whole
Speaker:sense of what it was to do what I, you know, to be who I wanted to be.
Speaker:And really or thought I was, I suspect is probably a better way of putting it and
Speaker:really how I wanted to proceed from that place, knowing that, and knowing that
Speaker:actually, you know, the exhaustion and the challenge, that level of difficulty
Speaker:that I felt was not normal in that sense.
Speaker:It reminds me of a message that Katrina Tan who's in our community.
Speaker:I'm not sure if she's with us live, but she wanted me to just share this with,
Speaker:because you've been helping her and talking to her about her own experiences.
Speaker:And um, you know, the message I really quite liked from her where she was saying
Speaker:like along the lines of just helping her ease into her own wiring, which I thought
Speaker:was quite nice way of putting this.
Speaker:And she was saying that looking back, she could see how she wasn't lazy.
Speaker:She was incredibly motivated and energized, but just sometimes it was on
Speaker:the only things that she cared about.
Speaker:And it didn't necessarily work with the productivity, profit model or
Speaker:society of the systems that they were, she was trying not to work within.
Speaker:And so I that's, I got that sense from what you're saying, it's
Speaker:like this going up, isn't going to work for me going sideways.
Speaker:Isn't gonna work for me actually being here, isn't working for me at all.
Speaker:And so there's needing to be a switch.
Speaker:And you said something about being neurodivergent and so maybe it's
Speaker:an opportunity here because I can remember talking to you previous like
Speaker:that you talked about neurodiversity in neurodivergent neuro there's a
Speaker:certain language around this that
Speaker:Yes, there's some words.
Speaker:On some level, a lot of this is about giving that experience words, and that's
Speaker:actually a part of this, you know, finding the words for our experience.
Speaker:And that help explain to ourselves and to others what's exactly going on for us
Speaker:and how we are experiencing something.
Speaker:So in this space, so neurodiversity refers to a population and your
Speaker:per population can be neurodiverse.
Speaker:They have a variety of different neurological ways of being, if you
Speaker:are different from the majority of people in a space, and this
Speaker:is obviously it's relative.
Speaker:So it's entirely like about who's around you, you are
Speaker:neurodivergent as an individual.
Speaker:So you're you're different from most other people around you.
Speaker:And that's sometimes contrasted with being neuro-typical, which is to be similar
Speaker:neurologically to most people around you.
Speaker:And there are always degrees of difference.
Speaker:It's not to say that everyone is different.
Speaker:I tend to find that there is something.
Speaker:It's kind of qualitative is that when there's a different, you know,
Speaker:and when it's big enough to be fundamentally qualitatively a different
Speaker:way of experiencing the world that's usually the way it kind of manifests.
Speaker:And when people start to become interested in that difference and, or get
Speaker:significant issues from that difference, it's more, a bit more than a preference.
Speaker:And then there are different diagnoses or different collections of ways
Speaker:of being, and those are sometimes called specific neuro minorities.
Speaker:So for example ESE autism spectrum condition might be a neuro minority.
Speaker:ADHD might be a neuro minority dyslexia might be in your own minority.
Speaker:And for many of us, we find ourselves as members of multiple neuro minorities.
Speaker:If we find ourselves neurodivergent at all.
Speaker:there's diversity as well in the neurodiversity.
Speaker:And it sounds like you can have I'm going to say maybe multiple labels put
Speaker:on you and I want it to like maybe segue into this question here from Julia.
Speaker:And he saying to label or not to label labels can bring stigma and blame,
Speaker:but can also change our reality, our view of ourselves and our behavior,
Speaker:which can be very empowering.
Speaker:Is there a right or wrong in labeling?
Speaker:Do we need to escape labels or embrace them?
Speaker:Yeah, that's a really great question.
Speaker:And I think for me, the fundamental arbiter of whether a label is helpful or
Speaker:not is the person to whom it is applied.
Speaker:It's not down to anyone else.
Speaker:So the question is, is this helpful for you?
Speaker:There's this explanatory for you?
Speaker:Does this enable you to understand yourself and your
Speaker:reality in a different way?
Speaker:One of the difficulties with being in any minority group is essentially
Speaker:the fact that is marginalized.
Speaker:You know, that it is identified as a minority, it's identified as
Speaker:different relative to the norm.
Speaker:And that can be kind of used against you, often sometimes unintentionally
Speaker:often unconsciously but it can be very much uh, an issue for people.
Speaker:So I think the extent to which you can use it and the consequences, the
Speaker:implications of it for you and your experience and your, the approaches
Speaker:that you then choose as a result are are really up to you, um, and your
Speaker:experience of the thing, rather than someone else's experience of you and how
Speaker:they choose to label you, that's theirs.
Speaker:And frankly it should remain theirs and not become yours.
Speaker:But very often, if you're in a minority, you don't get the
Speaker:choice to keep it that way.
Speaker:I was going to invite Dan up actually, cause he actually loves
Speaker:his label and I thought it would be a relevant bit of input here from
Speaker:someone, another person who I assume identifies themselves as neurodiverse.
Speaker:And I'm getting just a, I'd like to hear his, an experience of how he
Speaker:has been working with it and how it affects his, the way he works as well.
Speaker:I think, cause I think that's part of this is giving people a
Speaker:window into other people's worlds.
Speaker:So yeah, it'd be interesting to hear, you know, you just said,
Speaker:you'd love, you love your label.
Speaker:You know, just share a bit more, but maybe quickly just share about what you
Speaker:do and share your relationship to this topic, neurodiversity, and then the label.
