NeuroDivergent: Neuroabsurdism in Its Purest Form 

A New Paradigm of Human Potential

Given the variety of conditions associated with the term NEURODIVERGENT, we’ll begin this post by drawing a necessary distinction: those with a clinical diagnosis (e.g., ADHD) and those with Divergent Minds—individuals whose traits and specific personality conditions set them apart.  



Note: The need to expand the Divergent Mind is the core of our methodology. To understand how this flexibility translates into a deprogramming of rigid patterns of personal and relational identity, consult our study: 'Neuroabsurdismo y la Desprogramación de la Identidad: Protocolo Neurocognitivo para la Expansión de la Memoria de Trabajo y la Re-asignación de Roles
Study... 1Study... 2 Study... 3

Divergent: Refers to something that branches off or deviates from a common point or direction.  


The Absurd Exercises of Neuroabsurdism are born from Divergent Thinking and, in turn, amplify it on a neurochemical level to expand it even further.  


Why?  


Because so-called "logical," "sequential," and conventional thinking operates within—and is limited by—the domain of the mind.  


Neuroabsurdism and its foundational work, The Fall of Lord Fear, argue that this very mindset—the "logic" of a hypothetically "predictable" life—is the root of fear and most human suffering.  


Binary Thinking vs. Divergent Thinking  


The binary mind offers only two outcomes: more or less, good or bad. This breeds anxiety, fear, stress, and ultimately, procrastination...  


Since it operates under the tyranny of "achievement" and "success," it creates total disconnection from the Present, as it feels inexorably dragged toward the "best" and the endless pursuit of "security"—producing only dissatisfaction and perpetual insecurity.  


This is why Neuroabsurdism advocates for Concrete Action in the Present and a voluntary divorce—a hack—from the binary mind through its philosophy and exercises, to neutralize fear and expand your capabilities.  


The Power of the Divergent Mind 


Modern society, anchored to a conventional paradigm of "logical and correct steps," still fails to grasp the holistic processing and Divergent Execution a Neurodivergent person can achieve.  


Attributes of a Divergent Mind  


- Innate curiosity: A constant thirst for knowledge. They’re never satisfied with the first answer; they ask "why?" and "what if?"  


- Lateral thinking: They spot connections between seemingly unrelated ideas, using analogies and metaphors to find unconventional solutions.  


- Tolerance for ambiguity: They’re comfortable with uncertainty and don’t need everything perfectly ordered. In fact, they find opportunity in chaos.  


- Independence and nonconformity: They carve their own path, questioning established rules and ignoring majority opinion.  


- Need for autonomy: They value freedom in work and life. Rigid, micromanaged environments frustrate them.  


- Fluidity and mental flexibility: They generate ideas rapidly and shift perspectives effortlessly, avoiding fixation on a single approach.  


- Elaboration: They don’t just brainstorm—they refine ideas with unique, intricate detail.  


- Originality: They create what’s genuinely new, defying expectations and surprising others.  


The Achilles’ Heel  


In a society that champions "common sense" as the standard for behavior, execution, and idea development, Divergent Minds may be hindered by two of their greatest virtues: their deep need for Autonomy and their driving motivation—to follow Their Own Path and achieve Independence.  


To this, Neuroabsurdism reminds them:  


The path may be lonely,  

but only the quiet joy 

of being Yourself... 

will bring you Peace.