Radical Inaction: How to Live Like a Man Without Cleaning Up After One

By Kayla Warner

There are men out there — I’ve met them, you’ve met them — who live wildly disorganized, beautifully chaotic lives. They forget appointments, lose track of time, get distracted in the middle of conversations, show up late to things they planned themselves… and no one seems to care. They’re still praised. Still considered “successful,” “brilliant,” “high-functioning.” Their chaos doesn’t cost them credibility.

Many of these men have ADHD — whether they know it or not. They don’t need a diagnosis, because no one’s pushing them to explain their behavior. They’re not constantly trying to prove they’re competent. Their messes aren’t cleaned up by them — they’re quietly cleaned up for them.

And almost always, there’s a woman (or two) in the background keeping things from falling apart. A girlfriend. A wife. A mom. An assistant. Someone who silently absorbs the impact of their executive dysfunction while they keep floating through life, charming as ever.

As a woman with ADHD, I recognized these patterns immediately — because I do a lot of the same things. I forget texts. I miss appointments. I lose things. I bounce between projects. I burn out. The difference is, no one’s cleaning up after me. I am the someone who keeps things from falling apart. For myself. And often for others too.

It’s exhausting.

Let me be clear: this is not a subtweet about my boyfriend. He is wonderful and neurotypical and genuinely supports me in navigating my neurodivergence. I’m lucky in that way. This essay isn’t about him — it’s about a system. A culture. A world that hands ease and grace to certain people just for existing, while asking the rest of us to earn it by being perfect.

At some point, I just got tired of trying to keep up. Tired of managing symptoms, masking messes, apologizing for being myself. Tired of trying to outperform the reality of my own brain.

So I asked a question I never thought I’d let myself ask:

What if I just stopped?
What if I stopped trying to make life easier by working harder?
What if I stopped chasing neurotypical perfection?
What if I stopped performing competence to be taken seriously?

That question — What if I just stopped? — is where something radical began to grow.

Not burnout.
Not failure.
But freedom.

I started letting myself do a lot less. I stopped apologizing for the days when my brain just said “no.” I stopped over-explaining my schedule, my symptoms, my forgetfulness. I lowered the bar. I chose rest over guilt. I let dishes pile up without spiraling into self-hate. I let myself forget things. I let things be messy. I let people be disappointed. And I didn’t die.

I call it radical inaction.

Not laziness. Not giving up. Not doing nothing because I’m stuck — doing less because I’m free. Free from the need to prove my worth through productivity. Free from the pressure to be the neurodivergent woman who “has it all under control.”

And yes — I want my life to be as easy as a man’s.
Not because men are the enemy, but because ease shouldn’t be a gendered privilege.

Ease should be a right.
Support should be a right.
Being a whole, messy, inconsistent, brilliant person — should be enough.

This isn’t about calling out one man. It’s about calling out the system that lets some people coast while others constantly clean up. The system that celebrates “visionary” men with unmedicated ADHD while quietly punishing women for the exact same traits.

Radical inaction is about reclaiming that space.
It’s about refusing to do the emotional labor of keeping up appearances.
It’s about letting go of the belief that you have to be “better” to be lovable, hireable, worthy of support.

I’m no longer interested in performing mental clarity I don’t always have.
I want softness. I want support. I want my brain to be okay as it is.
And I want that not just for me — but for every neurodivergent woman still burning herself out just to break even.

So here’s my offer: stop with me.
Let something slide.
Let someone wait.
Let it be messy.

The world didn’t fall apart when men forgot the details — it won’t fall apart when you do, either.

Ease is not a reward.
It’s something we’re allowed to claim.
No permission slip. No apology. No clean-up required.

A close-up selfie of a woman smiling beside a flowering plant with large green leaves, showcasing delicate white blossoms.

On the Clock Again (But Only When I’m Actually Getting Paid)

I started working again for the first time since October—this time in a chill, part-time job. And wow, it really puts into perspective just how wrong it is that teachers are expected to work endless unpaid hours.

After eight months of not working, I started a part-time job as a receptionist/assistant at my boyfriend’s office. It’s a gentle return to work—low stress, nice environment, no emotional baggage or kids climbing the walls. Honestly, it’s been a pretty smooth transition considering how brutal burnout had me down bad last fall.

But still… I count the minutes until lunch. (One full hour. Non-negotiable. I made that very clear during my “interview” aka casual couch conversation with my boyfriend.) And I definitely count the minutes until the end of the workday too.