Speaker:So I'm an aspiring illustrator who makes money by being a management consultant.
Speaker:And yeah, I mean, listening, listen to Matt, like so many parallels, so
Speaker:many similar kind of experiences.
Speaker:It's like I kicked ass at school.
Speaker:My, I chose, I decided when I was 12, I was going to be a doctor because,
Speaker:you know, Why didn't realize that his options completely paralyzed me.
Speaker:So if I make a decision early removes those of options that's right.
Speaker:And also I knew exactly, and I was at boarding school, really tight structure,
Speaker:also a boarding school I could do.
Speaker:And if you don't want to, I could get into every single activity that
Speaker:I wanted, which, constant simulation.
Speaker:And literally I could wake up half past seven every day.
Speaker:I knew exactly what I was doing until I went to sleep at nine o'clock every day.
Speaker:Get to medical school blew up because I'm suddenly by myself with no structure
Speaker:intent designed, intended to now be an adult in a, doing a high stress,
Speaker:high, emotionally charged environment and designed to be able to just adapt.
Speaker:And yeah, that's what I say.
Speaker:I was kicked out until the point that I didn't and it went from.
Speaker:Top grades to slowly getting more and more ill to into my fifth year, my
Speaker:final year of medical school, when the old ma I basically continued
Speaker:being a, got you, probably struggled through passed my exams, got set to
Speaker:the NHS, it killed myself, or I quit and make the choice for my health.
Speaker:But like, from that point, my life has then been all one step after
Speaker:another of somehow trying to prove to myself that I'm not a failure that
Speaker:I'm good enough, you know, it had, it has massive emotional effects.
Speaker:And so that's like, this is where it kind of late was coming because
Speaker:the boarding school gave me lots from a intellectual point of view
Speaker:and a stimulating point of view.
Speaker:It, I don't know a lot of emotional ways it was crushing.
Speaker:So often people with ADHD are hypersensitive in some way.
Speaker:Some people, it could be auditory, some visual when it's different to
Speaker:say being an introvert or extrovert can, you can apply to both.
Speaker:And that can manifest itself in another syndrome called RSD uh,
Speaker:rejection sensitive dysphoria, which basically means that any kind of
Speaker:criticism or even perceived criticism is basically felt like physical pain.
Speaker:Um, And I have that to the max.
Speaker:So I'm boarding school, right?
Speaker:Full of all of these people who socially gel, like, you know, get in the
Speaker:clubs, you know, they link like that.
Speaker:And I'm this kid who lived abroad had a quite sheltered life
Speaker:full of self-confidence to the point that I was cocky as crap.
Speaker:And I was so different, so many ways, and I've never, and
Speaker:I've never been a thin match.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:I was a, you know, it was always a big kind of chunky prop, right.
Speaker:In rugby.
Speaker:So like targeted.
Speaker:So I've had so many labels throughout my life, right.
Speaker:Where labels are imposed on me that defining me in some way, according to
Speaker:somebody else's view of the world and somebody else's opinion about how I
Speaker:should fit into how they see the world.
Speaker:And that includes people in my family, even though they don't
Speaker:realize it even now, right?
Speaker:All right.
Speaker:You know, tensions in my family come up because they're still trying,
Speaker:they still want me to fit into how they think that I should fit into
Speaker:that world, which has exacerbated.
Speaker:So like that RSD and that pain is exacerbated by how
Speaker:much you care about somebody.
Speaker:So like the pain that you get from your closest family, even though they don't
Speaker:realize that they're trying to hurt you, they're not trying to hurt you don't
Speaker:realize that they're doing it is massive.
Speaker:So it was actually summer camp when I first thought, wait, Just thought
Speaker:about ADHD, because what I didn't realize until my ADHD tendency for
Speaker:massive amount of research took over was that there are different types.
Speaker:So in broad terms, there is generally inattentive, generally
Speaker:hyperactive or combined.
Speaker:So ADHD is not a lack of attention.
Speaker:It's an inability, it's a lack of dopamine production, dopamine reward,
Speaker:which means that you can focus, but you can only focus on things that
Speaker:intrinsically give you, you enjoy it, because they produce more dopamine.
Speaker:So actually it's a focus problem.
Speaker:It's not a hyperactive problem.
Speaker:So what happens is that your brain tries to simulate itself, whether that if it's
Speaker:fit, probably physical, quite moving is probably dominantly inattentive.
Speaker:Right?
Speaker:It's it's an internal world.
Speaker:It's like you could be sat there, like, yeah, but you're constantly, I could
Speaker:be into stuff and reading activities.
Speaker:Your brain is going a hundred million miles an hour trying to
Speaker:simulate itself, but not ever being able to latch onto stuff.
Speaker:And you can explain these things was applied to that.
Speaker:I was like, yeah, everybody sometimes we'll go upstairs
Speaker:and forgot why they went there.
Speaker:Does it happen every time you go upstairs?
Speaker:I just wanted to add to that because I think this is one of the really
Speaker:important one of the barriers, one of the words, whenever anyone has any of
Speaker:these difficulties, yeah, maybe that everyone's a little bit ADHD, which
Speaker:is one of those really unpleasant lies that has some truth in it.
Speaker:Because everyone or many people do actually have those underlying
Speaker:traits or some of the traits in some ways, but it's a question of degree
Speaker:and the question of, you know, how much of a barrier does this present.
Speaker:And I think when you mentioned RSD, the rejection sensitive dysphoria,
Speaker:which I've experienced for a very long time as well is people like w people
Speaker:would tell you that no one likes rejection and it's like, well, yes.
Speaker:Okay.
