Brain Tabs: A Neurospicy Mystery
Welcome to the inside of a neurodivergent brain:
– Tabs open
– Thoughts jumping
– Sound playing from nowhere
– Task? Forgotten.
– Vibe? Slight panic.
It’s not chaos on purpose.
It’s just how our minds work. Bouncing from task to task, trying to hold a hundred ideas, plans, sensory inputs, and snack cravings all at once.
What’s Actually Happening?
For many people with ADHD, autism, anxiety, or just plain overstimulated brains, it’s common to:
- Jump from one task to another mid-thought
- Keep mental tabs open (that convo you had 3 days ago? still looping)
- Forget what you were doing while doing it
- Be haunted by phantom music (seriously, where is it coming from?)
This isn’t a failure of focus.
It’s a sign of a brain with too many tabs and not enough RAM.
WiggleWired Suggests:
🧩 Chunk your tasks:
Try focusing on one “tab” at a time – even for just 5 minutes. Use a timer or sticky notes to help.
🔇 Sensory resets help:
If your brain is buzzing, unplug for a sec. Step outside. Stretch. Breathe.
🎧 Find the rogue music tab.
(Just kidding. You never will. It’s part of the lore now.)
The Truth Is…
Having a brain full of tabs doesn’t mean you’re broken.
It means you’re managing a lot, even if it’s not always in a straight line.
You’re allowed to close tabs.
You’re allowed to walk away.
And you’re allowed to laugh at the glitchy brilliance of how your mind works.