
Writing with ADHD doesn’t mean you lack discipline or talent—it means your brain is wired for intensity, intuition, and big-picture thinking, not linear slogging. Many screenwriting systems assume steady focus, orderly drafts, and one “right” way, but ADHD writers often create in bursts, jump between ideas, hyperfocus, lose steam, and then surge again. That isn’t dysfunction—it’s a different creative rhythm. The problem isn’t the brain; it’s trying to write against it.
Many writers with ADHD struggle not because they lack ideas, but because motivation doesn’t show up on command. Writers’ Club is built around short-term creative wins: bringing a defined piece of work each week and receiving immediate, focused feedback. That rhythm creates novelty and a sense of progress without forcing linear thinking. The club’s structure supports dopamine-driven momentum by offering clear entry points and achievable weekly goals.
Members can bring seven script pages, a partial outline, a lookbook, or three pitches, depending on where their energy is that week. Non-linear progress is supported, not penalized.
Pages receive professional and peer craft and character notes. For outlines we focus on structure, for lookbooks we explore evocative visual imagery. Pitches are refined for a strong hook and emotional impact. This feedback reduces overwhelm and gives writers a straightforward next step.
Writers with ADHD don’t need to “fix” themselves to succeed in film and television. They need environments designed for how creative momentum actually works. My Writers’ Club is that environment.