Speaker:That's kind of true.
Speaker:And I'm not actually sure.
Speaker:That's entirely true because there was some people that seek it, but anyway,
Speaker:but many people do not like rejection.
Speaker:The question is, do you have a slightly odd interaction with person in a shop
Speaker:that you've never met before and will never, probably never meet again?
Speaker:And then ruminate on what you did wrong about it for the rest of the day?
Speaker:That's what that level of, you know.
Speaker:And I think that's understanding that's a different experience of the world
Speaker:is, is a really important thing to to mention to people is like, yeah,
Speaker:there are small bits, but there are also, these things are really strong
Speaker:when you experience them particularly um, uh, with uh, yeah, when they're
Speaker:just there, unavoidably unignorably.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:And so like RSD, RSD has dominated my entire life.
Speaker:Like, it's so difficult to put yourself out there because you basically assume
Speaker:that you're going to get rejected and that rejection is painful.
Speaker:And so you don't do it.
Speaker:So you're constantly, and obviously then that you're going to get, you're
Speaker:not, that's going to then manifest other psychological issues, which
Speaker:are not specific to anything to do with being in diverse, but it's
Speaker:just a good thing that exacerbated.
Speaker:So my label came after I was at the summer camp and we found out our
Speaker:erstwhile MC Sanderson had had got him his own diagnosis and you kind
Speaker:of go, you look at Sanderson, who's largely I think, kind of go, yeah
Speaker:and that's, I can charge you that.
Speaker:Because, and that's because I had the biases, I had this thing,
Speaker:like the ADHD means you're a big bounty run a person, right?
Speaker:But actually most of the time near a diversity is hidden.
Speaker:And we don't like, we mask it in some way, or we get some people who are better at
Speaker:masking to be able to rest and masking.
Speaker:Normally you only get, find out that you are near diverse when you
Speaker:bother someone who's neurotypical.
Speaker:When you become a problem, they get you tested so they can label you.
Speaker:Because I had RSD, I was always the good guy.
Speaker:I would never got in trouble.
Speaker:I always did everything.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:But you know, tobacco is a perfectionism in me, which is not
Speaker:great, but I wasn't the radar.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:Cause I was always taught the class, the teacher's pet, all of that, right?
Speaker:And and I'm primarily inattentive.
Speaker:So I wasn't bouncing around being.
Speaker:So I just completely, you know, went under the radar and then so
Speaker:it wasn't until it sounds little and I guess it's just interesting.
Speaker:I wonder why he go, he thought at an adult like that.
Speaker:And that's what I just did some research, from went to some of the the
Speaker:good central places to get information.
Speaker:And a lot of them will do briefly all kinds of checklists or little quizzes to
Speaker:just kind of assess are very high level if you might have some of the traits.
Speaker:And I started reading some of these lessons kind of go, yeah.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:And what do you mean?
Speaker:You've got to like, yes, like 90% of this literature to kind of like right, this.
Speaker:So then my propensity for massive amount of research, because if you do
Speaker:lots of research, you can't be wrong and you can't be criticized, took over.
Speaker:And so obviously I looked a lot into it and I was like, yes,
Speaker:I'm I am really confident that things started to fit into place.
Speaker:And so the provision for getting diagnosed is horrible.
Speaker:I was, I had, I applied, I talked to my GP and he was a good base supportive and
Speaker:got me onto the, by the time I'd waited two years, I'm like, I could be waiting
Speaker:another two years and every moment I'm not diagnosed, I'm not getting help.
Speaker:I'm not gonna support because it's not because I care so much about the label
Speaker:is because it becomes access to support.
Speaker:And it allows you access into groups or support networks or whatever it is.
Speaker:And so I ended up going private paying for it.
Speaker:I had that luxury.
Speaker:I had that privilege by being able to do well enough, not as well as I'd
Speaker:like, but you know, I can't complain.
Speaker:I'm like, you know, managed to carve out.
Speaker:A niche for myself through maybe some tiny little gift, as I said, so.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:But most enable then lets me to own this.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:But I can versus like, yeah, I've got this and because I've
Speaker:got this, I can understand it.
Speaker:Okay.
Speaker:If I can understand that I can educate people and I can
Speaker:start to buy those things.
Speaker:So yeah, I left my label because it gave not just get, getting the
Speaker:access to medicine, which helps me, but it is not a, it's not a cure.
Speaker:It brings me up close to someone.
Speaker:Who's neuro-typical that's it just, but it just feels like
Speaker:it's a little bit more quality.
Speaker:I don't think it's equity, but it's certainly a poster to a concert.
Speaker:Thanks, Dan.
Speaker:I just briefly cause I'd like to also bring Kim in at some point, but just
Speaker:a quick question for you in terms of.
Speaker:With work.
Speaker:How is it that you're able to do, are you having to create coping mechanisms?
Speaker:You know, I hear Matt talking about masking, but then, or is it you're
Speaker:finding the Asher, you found a way to work that doesn't drain you
Speaker:or aligns with how you think just to getting a thought about that.
Speaker:So like, yeah I'm not shy of saying that Happy Startup saved my life.
Speaker:It really did, but it's it got me onto a new path and you be part of that
Speaker:journey of understanding and owning and being a better version of myself rather
Speaker:than worrying about what I'm making.
Speaker:so I don't have all the coconut columns and I've built up a huge repertoire of
Speaker:bad coping mechanisms because they're all coping mechanisms which are designed
Speaker:to be judged by someone who's not me.
Speaker:They're all I, if I do this thing, I will make somebody else happy.
