For the ones whose brain hides the task

Forty emails you don't have to write. Already drafted.

The follow-ups, the deposit asks, the kill-fee invocations, the "this isn't working" exit. The exact emails your brain has been refusing to draft for weeks. Pick one. Fill three blanks. Send.

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If your brain has already hidden the task

The invoice doesn't exist again today.

The task disappears for hours at a time. You only remember it the second before sleep, in the dark, useless.

You opened TikTok 11 times today. You haven't opened the invoice once.

The client who owes you the most is invisible. Your brain has filed them under "later, when I have the energy."

You opened the doc. Stared at the cursor. Closed the laptop. The decisions cost more than you had in the bank.

You cleaned the entire kitchen at 11 p.m. instead of writing the email. You knew exactly what you were doing.

It's been 47 days. The task is still in the "I'll get to it tomorrow" bucket. It always is.

You're not lazy. Your nervous system is doing dopamine math. The blank email needs planning, word choice, decisions, anticipated discomfort — expensive, with an uncertain payoff that might be days away. Scrolling, snacking, anything-else — cheap, immediate, guaranteed. Of course your brain hides the task. The math doesn't pencil.

Most people have a drafts folder full of half-written emails. You don't.

That's the whole problem. Your brain didn't even let the task get that far. The "I'll write it tonight" email never made it to the page, never made it to the drafts folder, never existed except as a vague pressure that vanishes the second something else lights up.

So we built the drafts folder you don't have. Forty emails. Six decisions. Already drafted. Already decided. Waiting for you to pick one and send.

Pre-paid executive function

The decisions are already made. You just pick.

Forty scripts. Every word choice, every pivot, every line break already settled. No blank page. No "what tone am I going for here." No 90-second rumination over whether to say "circling back" or "checking in." The dopamine cost drops to near zero. Your brain stops hiding it.

docs.google.com / The 14-day late nudge

Script preview

The 14-day late nudge

Subject: Invoice [#1024] — what's blocking it?

[Name],

It seems like invoice [#1024] got stuck somewhere on your side. That happens. Have you given up on getting this through your accounts payable process?

I'm going to assume the answer is no. So:

What needs to happen on your end to get this paid by [Friday]?

Copy. Paste. Fill three blanks. Send.

Built on FBI hostage-negotiator playbook (Chris Voss) adapted for client conversations. Calibrated questions, tactical empathy, and the "no" disarm. Not "polite reminders" — language designed to get the money out without burning the relationship.

  • The 14-day check-in. Calibrated question opener ("what's blocking this on your end?") that flips the burden to them without making it confrontational.
  • The deposit ask. No apology, no "would you mind." Names the cost of skipping the deposit so they understand what they're choosing.
  • The "card declined" follow-up. Tactical empathy first ("happens to everyone"), specific deadline second. Protects the relationship while moving the money.
  • The pause-work email. Uses the "no"-question disarm: "Have you decided to walk away from this project?" Makes them say no, which is them committing to keep going.
  • The kill-fee invocation. Names the situation as labeled in the contract, references the original signed terms. No new asks — just enforcing what they already agreed to.
  • The "this isn't working" exit. Late-night-DJ tone. Calm, slow, no escalation. Because the goal is the exit, not the win.

+ 34 more, every situation that's ever made you stare at the cursor.

Then your brain finds the next decision.

Script in hand. Ready to send. Now your nervous system runs the next round of expensive choices.

  • Which version. Polite or firm.
  • Today or wait one more day.
  • Send to her or to her boss.
  • If they push back, do I hold or fold.
  • If they ghost, do I escalate or write it off.

More decisions. More executive load. The bank's still empty. And just like that, the script joins the invoice in the bucket of things your brain has hidden from you again.

Pre-paid decisions

The tree carries the load. You execute the plan.

Six decision trees built on negotiation logic and Black Swan theory. The hard thinking is already done. You answer three or four yes/no questions about what you actually know. The tree hands you the next move. No staring. No spiraling. No "but what if…" rabbit hole that costs you another afternoon.

  • The "how late is too late" tree. Maps days-since-invoice against payment-history pattern. Tells you whether you're dealing with an admin delay, a cash-flow problem, or a slow-walk.
  • The mid-project renegotiation tree. Surfaces who actually has decision power on their side, then routes between hold-the-line, structured concession, or graceful exit.
  • The red-flag intake tree. Six early-warning signals from the kickoff conversation. If three or more hit, the tree gives you the language to walk or to take with terms.
  • The discount-ask tree. Diagnoses whether they're price-shopping, anchoring, or signaling a real budget problem. Different routes for each.
  • The silence tree. Maps days-of-silence against last-known-status. Tells you whether to nudge, escalate to their boss, or use the "have you given up" reactivation.
  • The "I'm done" exit tree. Scripts the conversation in three voices (calm, firm, formal) so you can pick what fits the relationship and end it without burning what you can't afford to lose.

Mental load: handed off.

Zack

Builder, draftsfolder.co

Why I built this.

I have ADHD. I built this because I needed it. Every script started as an email my brain wouldn't let me even start drafting, with money on the line. Every tree started as a decision that disappeared from my working memory for a week and cost me real money in the meantime.

I don't believe productivity gurus. I believe in offloading the executive function I don't have to spare. That's what's in here. Decisions made, words chosen, so the dopamine math finally pencils.

Brand-new launch. I'd rather earn your trust with the work than pad the page with stock testimonials. The 30-day refund is yours, no questions, if it doesn't help.

If you bought these separately

  • Follow-Up Scripts$89
  • Decision Trees$39
Total value $128
Today only $39

Is keeping your dopamine worth $39?

Step 1 of 2

30-day refund  ·  Stripe-secured checkout

30-day, no-questions-asked refund.

If the Vault doesn't help, email me within 30 days. I'll refund you. You keep the files. No forms, no hoops.

FAQ

Quick answers.

No. Every script started as an email I couldn't make myself send, or one I wished I'd had at the time. AI helped polish a few lines. It didn't write the system. The voice and the escalation logic are mine.

The Vault is for the behavior, not the diagnosis. If your brain hides the email until the bill comes due, if you'd rather scrub a sink than write a follow-up, if "I'll do it tomorrow" is a recurring lie you tell yourself, this works for you. Diagnosis optional.

Then email me within 30 days, full refund, you keep the files. But hear me out: most of the brain-block isn't about the email. It's about figuring out which words to use and whether you're being too much. The script removes the writing. The decision tree removes the deciding. What's left is "highlight, copy, paste, send" — four motions, three seconds, no thinking required.

The Vault is built for freelancers, contractors, and solo operators who bill clients. If your job is salaried W-2, some scripts apply, but you'll get less use out of it.

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