Operational support systems for overwhelmed brains. Practical visuals that reduce friction, increase clarity, and make daily life easier.
There was a time when I genuinely believed everyone else had received a handbook.
Not a literal handbook.
Just…instructions.
Instructions for remembering appointments without setting six alarms.
Instructions for starting tasks before they became emergencies.
Instructions for knowing what to make for dinner every single night without staring into the refrigerator like it contained the meaning of life.
Instructions for managing a house, a family, a schedule, a body, a brain, and approximately 47 open mental tabs at the same time.
Meanwhile, my system looked something like:
forget important thing;
remember important thing at 2:14 AM;
create elaborate new system;
never use system again;
repeat forever.
At some point, I realized I wasn’t failing because I was lazy.
I was failing because I was trying to operate a complicated human life using memory, motivation, and panic as my primary organizational tools.
Which, as it turns out, is not a particularly reliable operating system.
So I started building external supports.
Tiny ones.
Checklists.
Visual guides.
Decision trees.
Flowcharts.
Emergency plans for days when my brain refused to participate.
Not because I wanted to be more productive.
Because I wanted to stop feeling like every ordinary task required an extraordinary amount of effort.
And something surprising happened.
The more I stopped trying to become a different person, the easier life became.
The goal was never to become perfectly organized.
The goal was to stop needing perfect organization to survive.
Over time, those little systems started filling notebooks.
Then folders.
Then walls.
Then conversations with friends who would look at a worksheet and say:
“Wait… can I have a copy of that?”
Because it turned out I wasn’t the only person wandering around thinking:
Why can’t I start?
Why does everything feel harder than it should?
Why am I overwhelmed by things I know how to do?
Why am I exhausted all the time?
The answer wasn’t a lack of willpower.
It wasn’t a lack of character.
And it definitely wasn’t a lack of trying.
Sometimes the problem is simply that humans are expected to run increasingly complicated lives without enough support.
That’s where The Routine Laboratory came from.
Not from productivity culture.
Not from optimization culture.
Not from color-coded perfection.
The Routine Laboratory exists because real people deserve real systems.
Systems that work when you’re tired.
Systems that work when you’re overwhelmed.
Systems that work when you’re distracted.
Systems that work when life is messy, kids are yelling, dinner isn’t planned, laundry has become sentient, and your brain has decided that answering one email is equivalent to climbing a mountain.
Everything we create starts with a simple question:
“What would make this easier for a real human on a real Tuesday?”
Not an ideal human.
A real one.
The kind with too many tabs open.
The kind carrying invisible mental loads.
The kind who are doing their best with the energy they have.
The kind who doesn’t need another lecture.
They need a system.
So welcome to The Routine Laboratory.
We’re not here to help you become a productivity machine.
We’re here to help overwhelmed brains brain better.
One ridiculously practical system at a time.
THE ROUTINE LABORATORY
Helping Brains Brain Better