Speaker:So a lot of the deep work that I'm doing right now and a lot of help from
Speaker:Vicks in the community, who's amazing.
Speaker:And you know, if you ever want to get help, particularly from
Speaker:a, it's a perfectionism or I, I love her style and body pitching.
Speaker:Cause I'm getting, I'm really tapping into me.
Speaker:Like one of the things that I'm gifted grid, because I find some
Speaker:things hard when you're a lady, three brains are usually be better
Speaker:connections is why I'm good at my job.
Speaker:And I can see patterns, whether people don't see patterns.
Speaker:And so actually intuition is a big part of how I do my job
Speaker:well, but I don't use it for me.
Speaker:And so I'm tapping into this somatic intuitive aspect.
Speaker:And with Vik's help, I'm really doing some deep work.
Speaker:And so that it's not about making coping mechanisms, actually, it's actually
Speaker:finding, taking responsibility and saying, stop asking for permission and
Speaker:stop trying to apologize for who you are.
Speaker:Disability is not the medical model, which is you've got a deficiency or something
Speaker:that needs to be, you know, fixed.
Speaker:It's not the charitable model, which is, oh, someone's suffers
Speaker:from a disability, right.
Speaker:Disability exists because people who are in the center of the bell curve do
Speaker:not create a world in which the people at the edge of the bell curve can live.
Speaker:The world that you exist in is not designed for me.
Speaker:That's what disability.
Speaker:So disability is about say, you know, what, how am I happy
Speaker:at the edge of the bell curve?
Speaker:How do I just change the world?
Speaker:So I do that the responsibility of everybody else is to understand that
Speaker:they might be the majority in the middle, but there are people at the edges and
Speaker:their job for any kind of disability of any kind of mirroring in your domestic,
Speaker:in any instability is two seconds.
Speaker:Just remember that they're not central to the universe and they need to think about
Speaker:creating a world, which is equitable.
Speaker:I wanted to just bring that slightly actually to kind of bring Dan's
Speaker:point even further forward, which I think is one of the really important
Speaker:things that I do in my work, which is really focusing on the value of being
Speaker:neurodivergent to the wider system.
Speaker:So I think this is one of the, one of the massively overlooked
Speaker:things in this is I don't work with businesses that are doing this just
Speaker:out of the kindness of their heart.
Speaker:I do this work with businesses because those businesses are coming
Speaker:to understand that the perspective that neurodivergence gives them
Speaker:the, a huge, competitive advantage.
Speaker:Neurodivergent people because of that different way of experiencing the
Speaker:world, that different perspective can see opportunities and
Speaker:threats that others simply don't.
Speaker:And so that ability to work with stuff that other people don't see
Speaker:or work in ways, particularly in, if you will, with a sensitivity that
Speaker:others can't is actually really about, you know, it's good for everyone.
Speaker:It's actually good for the people, even people right in the middle of every bell
Speaker:curve who are completely unchallenged in, in that sense is the continuation
Speaker:of the system that supports that bell curve is dependent upon it finding new
Speaker:opportunities and avoiding new threats.
Speaker:So it's the people at the edges who are, who do that work, who can keep who on
Speaker:some level kind of keep it going and keeping thriving for everyone else.
Speaker:I was curious about what Dan had said about so, and the way I heard
Speaker:is like the neuro-typical person was running the label for this person
Speaker:because they wanted to work out what.
Speaker:So, whether it's to fix them because they're not, and even he's, he mentioned
Speaker:the side of bringing yourself up.
Speaker:And there's a question here from Meg.
Speaker:I'm not sure if she's with us live, but she was asking about because of
Speaker:this, the way I'm perceiving as kind of this judgment that people can have
Speaker:on the label, this question about whether to disclose or not disclose
Speaker:the diagnosis and whether you have suddenly inexperienced or an opinions
Speaker:about that and what that could mean.
Speaker:Definitely I, it's a difficult question and it is stigmatized.
Speaker:I think this is, you know, the, when we say stigmatized, I think people
Speaker:kind of, you know, the consequences, the practical consequences of having
Speaker:a stigmatized condition is, are not that well understood in general terms.
Speaker:And what happens is your both you're really, it's when people see the condition
Speaker:instead of the person, very often.
Speaker:Even when people are expecting you to be are trying to be helpful without
Speaker:questioning their own awareness and their own position and their own
Speaker:capability to help you can get people who will deny your access to things
Speaker:or relate to in a certain way that is simply, you know, not helpful it seeing
Speaker:the condition instead of the person.
Speaker:So that there are strong reasons not to disclose.
Speaker:It can be helpful.
Speaker:Particularly, if you find yourself, I think this is one of the interesting
Speaker:things is the more privileged that you do have the higher you are in an
Speaker:organization, for example, the better it is for everyone, if you do disclose.
Speaker:So this is one of the things I often talk to big organizations about is
Speaker:one of the best ways to make a D de-stigmatize neurodivergence is for
Speaker:people who are on the board to be Frank about the neurodivergence that they
Speaker:have and that they, their family have.
Speaker:So it's a really it's a really challenging one.
Speaker:I think for me, it's like, there's no moral.
Speaker:Obligation to disclose is the way that I would say.
Speaker:So it's a question of whether or not it is helpful to you in the
Speaker:circumstances that you find it.
Speaker:Nice one
Speaker:That's my position.
Speaker:You can competently, it's not appropriate to out people or suggest that they out
Speaker:or kind of beyond facilitating openly, inviting them, making it easier for
Speaker:them, nor should you kind of push people to out themselves before they're ready.
Speaker:There are big consequences.
