About Gulley

The organiser who actually gets it — because he lives it.

Photo coming soon

I have ADHD and dyslexia too.

Gulley Freeman started Clutterbusters because he noticed a gap: most professional organisers use neurotypical systems and neurotypical communication styles. For ADHD and autistic clients, those approaches don't just fail — they can feel actively shaming.

Gulley has ADHD and dyslexia himself. He understands executive dysfunction from the inside. He knows why starting is the hardest part. He knows what it's like when "just throw it out" sounds impossible. He knows the grief of parting with something, even when you haven't used it in years.

That lived expertise is what makes Clutterbusters different.

How I work

The single most important thing Gulley does differently is body doubling — staying present with you while you work, rather than directing from a distance or asking you to leave the room.

For ADHD and autistic clients, having someone present reduces the initiation barrier dramatically. It's not about being supervised. It's about having another nervous system in the room to anchor your attention.

Everything else follows from this: the pace is yours, the systems are designed for your brain (not the "right" way), and nothing gets thrown out without your understanding and agreement.

What Clutterbusters stands for

No shame

Clutter is not a moral failing. Executive dysfunction is not laziness. Emotional attachment to objects is not a problem to be fixed.

Practical systems

Open shelving. Transparent containers. Point-of-performance storage. Systems that account for how your brain actually works.

Sustainable approach

Where possible, items are donated, salvaged, or upcycled. Minimal waste. Maximum care for what you're letting go of.

Your timeline

Hyperfocus welcome. Energy crashes understood. We go at your pace — whether that's 2 hours or a full day.

Let's talk about your space.

No pressure. Just a conversation about what you're dealing with and whether Gulley can help.