ADHD Must Box
ADHD Was Once an Ancient Brawler — The Brawler Theory
Seven Traits of the Brawler Nervous System
Intolerance of stillness, dulled risk/pain perception, sub-second reaction, rapid anger, present-only focus, anti-hierarchy instinct, high resilience — seven traits that map exactly onto ADHD.
Deficits as Natural Forms
Weak working memory, blurry time sense, poor planning — in the brawler environment, these are not deficits but conditions that keep the nervous system in its native place.
Kin Selection and Heritability
The 80% heritability of ADHD is explained through kin selection: brawlers' siblings carried the same genes, passing them on across ten thousand years of selection pressure.
Why Boxing, Not Exercise
Not exercise as dopamine supplement, but direct re-encounter with the environment the nervous system was made for. Explosion-recovery cycles, immediate response, anger permitted.
Boxing vs. Martial Arts
Taekwondo, judo, jiu-jitsu emphasize technique and hierarchy. Boxing preserves the brawler essence: simplicity, no hierarchy, present-only focus. MMA is theoretically closest, boxing is practically closest.
Anchor, Not Cure
Boxing is not a cure for ADHD. It is an anchor — meeting the original environment regularly makes the rest of daily life bearable. Ben Whittaker: "I feel at home in the boxing ring."