Speaker:It's a big shift, particularly for a pervasive neurodevelopmental
Speaker:condition like ADHD dyslexia, because they're always going to be there.
Speaker:And there's a lot of stuff to negotiate around that.
Speaker:And so it's about transitioning to a new way of understanding things
Speaker:and new way of being in a way that doesn't create complete overwhelmed.
Speaker:That doesn't mean that the existing ways of keeping, keeping things
Speaker:going stop working for you.
Speaker:Thank you, Matt.
Speaker:Awesome.
Speaker:Well, hopefully that's going to be helpful for Meg.
Speaker:I'm going to have another question here from Andrea, and then I'm going to
Speaker:even get Kim to share his experiences.
Speaker:And as I understand that Kim hasn't necessarily gone down the
Speaker:diagnosis route yet for these it sounds like he's connected with
Speaker:some of these ideas around ADHD.
Speaker:So before that, Andrea is asking about this idea of this question
Speaker:about the difference between condition versus disorder.
Speaker:Yeah I like to differentiate these two because it's very often considered a,
Speaker:you know, if you you might have noticed, I say ASC rather than ASD whereas in
Speaker:the, in the conventional literature, it would be autism spectrum disorder.
Speaker:ADHD is, doesn't have a positive name or a condition or name it's
Speaker:a disorder in and of itself.
Speaker:And as Dan mentioned it's actually completely named wrong because it
Speaker:isn't a deficit of attention at all.
Speaker:But, and that's an example of a very good example of what happens when other people
Speaker:look at us and judge us on their terms rather than on our own terms and our own
Speaker:experience that sits as an external label.
Speaker:So for me the condition is neutral.
Speaker:It's just a way of being, it's neither positive, nor negative
Speaker:until it's in a certain context.
Speaker:And so the question is then around what contexts are helpful
Speaker:for this particular condition?
Speaker:A disorder is a specific way of being that is pervasively unhelpful to the
Speaker:kind of way that the individual is.
Speaker:And that's not to say that people neurodivergent,
Speaker:people can't be disordered.
Speaker:In fact, very many of us end up disordered because we've taken on the disordered
Speaker:ways of being that we were expected to be because they were kind of forced onto us.
Speaker:It's equally possible for a neuro-typical person to have a disordered relationship
Speaker:with reality, to not be, you know, not have a set of approaches that, that
Speaker:work, that meet their needs kind of contradictory relationship with reality.
Speaker:So it's really making those two things independent.
Speaker:And sometimes I talk about this as a disorder and mental health
Speaker:are relatively closely synonymous.
Speaker:So sometimes it's, you can be mentally healthy and neurodivergent
Speaker:just, as you can be mentally unhealthy and neuro-typical is
Speaker:one way to to understand that.
Speaker:Thank you very much.
Speaker:Ma'am I'm going to bring Kim on now and well, we bring him on our own, maybe tap
Speaker:on to this question here from Dominic.
Speaker:What other things that you found difficult that you thought other
Speaker:people found easy or easier?
Speaker:For me until I started picking it apart, the answer is life.
Speaker:It was literally like, like why do I find this?
Speaker:Why do I find being me so hard?
Speaker:Why is it so hard to be me, and still kind of meet intrinsic needs and uh, meet
Speaker:my intrinsic needs and the, and connect with others and be, you know, be welcome,
Speaker:be rewarded financially, do not get into trouble, not get punished, whatever.
Speaker:Um, so it was like, why is it so hard for me to do that?
Speaker:That, that is the fundamental question.
Speaker:Now you can break it down into more specific details of another point, but
Speaker:I think it's like, why is life hard?
Speaker:Why does life seem to be harder for me than it has for other people?
Speaker:Thank you.
Speaker:Ma'am maybe we'll go into a little bit more specifics in
Speaker:a bit, but we have Kim here.
Speaker:I wanted to get you on, because from my conversations with you've, you feel
Speaker:that you have, you identify a lot with this idea of having ADHD and I thought
Speaker:it'd be useful to get your perspective.
Speaker:Cause it feels like you haven't gone down the diagnosis route quite yet.
Speaker:And you're still trying to understand what it means for you.
Speaker:So I'd just be curious to hear your experience of it and how that's
Speaker:manifested in the way you work.
Speaker:And how I think a bit like Matt was saying, you know, what does that
Speaker:mean in terms of the experience of doing stuff in the world?
Speaker:Well, I've always thanks by the way, Matt, for the um, for the words,
Speaker:because I've always felt neurodivergent, which I've never said before.
Speaker:That's the sentence I've never said before, which actually really
Speaker:makes like so much sense to me.
Speaker:But I have always felt neuro diversion or always and I've never quite known why.
Speaker:And then, so when I was in school, I got accused of cheating at my exams
Speaker:because I would never pay attention, I always was like, you know, joker
Speaker:messing around actually ended up getting quite good exam results.
Speaker:And my genuinely teachers accused me of cheating.
Speaker:It's because it just seemed like it wasn't paying attention,
Speaker:but somehow things went in.
Speaker:A pretty good example of that is when I was listening to Dan
Speaker:talk so much resonated, I love you, Dan, Greg, see you mate.
Speaker:And I was hanging on every word, but at the same time I was crafting
Speaker:this objective fold from blue tack.
Speaker:And I just only really realize that did it just a few seconds ago.
Speaker:So it's like, you know, I have this tendency to feel like I'm not
Speaker:paying any attention, but actually stuff is just getting absorbed.
Speaker:And so I always had that school of being like problem also is a bit of a problem.
