Building structure where none exists.
Advocating for minds that run different code.
People are often surprised when I tell them about my neurodivergence. "But you coordinate programs," they say. "You're so organized."
Exactly. I'm organized because I have to be. External structure—protocols, schedules, clear expectations—creates the framework that lets me thrive.
"I can coordinate complex programs because the protocols are clear and the goals are defined.
It's the personal life—the groceries, the laundry, the executive function of daily existence—where the gaps show. The neurodivergent mind thrives in structured complexity but struggles with mundane chaos."
Neurodivergent minds are often labeled as scattered, disorganized, or poor learners. The truth is simpler: we're running different software on hardware the world wasn't designed for.
The professional world has structure—protocols, deadlines, clear expectations. That's where we can thrive. It's the unstructured personal sphere where executive function fails.
Intellexa is about building scaffolding for the unstructured. Tools for the things without policy manuals—groceries, appointments, domestic executive function.
Not productivity porn. Not another app. An operating system for the personal chaos that neurodivergent minds navigate daily.
How I got here without losing myself entirely.
Realizing that the chaos wasn't a defect—it was a different operating system. The scattered thoughts, the difficulty with routine tasks, the ability to see patterns others missed. Not broken, just differently wired.
Discovering I could coordinate complex programs while struggling to remember groceries. Thriving with clear protocols while drowning in unstructured time. The gap between professional capability and personal chaos became the puzzle to solve.
Stepping back from titles to return to fundamentals. Learning that climbing isn't always the answer. Sometimes the most important work is building the scaffolding that holds everything else together.
Now building tools for minds like mine. Not productivity hacks—real scaffolding for executive function. AI-augmented systems that don't try to fix the brain, but extend it. This site, these projects, this advocacy.