
The Weight of Loss — “Learning to Feel What I Once Ignored”
November 17, 2025
ADHD and the Power of Structure — Turning Overwhelm into Order
November 17, 2025
T
here’s one story I’ll never forget from my early SLS workshops.
A man named Daniel walked in on the first day looking defeated. “I’m always losing things,” he said, “my keys, my wallet, my focus, and sometimes, my peace.” He wasn’t exaggerating. Every morning was a frantic search. Every evening ended in frustration.
We began simple. I asked him to start with one thing: a nightly five-minute check. Before going to bed, he would gather his essentials — wallet, keys, phone — and place them in the same spot. I told him not to overthink it. Just repeat it nightly, even if life felt messy.
Three weeks later, he emailed me. His words still make me smile:
“Henry, I haven’t lost a single thing in 21 days. But what surprises me most is that I feel calmer. I wake up earlier, I move slower, I even think clearer.”
It wasn’t about the keys. It was about regaining control.
When we lose physical things often, it’s usually a sign we’ve lost rhythm internally. The moment we restore one, the other follows.
Daniel’s life didn’t change overnight — it changed every night, one small, intentional act at a time