Speaker:And then at university, I got diagnosed with the last year of university.
Speaker:I got diagnosed with dyslexia because it always felt like I was like, not
Speaker:that great at writing numbers, certain things I just could not compute.
Speaker:But talking of computing.
Speaker:I only applied for the thing because I got a free computer.
Speaker:So it was like, excellent, cool.
Speaker:Again, you can feel that will help.
Speaker:And then I was like, okay, well, I've actually been
Speaker:diagnosed like very dyslexic.
Speaker:How have you dealt with this we life?
Speaker:And then I think when I went into a workplace as well, from what Dan said
Speaker:of being in this workplace, like in an agency, just looking around and realizing
Speaker:that I'm just, so I just thought so different here, even though it's supposed
Speaker:to be a creative place I feel like I'm just, I just don't fit in at all.
Speaker:I'm just not, I just don't feel like I should be here.
Speaker:And part of that is always coming up with so many different ideas and start
Speaker:trying down so many different avenues.
Speaker:And I wouldn't just come up with an idea.
Speaker:I'd come up with an idea and it would get, I would go so far down that route
Speaker:into that, I just didn't want to do, but then one thing would take my attention
Speaker:that I was like really curious about.
Speaker:And I find myself three hours later with an entire visualization
Speaker:business plan detail on every aspect of how I would do it.
Speaker:And the whole thing as I taught, right, this is really not helping me.
Speaker:I'm getting held back here by this whole struggling to focus thing.
Speaker:So I started looking into ADHD and doing those sort of tests and questionnaires.
Speaker:And then I did a few paid for little ones that were a little bit more expensive.
Speaker:Every single one.
Speaker:It wasn't like are a few of the traits, things like 10 out of 10,
Speaker:10 out of 10, you know, 190 900.
Speaker:And I was just like, holy shit.
Speaker:I guess I've got this ADHD thing and I've never really
Speaker:considered what it was before.
Speaker:And then as you say, you start doing you know, more research and then the
Speaker:light bulb was just, it felt like a huge sort of weight off my shoulders of
Speaker:like, oh, is this why I'm just struggled with so many things for so long?
Speaker:And I really like, I'm always feel like there's a.
Speaker:Pulling me in certain directions and I've struggled to swim against it when
Speaker:I'm trying to do something that I'm, you know, that I don't enjoy doing.
Speaker:And there's so many little things that come out since learning about
Speaker:ADHD and that just tick all the boxes and help lighten make me feel
Speaker:lighter, because I've cause I feel like, okay, I know one of the things
Speaker:I mentioned about labels, it's like.
Speaker:So I've got, I've started to go down the route of diagnosis for ADHD,
Speaker:but it's just like taking forever.
Speaker:Do I need it?
Speaker:But I kind of feel like, I feel like for me, I seek a lot of
Speaker:justification in what I do.
Speaker:Um, dunno why, but I feel like if I had like, almost like, a medical reason
Speaker:or like a factual reason that's been diagnosed by someone who knows more than
Speaker:me, then that would give me a little bit more of an open door to do actually do
Speaker:the stuff that I love, rather than just do the stuff I feel like I have to do.
Speaker:Because it's like, well, actually I've got a really good reason why I'm doing this
Speaker:as well as just wanting to do it because there's a part of me that feels that's
Speaker:always felt without a diagnosis about something telling me, no, you definitely a
Speaker:hundred percent got ADHD and just go with it, I feel like there's a resistance to
Speaker:doing all the stuff that I love because of almost like a bit of a selfishness,
Speaker:if like there's stress comes with that, or I don't own the money that I need to
Speaker:cover that I will be putting more stress on my family or that kind of thing.
Speaker:So, you know, what I do now with the video is a bit like that.
Speaker:You know, I know I'm good at it because I spot patterns and a lot of the
Speaker:benefits of having ADHD really relate into being able to create visual stuff.
Speaker:And that's why I'm good at it.
Speaker:And that's why I'm good at sort of teaching it, but then, you know,
Speaker:everyone, I think pretty much everyone knows here, I think is adventure, and
Speaker:that's what I've always wanted to do.
Speaker:And I'm just always like thinking of that stuff.
Speaker:So I've got a constant battle going on between the stuff that I want to do.
Speaker:And I haven't actually found when you asked them to come on and call us.
Speaker:It's like, oh, I'm not sure it'd be very helpful.
Speaker:Cause I haven't found many ways to actually deal with it.
Speaker:I stopped whipping myself with a, with an elastic band.
Speaker:You'll be grateful to know.
Speaker:Um, but I think that I still struggle with that and I still struggle to
Speaker:find the balance between that stuff.
Speaker:And just, I'm just always so gung ho at doing the things I want
Speaker:to do and just so resistant to the other things that I don't.
Speaker:Well that's I think what you just said is perfect though.
Speaker:I think giving people a window into another world and how you've well,
Speaker:for me, it's this hearing how.
Speaker:Just telling each other stories seem to be just pinging light bulbs for each other.
Speaker:And that being, I think as much as anything is the
Speaker:intention we have here, really.
Speaker:I think that the thing for me is I deep down, I know, and I've always known that
Speaker:the ADHD or the ability to hyper focus is something that if I think about all
Speaker:the best things that I'm most proud of, all the things that I've made my
Speaker:most success in my own vision of that has been where I've been hyper-focused
Speaker:on something, you know, building something, fixing something, creating
Speaker:something I've been like, unshakably like, no one can, unfuckwithable.
Speaker:No one can touch me.
Speaker:Like I'm in this zone.
Speaker:Get out of my way, you know?
