[{"content":"","contentType":"startable-life-lab","date":"0001-01-01","permalink":"/startable-life-lab/games/","section":"startable-life-lab","site":"Fondsites","tags":null,"title":"Startable Life Lab Game Lessons"},{"content":"Startable Life Lab is a practical, non-clinical guidebook shelf for making everyday tasks easier to start, resume, and complete. The guides focus on systems you can see: start lines, visible time, friction audits, offload stations, visible task boards, body-double scripts, help requests, portable start kits, transition ramps, hyperfocus exit ramps, break return cues, finish lines, big project maps, overdue task reentry, tiny admin batches, open-loop parking lots, shared household handoff boards, study spaces, digital boundaries, email replies, call stations, laundry cycles, meal prep starts, grocery starts, creative reentry notes, calendar-to-start bridges, getting-dressed start lines, one-surface resets, coming-home landing strips, packing runways, personal-care starts, digital file searches, guest-ready resets, weekly resets, chore starts, paperwork stations, morning launch pads, waiting-mode bridges, reentry notes, and shutdown notes.\nNoteEducational boundary Startable Life Lab is educational and practical. It is not a diagnostic tool, medical advice, therapy, or a treatment plan. If attention, focus, mood, sleep, anxiety, learning, or daily functioning problems are seriously affecting your life, consider speaking with a qualified professional. For quick practice between guides, use the Startable Life Lab game track . It turns start lines, visible time, offloading, body doubling, transitions, study spaces, and digital boundaries into short drills.\nStart here Begin with Startable Life Quickstart , then read Task Initiation: Why \u0026ldquo;Just Start\u0026rdquo; Is Bad Advice and The Start Line . Those three explain the core rhythm of the lab.\nFor everyday routines that fall apart around the edges of the day, add Morning Launch Pad , Waiting Mode Bridges , and The Bad-Day Reset .\nFull path Startable Life Quickstart - A practical first path for making tasks visible, startable, returnable, and finishable without shame or diagnosis. Task Initiation: Why \u0026ldquo;Just Start\u0026rdquo; Is Bad Advice - Why vague start advice fails, and how to make the first action specific, physical, and low-friction. The Start Line: Turn a Vague Task Into a First Physical Move - A repeatable method for converting abstract tasks into a first visible action you can take in 30 seconds. Friction Audit: Find the Hidden Step - A practical way to find the hidden object, decision, memory load, or setup demand that keeps a task from becoming startable. Decision Paralysis: Shrink the Choice Before the Task - A way to make stuck choices smaller, visible, and less likely to block the first move. Time Blindness Without Shame - A practical guide to time visibility, estimates, timers, clocks, buffers, and anchors without shaming the reader. Waiting Mode Bridges - How to handle appointment days, uncertain start times, and between-task waiting without letting the whole day disappear. Body Doubling for Beginners - How to work beside another person for accountability, focus, and momentum, with scripts and examples. Asking for Help Without the Spiral - How to ask for a small concrete kind of help when a task is stuck, without turning the request into a confession or rescue mission. Working Memory Offloading - External memory systems for whiteboards, trays, notes, launch pads, capture stations, checklists, and labels. Portable Start Kit - How to build a small portable kit that makes study, work, errands, paperwork, and waiting-room tasks easier to begin away from the usual desk. Transition Routines - How to leave one task and enter the next using rituals, reset cues, packing steps, and shutdown/startup sequences. The Two-Minute Setup - Prepare tomorrow\u0026rsquo;s first task tonight by staging materials, reducing decisions, and defining a start line. Morning Launch Pad - How to make the first hour of the day easier to enter by staging objects, reducing decisions, and giving mornings a visible start line. Homework Without a Fight - A parent/student guide for starting homework with less conflict, using scripts, breaks, return points, and environment setup. After Meetings and Classes: Reentry Notes - How to turn meetings, classes, appointments, and group sessions into visible next actions before the context fades. Study Spaces That Actually Help - A guide to light, sound, clutter, seating, supplies, timers, visual cues, and low-friction study environments. Digital Distraction Map - Map notifications, open tabs, feeds, devices, and app friction, then choose practical setup options. Email Replies Without the Spiral - How to make email, messages, and small replies easier to begin by separating the reply from the thinking spiral around it. The Shutdown Routine - End work in a way that makes restarting easier later: capture next steps, mark progress, reset desk, park tabs, and choose the next start line. Does This Mean I Have ADHD? - A careful, non-diagnostic explainer about executive-function struggles, possible causes, and when to seek professional support. Task Triage When Everything Feels Urgent - A practical way to choose the next startable task when every responsibility feels equally