Even though I like working here, I’ve realized how fiercely I now guard my time. Like when my boyfriend tries to bring up work stuff at home and I’m immediately like:

“Circle back when I’m on the clock tomorrow. I’m not salaried. I’m not doing unpaid overtime.”

It’s not personal. It’s about boundaries.

And it’s also about reflection—because when I was a teacher, I didn’t even have a clock to punch.


The Job That Followed Me Home (and Into My Dreams, and My Body, and My Burnout)

As a teacher, I spent thousands of hours working outside my contract. Nights. Weekends. Breaks. Summers. All unpaid. All expected. All “just part of the job.”

I stayed up all night working on lesson plans, behavior systems, bulletin boards, PD assignments, data reports, emails, and IEPs. I’d grocery shop while mentally mapping out small group rotations. I’d scroll Pinterest for anchor chart ideas during dinner. I’d dream in read-aloud voices.

Even thinking about it now makes my stomach turn a little. Not because I didn’t care—but because I cared so much and the system took advantage of it. Because no one talks about how teaching seeps into every corner of your life until there’s nothing left but the job and a shell of yourself holding a stack of ungraded spelling tests.


Now That I’m Not a Teacher, I See It Even Clearer

Working this job—calm, structured, low-stakes—makes me realize just how outrageous the teaching workload really was. The fact that unpaid labor wasn’t just normalized but necessary to be “effective”? That’s exploitation.

And I didn’t just pay with my time. I paid with my health.

Burnout took a wrecking ball to my nervous system. Years later, I’m still rebuilding. Still trying to sleep through the night. Still trying to not flinch when I hear a printer jam.


I Work Now. But Only When I’m Being Paid.

So yeah, I work now. I’m easing back in. I’m contributing. But the second I clock out? I’m done. I’m not discussing spreadsheets over spaghetti. I’m not responding to texts at 8 PM. I’m not doing anything work-related unless I’m actively being paid.

Because I’ve been there.
Because I’ve learned the hard way.
Because my time—and my healing—is worth more than that.

Not Gone, Just Spinning Plates

It’s been a little quiet on the blog lately, and I wanted to check in—not because I feel like I have to, but because writing still feels like home, even when life pulls me in twelve directions at once.

The past week has been… a whirlwind. I just got back from vacation (which was lovely), and basically the second I got home, real life looked at me and said, “Welcome back, hope you’re ready to sprint.” Spoiler alert: I wasn’t.

First came the Indy 500—a sacred tradition in my family and honestly one of the most emotionally charged, beautiful, overstimulating events I’ve ever been to. Between the roar of the engines, the crowds, the beer, the goosebumps during TAPS, and maybe a little weed, I’ve needed a few days to mentally and physically recover. (Sensory overload is real, y’all.)

The night before the race? Oh, just me staying up until 2 a.m. helping my boyfriend assemble what can only be described as The World’s Most Evil DIY Desk. Like, this desk might be haunted. It came with 200 pieces and emotional damage. But we did it. Kind of. I think.

Also, I still haven’t unpacked from vacation. At this point, I’m just pulling clean-ish things from it like it’s a makeshift dresser with commitment issues.

Speaking of sorority things—I’ve got some catching up to do. While I was away, I tried to unplug a bit, which means now I’m re-plugging with a vengeance and going through AAC emails like I’m Indiana Jones dodging boulders.

Oh—and I start a part-time job tomorrow. Just something low-key to help out at my boyfriend’s law office. It feels aligned, supportive, and chill… which is the exact opposite of how my nervous system is reacting, but we’re breathing through it.

Also, the Pacers are in the playoffs, which means there’s been a lot of yelling at the TV, celebratory pacing, and emotional investment in players I didn’t know the names of three months ago. Worth it.

All of this is just to say: I’ve been busy. Not in the hustle-culture, rise-and-grind kind of way—but in the messy, human, “how do I do all of this and still be myself?” kind of way.

And while I haven’t had much time to paint, read, or write… I’ve been living. Which counts for something. Maybe even everything.

So if you’ve been feeling behind or out of sorts or like your creative self has been hiding under a pile of responsibilities—I see you. I am you.

New posts are coming soon. I just needed a second to catch my breath—and maybe find a clean pair of socks.

A smiling couple takes a selfie, with the man on the left wearing a light-colored shirt with 'Ledger Law' printed on it, and the woman on the right showing a joyful expression, seated close together in a warm-toned room.
Smiling through building the desk together! #TeamWork