Speaker:And that feels great to be in that zone, but I've just not been in it recently
Speaker:that much, as much as I'd like to.
Speaker:So hyper-focus, I mean, like totally, totally like my mind is so immersed in
Speaker:it and I'm only present in that thing.
Speaker:So for example, when I'm creating something physical building convert in
Speaker:a van, get a bit windows convert and a van, I know I can just get hyper-focused.
Speaker:I will work on it every waking hour of the day.
Speaker:For those few days possible, I'll go into space, sit and eat dinner,
Speaker:like talking to myself about, you know, the wiring or whatever.
Speaker:I'll be so into it that my wife would just be like, oh my god,
Speaker:I'll just be present for a minute.
Speaker:It's like I am, but somewhere else, you know?
Speaker:That, but then the other side of that is the thing where I have to
Speaker:like, ah, like barricade myself in and put a hoodie over my head to my
Speaker:screen to try and create that focus that just looks so difficult to do.
Speaker:And that hyper-focus, if somebody it's always, for me it's also the
Speaker:pattern thing that related to that, what Dan said, one of the benefits is.
Speaker:Because I see it as a superpower, if I'm allowed to like wear the
Speaker:Cape, do you know what I mean?
Speaker:And it's fine trying to find those opportunities to wear the Cape
Speaker:where it will be accepted on it, and a real positive for everybody
Speaker:is quite difficult in the current system of the way things work.
Speaker:So like for example, seeing patterns.
Speaker:That resonates with me.
Speaker:I see things.
Speaker:And I put them together from so many different places that ended up
Speaker:coming together and creating some sort of solution, but something
Speaker:it's like the video making.
Speaker:This is why I ended up because I just spotted.
Speaker:Okay, well, these are the same things that make all the videos look good.
Speaker:Just do those.
Speaker:You don't need to learn how to do all the rest of it.
Speaker:Just do the few things that make these things look good, right?
Speaker:And that seemed really obvious to me, but really not obvious to other people.
Speaker:And when I like one of the first slides in a lot of my workshops, I'll
Speaker:go one of the first things where I like mindset creative mindset is show
Speaker:people what they don't ordinarily see.
Speaker:Because when we watch something in visual or video, the reason why we're attracted
Speaker:through people who are attracted to it is because they see something they
Speaker:haven't seen before, or they see something they can't see with their own eyes.
Speaker:Like, for example, why we love slow mode because we don't see
Speaker:in Mo we love a time-lapse cause we don't see in a time lapse.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:We just, yeah.
Speaker:It's so showing what I feel like it's people we've already had to
Speaker:deal with have this different, or have these different perspectives.
Speaker:These divergent ways of thinking is if we can show people what they don't
Speaker:ordinarily, see, we can show what we see, then people go, wow, that's cool.
Speaker:That's interesting.
Speaker:And they, then they go for it, right?
Speaker:So it's finding, I'm trying to find more opportunities to show
Speaker:people what they're not seeing.
Speaker:And I felt like that is a superpower that I think we all need to, if we,
Speaker:if you're neuro diverse is to try and, okay, what have I got different
Speaker:than show people that as much as possible, because that's interesting.
Speaker:Cause they don't normally see it.
Speaker:Thank you very much, Kim.
Speaker:I really like that that from Kim as a, as an approach, and I think one of the
Speaker:big challenges of being neurodivergent and having learned to camouflage for
Speaker:so long is that the weaknesses or perceived weaknesses that you learned
Speaker:to cover up and perhaps have learned to cover up so long that you've forgotten
Speaker:there, even if they are very often your greatest strengths deploy differently and
Speaker:figuring out what those are and figuring out how to turn them into things that
Speaker:are helpful for you, helpful for other people is really a lot of the work.
Speaker:We, if you're, if you experienced the world that differently, you're not given
Speaker:that on the plate the way the other people are, the pathway is actually not there
Speaker:for you laid out the work is to make it, if you find yourself in that situation.
Speaker:And I think that accepting and allowing ourselves to do that, partly because
Speaker:it's so deeply transgressive, it's so deeply heretical, this work really it's
Speaker:fundamentally challenging to the way things are in a good way, in a positive
Speaker:way, but the world does not always respond to that positive is, is a difficult
Speaker:thing to kind of overcome internally.
Speaker:And the other part of it is really recovering what you enjoy, you know,
Speaker:what is, what really lights you up?
Speaker:I had spent I'd forgotten.
Speaker:I, I'm not sure.
Speaker:I haven't used.
Speaker:Because they've never had it or very rarely had it.
Speaker:And I had, I definitely still some somewhat carry that idea of, and if it
Speaker:is like the idea, like for me, guilty pleasure is kind of a tautology, it's
Speaker:a, it's the same thing that there's no such thing as a pleasure that
Speaker:isn't guilty, because it's because I was told that everything I enjoyed
Speaker:was kind of wrong or certainly the way I was doing it was wrong.
Speaker:And actually recovering that and working on that is a huge part of it.
Speaker:And sharing our experiences.
Speaker:I love that.
Speaker:Yeah, it really is shared experiences so often we experienced, you know, when
Speaker:you, when you experienced the world differently, you experienced these
Speaker:very small, constantly invalidation, these things that are like, you know,
Speaker:actually I might am I experienced, you know, you kind of question your
Speaker:own experience of the world so much so that you can kind of lose sight of it.
