Jumping In Sloppy: Why Starting Imperfectly Is an ADHD Superpower
Jan 17, 2026
In a thought-provoking conversation, Russ Jones, a late-in-life ADHD-diagnosed podcaster and productivity advocate, shares insights about overcoming the paralysis of perfectionism. He discusses his personal journey through burnout and isolation during the pandemic, highlighting how 'jumping in sloppy' can be a liberating approach for ADHD brains. The duo dive into strategies like using timers to ease anxiety, the power of community for accountability, and why sometimes quitting can actually help you start. This dialogue emphasizes that progress is born from connection and momentum, not flawless planning.
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Late Diagnosis Sparking Purpose
- Russ Jones was diagnosed with ADHD around age 40 and found purpose after a painful period including divorce and depression.
- He turned to helping others during the pandemic, which led to ADHD Big Brother and community work.
Perfectionism Hides As Research
- ADHD brains often get stuck planning because they search for a perfect system before starting.
- Any system can work if you actually do it and iterate when parts fail.
Failures Often Lack Scaffolding
- Many ADHDers say 'I know me — that won't work' based on past failures without support.
- Jones argues those failures often lacked scaffolding and felt accountability, so try systems with support.

