What if we’ve been misdiagnosing a form of intelligence no one had words for?For decades, we’ve tried to explain certain minds using labels like ADHD or executive dysfunction. But what if the issue isn’t dysfunction at all—but architecture?Some people can see entire systems—business models, software platforms, supply chains—before anyone else. But they can’t manage a calendar. They can design multi-layered structures in real time… while forgetting to eat lunch. These aren’t paradoxes. They’re patterns.I’ve been working on a cognitive profile I call Profound Cognitive Hemispheric Asymmetry (PCHA). It’s not a diagnosis—it’s a hypothesis. One that might explain the lived experience of thousands of overlooked thinkers across tech, design, education, and beyond.
The Architecture of an Unnamed Mind
What if we’ve been misdiagnosing a form of intelligence no one had words for?For decades, we’ve tried to explain certain minds using labels like ADHD or executive dysfunction. But what if the issue isn’t dysfunction at all—but architecture?Some people can see entire systems—business models, software platforms, supply chains—before anyone else. But they can’t manage a calendar. They can design multi-layered structures in real time… while forgetting to eat lunch. These aren’t paradoxes. They’re patterns.I’ve been working on a cognitive profile I call Profound Cognitive Hemispheric Asymmetry (PCHA). It’s not a diagnosis—it’s a hypothesis. One that might explain the lived experience of thousands of overlooked thinkers across tech, design, education, and beyond.