How I stay organised

I’m not into over-optimising productivity. These tools help me think clearly without turning life into a system.

Office Gear I Recommend

These are helpful peripherals and chairs that have made my work-from-home setup more comfortable and productive over the years.

Notion

I don’t use Notion as a “second brain” or a productivity system. I use it as a calm place to put things I don’t want rattling around in my head.

Over time it’s replaced loose notes, half-finished documents, and the habit of storing important things “temporarily”. It’s where I keep long-term plans, reference material, and anything future-me will be annoyed I didn’t write down.

If you like flexibility and don’t want to be forced into someone else’s workflow, this is worth exploring.

Explore Notion →

Todoist

After trying more complex task managers, I ended up back at something simple. Todoist works because it doesn’t ask much of you.

I use it for short-term commitments and reminders — things that need to happen but don’t need a system. No dashboards, no optimisation guilt.

If you want a task list that stays out of the way, this is a solid choice.

Try Todoist →

Audible

I listen to audiobooks while walking or travelling. It’s how I keep learning without adding screen time.

Get Audible →