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Every task you avoid grows scales.

Dragon Slayer is a productivity system built on avoidance psychology, error calibration, and expressive writing. Name your dragons. Face one a day.

No spam. One email when the gates open.

Dragon Slayer — dashboard
Top 3 dragons

Three dragons. Face one today.

A hundred tasks is noise; three is a decision. Top 3 ranks your most-avoided, highest-stakes dragons and puts them where you can't look away.

  • Ranked by how long you've looked away
  • One screen, zero noise
  • Slay #1 and watch the ranks shift
Dragon Slayer — top 3 dragons
The error log

One sentence a day. Sharper every week.

Log one thing you were wrong about, tag the root cause, and note what changes. Calibration compounds — updates, never confessions.

  • Root causes like planning fallacy and overconfidence
  • Stakes and tags for pattern-spotting
  • A weekly rhythm you can actually keep
Dragon Slayer — error log
Self Authoring

Settle accounts with your past.

Based on James Pennebaker's expressive-writing research: map your life into epochs, find the memories that still sting, and write them until they're filed away.

  • Old, still-heavy memories flagged as unprocessed
  • Four guided steps from event to lesson
  • Finished chapters stop draining the present
Dragon Slayer — self authoring
The banner

Your own words, riding ahead of you.

The quotes that move you — yours, not ours — greet you at the top of every page.

Equally, only one who has risked the fight with the dragon and is not overcome by it wins the hoard, the “treasure hard to attain.” He alone has a genuine claim to self-confidence, for he has faced the dark ground of his self and thereby has gained himself. This experience gives him faith and trust, the pistis in the ability of the self to sustain him, for everything that menaced him from inside he has made his own.

Carl Jung

Your words, every page.

The method

Myth on the surface. Science underneath.

Dragons are the costume; the mechanics are not. Each module runs on a documented pattern of human error — and a documented way out.

Avoidance compounds

An avoided task doesn't wait — it grows. Making the growth visible turns vague dread into a target you can hit.

Unexamined errors repeat

You can't calibrate judgment you never audit. One logged error a day quietly rebuilds how you predict, plan, and trust.

The unwritten past drains you

Memories that still sting after 18 months are unfinished business. Writing them through — Pennebaker's expressive writing — files them away.

The dragon isn't going anywhere. You are.

Join the waitlist and be there when the gates open.

No spam. One email when the gates open.