we name the parts of adhd nobody else is brave enough to put on a mug.
I realised two things at once. One: a lot of my life suddenly made sense. Two: most of the products marketed at people like me were either clinical and joyless, or built around the idea that ADHD is a quirky productivity superpower if you just hustle harder.
Neither of those felt like my actual experience. The actual experience is funnier, messier, more tender, and a lot more specific than that. So I started making the things I wished existed when I got diagnosed.
OddlyWiredCo is built for the late-diagnosed adults, the AuDHD ones, the ADHD women who slipped through every screening as kids, the ADHD parents raising ADHD kids, and anyone who has ever sat in a chair for forty minutes trying to start a task they actually wanted to do.
The door is open wider than ADHD. Autistic adults who only worked it out in their thirties, people in autistic burnout, the dyslexic and dyspraxic, the sensory-different, the demand-avoidant, the OCD and tic kids who grew up masking. The whole neurodivergent room. The products lead from ADHD because that is what I live with, but if your brain does not run on the productivity industry's defaults, this is your shop too.
If "I thought I was just bad at being a person, turns out I'm neurodivergent" landed somewhere in your gut. You are in the right shop.
Humour and identity mugs and prints. Digital planners and tools designed for executive-function reality (not the "wake up at 5am and journal" version). Seasonal drops around moments like Mental Health Awareness Month, perimenopause overlap, and late-diagnosis anniversaries.
Every product targets a specific neurodivergent moment. Masking fatigue. Time blindness. Object permanence. The 2am doom-scroll. The hyperfocus spiral. Rejection sensitivity. The bits that do not make it into mainstream "ADHD content" because they are too honest.
tools and humour, that's it.
If you buy something, I see your order. If you message the shop, you are messaging me. If a product does not work for your brain, that's information about the product, not about you. I am glad you found the shop.