Okay, let’s talk about this ‘demarion thomas’ thing I tried out recently. Wasn’t exactly sure what it was, maybe a technique or a framework, saw the name pop up somewhere and thought, why not? I like trying new ways to get stuff done, especially when I feel a bit stuck.

Getting Started
So, I had this small side project, nothing major, but I was hitting a wall. Couldn’t quite figure out the next steps. I remembered the name ‘demarion thomas’ and decided this was as good a time as any to see if it helped. Didn’t have a manual or anything, just the name.
I grabbed my usual notebook and a pen. I find writing things down physically helps sometimes, gets it out of my head. I thought, okay, let’s just start putting down thoughts related to this project, maybe that’s what this ‘demarion thomas’ approach is about.
The Process I Tried
First, I wrote the main goal right at the top of the page. Nice and big. Then, I just started listing everything. Seriously, everything that came to mind about the project:
- Tasks I knew I had to do.
- Problems I was facing.
- Ideas, even half-baked ones.
- Questions I still had.
- Resources I thought I might need.
I didn’t try to organize it at first. Just a big, messy brain dump. Filled up about half a page pretty quickly. It felt kinda good, actually. Less swirling around in my brain.
Then, I tried to make some sense of it. I looked at the list and started grouping things. Put circles around related items. Drew lines connecting things that depended on each other. This part was trickier. Some things didn’t fit neatly anywhere. I ended up with a few groups, like ‘Research Needed’, ‘Core Tasks’, ‘Possible Issues’. I guess this was my interpretation of applying the ‘demarion thomas’ idea, whatever it truly is.

What Happened Next
Looking at the grouped items, it became a bit clearer what needed tackling first. It wasn’t a magic solution, the problems were still there. But they felt less overwhelming. Seeing them written down and loosely organized made them seem more manageable.
I picked one item from the ‘Core Tasks’ group that seemed like a logical next step and just started working on that. Didn’t worry about the whole big picture for a bit. Focusing on that one small piece helped me get moving again.
Final Thoughts
So, my experience with this ‘demarion thomas’ thing? It wasn’t revolutionary. For me, it turned into a focused brain dump followed by some rough organizing. The key part was just starting and getting thoughts onto paper without judging them initially.
I don’t know if I did the ‘official’ demarion thomas method, or if there even is one. But the process I followed helped me break through that stuck feeling. It’s basically a simple way to untangle your thoughts when you’re facing a knotty problem. I might use this approach again when I feel overwhelmed, just calling it ‘my messy notebook technique’ might be more accurate! It worked well enough for that specific situation.