loud, late, or important. Energy-Matched Task Menu - How to choose a task that fits the capacity you actually have, without letting low-energy moments erase the whole day. Return Points After Interruptions - How to leave visible breadcrumbs that make interrupted work easier to resume without rebuilding the whole task from memory. Breaks With Return Points - How to take useful breaks without letting the original task disappear, using visible return cues, time boundaries, and gentle restart ramps. Creative Project Reentry - How to return to writing, art, craft, music, and side projects after a pause without rebuilding the whole project from memory. Low-Friction Chore Starts - How to make household chores easier to begin by staging supplies, shrinking the first move, and avoiding all-or-nothing cleanup traps. Laundry Cycles Without the Pile - How to make laundry easier to start, transfer, fold, and return by treating it as a visible cycle instead of one giant chore. Meal Prep Start Lines - How to make cooking and meal prep easier to start by staging the first tools, ingredients, and stopping points without turning food into a planning project. Paperwork Without the Pile - A startable setup for forms, mail, school papers, and household admin that keeps the first action visible. Phone Calls and Appointment Starts - A way to make calls, booking tasks, and appointment preparation more startable without turning them into a full admin spiral. Errands and Out-the-Door Starts - How to make errands, pickups, returns, appointments, and leaving-home tasks easier to start by staging the first physical moves. The Bad-Day Reset - A practical reset routine for restarting after a missed routine, messy day, late start, or unfinished task. The Weekly Reset Without the Overhaul - How to use a modest weekly reset to make the next few days more startable without rebuilding every routine at once. The Open-Loop Parking Lot - How to park unfinished tasks, objects, papers, and reminders so they stay findable without taking over every surface. Good-Enough Finish Lines - How to define a task\u0026rsquo;s stopping point before you begin, so open-ended work has a visible finish instead of turning into a perfection spiral. Big Project, First Map - A practical way to turn a large, vague project into a small visible map with one first move, one parking place, and one next review. Overdue Task Reentry - How to restart a late, avoided, or uncomfortable task by separating repair from shame and making the next responsible move visible. Tiny Admin Batch - How to gather small admin tasks into a bounded session with a clear start, a clear stop, and less pressure to clear the whole backlog. Visible Task Board Without the Planner Spiral - How to make a small visible task board that supports starts, pauses, and returns without becoming another planning hobby. Hyperfocus Exit Ramp - How to leave an absorbing task without snapping the thread, losing the next obligation, or turning stopping into a fight. Shared Household Handoff Board - How to use one calm household board for shared chores, errands, papers, and handoffs without turning coordination into nagging. Calendar-to-Start Bridge - How to turn calendar entries, appointments, and time blocks into visible materials, buffers, and first physical moves. Getting Dressed Without the Decision Spiral - How to make clothing choices, laundry state, weather, comfort, and leaving-home routines easier to start. One-Surface Reset - How to clear one useful surface for the next task without turning the reset into a whole-room cleanup. Grocery Starts Without the Aisle Spiral - How to turn food intent, pantry checks, bags, timing, and store decisions into a visible first move. Coming Home Landing Strip - How to give keys, bags, papers, shoes, water bottles, and errand leftovers a visible landing place. Packing Without the Last-Minute Search - How to stage packing for trips, overnight stays, long days, classes, and appointments without a last-minute search. Shower and Care Start Lines - How to make showering, grooming, and basic personal-care routines easier to begin with one staged first object. Digital Files Without the Search Spiral - How to make screenshots, downloads, forms, school files, and work documents findable enough to start the real task. Guest-Ready Reset Without Panic Cleaning - How to make one visitor-facing area usable without turning a guest visit into a whole-home cleaning sprint. Dishes Without the Sink Pile - How to make dishes easier to begin, pause, and finish without turning the sink into an all-or-nothing household reset. Device Charging Start Station - How to make phones, tablets, laptops, headphones, and power banks ready enough to support the next task instead of blocking it. Social Plan Start Lines - How to make casual plans, visits, meetups, and invitations easier to start without over-preparing or disappearing into avoidance. Careful questions If you arrived here because online ADHD content felt familiar, read Does This Mean I Have ADHD? slowly. It explains why executive-function struggles can have many causes and when professional support is the better next step.\n","contentType":"startable-life-lab","date":"0001-01-01","permalink":"/startable-life-lab/guidebooks/","section":"startable-life-lab","site":"Fondsites","tags":null,"title":"Startable Life Lab Guidebooks"}]