Busy Minds, Brain Dumps & The Myth of “Just Do It”
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About this listen
In this relatable and meandering episode of Growth Through Friendship, Juliet and Angela dive into the chaotic inner world of busy minds—those mornings where the coffee is strong, the sleep is broken, and the mental tabs are wide open. What begins as light banter about cat mugs and early wake-ups quickly turns into a thoughtful exploration of how the brain juggles lists, responsibilities, ideas, procrastination, and the pressure to “just get on with it.”
They unpack the art (and illusion) of productivity: colour-coded to-do lists, mind maps, brain dumps, course ideas that take two years to resurface, and the irresistible temptation to design websites, logos, and brand palettes before doing the actual thing. With humour and honesty, they explore why the organising often feels more satisfying than the executing—and why that doesn’t necessarily mean it’s wrong.
The conversation widens to look at modern hustle culture, YouTube algorithms, and the “tech-bro” mindset that shames people into believing productivity is simply a matter of discipline. Juliet and Angela question whether this advice is realistic for people with full lives, emotional histories, family demands, and multi-layered responsibilities. They reflect on how deeper thinkers often need more processing time, and how compassion for our own pace is a far healthier motivator than pressure from strangers online.
This episode is a grounded reminder that not all minds work the same way. Planning is part of the process, thinking is doing, and sometimes the reason something takes longer is because life is bigger—and more complex—than the simplistic “just start” narrative.