Speaker:And the recovery of that, the working with other people who experienced the
Speaker:world in a similar way, sharing those experiences and sharing the value of
Speaker:that experience, discovering the value of that experience with other people who
Speaker:are similar is a huge part of it, really.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:And so for me, I think that is like, is that, that self exploration that real
Speaker:it, like becoming curious, allowing yourself to be curious is is for me is the
Speaker:fundamental thing you're giving, you're giving yourself that gift, because if
Speaker:not for you, because that is the greatest gift you can offer other people as well.
Speaker:if it felt like being in Matthew's head and Kim and Dan's head in an,
Speaker:in a good way to understand what it's like to be your other version.
Speaker:So for me I'm just absorbing really learning.
Speaker:And I think what it's given me is like Matthew said this feeling that
Speaker:these are strengths, not weaknesses.
Speaker:And how do we like this?
Speaker:I suppose, create space for conversations first and foremost, to be aware
Speaker:of these points of difference.
Speaker:Some people don't feel different, but feel they could be themselves.
Speaker:But also like Kim has seven, particularly this kind of creative force that
Speaker:feels like it's at the heart of it.
Speaker:You know, how do we encourage that more?
Speaker:Because I guess that's what entrepreneurship is.
Speaker:Isn't it like thinking differently, having different ideas and not following the
Speaker:norm is actually a quality, not something that should be sort of bashed down.
Speaker:So yeah, for me, it's just been fascinating to listen in because I feel
Speaker:like, yeah, it's like a positive kind of worms in some ways to understand what this
Speaker:is all about and how we can play our part, I suppose, in making you feel like people
Speaker:feel that it can do themselves money because when it comes down to for me.
Speaker:Totally.
Speaker:I I'm just been really appreciative of, you know, the stories just to see, like
Speaker:you said, into other people's world.
Speaker:And some of the stuff that I relate to, some of the stuff that both Kim
Speaker:and Dan were sharing and, and Matt.
Speaker:Uh, It was quite interesting to see the idea of, I would like to say, like,
Speaker:to be different, but not to feel apart because I think, you know, we, we are
Speaker:all different, but it doesn't mean we have to be apart from each other.
Speaker:It doesn't mean we can't be connected.
Speaker:That for me is an interesting thing to think about.
Speaker:And thinking again from Kim and Dan, like to be unfuckable on the edge of
Speaker:the bell curve, then don't fuck with me.
Speaker:I'm going to be happy in this place.
Speaker:I don't have to conform, but I can still provide value.
Speaker:So, so much to learn here and I'm really appreciate this.
Speaker:And thank you, Matt, for opening up this world to me and to Lawrence herein and
Speaker:sharing that story with everyone else.
Speaker:For people who would like to learn more about your work and to get help from.
Speaker:Matthew where's the best place to send them and how best
Speaker:to get in touch with you?
Speaker:As a person with ADHD, I'm in the midst of like doing multiple things at once
Speaker:and redoing the description of the website and everything, the best way
Speaker:is probably LinkedIn at the moment.
Speaker:If you're interested in community, although the community name has
Speaker:changed, you can find out about the community at divergentpathfinders.com.
Speaker:That is specifically for neurodivergent really um, yeah.
Speaker:People who want to take this different path in work who are neurodivergent.
Speaker:I've uh, you can also find out a little bit about me and matthewbellringer.com,
Speaker:but it's all out of date.
Speaker:So yeah, I use LinkedIn.
Speaker:I love talking to people, so do just reach out and have a conversation.
Speaker:That's the best way to do it.
Speaker:And join us if you're interested, if you identify neurodivergent
Speaker:and I should say for me it doesn't you don't need a diagnosis.
Speaker:It's all about whether you really identify with that experience.
Speaker:And so that for me is the fundamental thing and exploring what that is and how
Speaker:we can best benefit from that is yeah.
Speaker:Is great stuff.
Speaker:So, there are lots of other good resources out there.
Speaker:Some of which I can recommend, maybe we can recommend as well
Speaker:to help people explore that.
Speaker:So also if you search for a Mackie, bell-ringer on YouTube, you'll find my
Speaker:podcast, uh Delightful Descent or pop, pop webcast, Delightful Descent, which
Speaker:is really about fundamentally challenging these kinds of deep seated ideas that
Speaker:aren't examined aren't considered where they don't work for us and how we can
Speaker:have some fun doing it whilst we do.
Speaker:One of the things I really like to focus on is having fewer shoulds.
Speaker:Is we're all told that there are so many things we should be doing to be
Speaker:successful, to be, you know, to be happy, to be lovable, to be whatever.
Speaker:And you I've yet to meet a person who didn't have more
Speaker:than enough things to be doing.
Speaker:I've yet to meet a person with ADHD who didn't have a backlog of like who, who
Speaker:keeping track of the things that they were supposed to be doing was one of
Speaker:the things that they weren't even doing.
Speaker:Um, So, So like dropping some of those things off the list and maybe replacing
Speaker:them with more wholesome, more fulfilling, easier ways of doing them is a huge part
Speaker:of this and finding what that is for you.
Speaker:And part of the show is really about exploring some of those and getting
Speaker:rid of some of the things we should be doing so we can replace it with
Speaker:things that we want to do instead.
Speaker:Thank you for listening to our happy Entrepreneur podcast.
Speaker:If you liked what you heard, please subscribe to us on iTunes,
Speaker:Spotify, and SoundCloud, or wherever you found this podcast episode.
Speaker:And if you'd like to learn more about creating a new path for your work
Speaker:and business, a path that feels more meaningful, more purposeful, and
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Speaker:website, thehappystartupschool.com and you'll receive little nuggets
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Speaker:purposeful path, and also a little bit of wittering from myself and Laurence
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