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Let me paint you a picture: It’s 3am, and I’ve just emailed myself a reminder to buy olive oil and cotton wool. No, I’m not running a crime scene cleanup crew—I’m just a 0-inboxer Type A person trying to survive in a world of chaos and unread WhatsApp messages.

Now, let’s set the record straight: This article wouldn’t even be allowed to exist in my brain if it didn’t come with a list. I live for lists. Lists are my personality. If you’re reading this and feeling seen, congratulations—you might also be a Type A unicorn with inbox zero dreams and mild control issues. Welcome, friend. Keep reading.

So what does AI say a Type A personality is? Blah blah blah, achievement-oriented, high-strung, organized, probably competitive. Basically, someone who treats productivity like an Olympic sport.

But I say: Type A-ness is less about being perfect and more about being a little neurotic, sometimes fabulous, and frequently exhausted.

Are women more prone to being Type A? Who knows—but it feels like it. Every woman I know has a Google Calendar that could rival NORAD’s missile tracking system and a skincare regimen that runs longer than some doctoral theses.

But here’s the kicker: being Type A isn’t the same as being a perfectionist. I’m not a perfectionist. Let me repeat: I am nota perfectionist (see what I did there?) My house looks like it was decorated by a toddler with a glue stick, and I’ve absolutely published things without rereading them because the high of ticking it off my to-do list outweighed the fear of a typo. Emotional regulation? Yeah, I’m working on that too. One deep breath, yoga class and internal monologue at a time.

Being a Type A 0-Inboxer Actually Means:

  • If you add me to a WhatsApp group and there’s an RSVP involved, I have exactly 30 minutes to reply and put it in my calendar or I will mentally combust. Like, spontaneous combustion. Bye-bye, me.
  • Sick days don’t exist. My body may be horizontal, but my brain is guilt-tripping me into answering emails from the grave.
  • cannot go to bed with unread emails. If I see that red bubble, I hear the Jaws theme playing.
  • If I think of something I need—cotton wool, olive oil, a new soul—I must email myself immediately or I will forget and it will haunt me until death.
  • No shopping list = total emotional collapse.
  • I have never gone to bed without washing my face and brushing my teeth. Even when I’m so drunk I accidentally brush my face and wash my teeth. True story.
  • I throw away perfectly good things if I don’t know where they belong. Recently, I tossed three eyeshadows because they had no “home.” I now regret this, but the garbage man probably feels fabulous.
  • Loose cables and tangled wires? Actual anxiety. I once nearly fainted trying to untangle a drawer full of chargers.
  • My calendar is a blood sport. It’s Tetris meets Hunger Games.

Let me tell you, making this list is basically free therapy. 10/10 recommend. And I’m not done.

Being Type A Also Means:

  • I am exhausted, but in a fabulous, efficient way.
  • It’s a superpower, and also a curse. Like having x-ray vision, but only for clutter and inefficiency.
  • I can be the world’s most reliable friend or an emotional hurricane full of chaos. There is no in-between.
  • I always have a holiday booked. Even if it’s just “leave the house and go stare at trees for 20 minutes, if I can book it on EasyJet I am happy.”
  • Budgeting? A+ with distinction. My bank thinks I’m boring. I call it responsible.
  • never miss a sale. I once spotted a discount code from the corner of my eye and I could swear it winked back at me.
  • Online shopping is my self-care and my battlefield. Returns? Already printed the label before it arrived.
  • Everything is a competition. I once lost a mountain bike race to a 9-year-old and I’m still in therapy. She was wearing a unicorn helmet. I’ve never emotionally recovered. I hope she has, the little rat.
  • I am imperfect, but obsessively aware of how I’m imperfect, which is maybe worse?

If you read this and thought, “Yes, this is me,” then I beg you—add to the list. Let’s trauma-bond over calendar invites, inbox phobia, and the fear of messy desk drawers.

Your turn:
What are your weird Type A or 0-inboxer quirks?

Let’s build the ultimate Type A manifesto. Bonus points if your answer is color-coded or in alphabetical order.


2 responses to “What Does It Mean to Be a Type A 0-Inboxer? A Memoir in List Form (Because, Obviously)”

  1. butteryfadingeaa2a9a1a0 Avatar
    butteryfadingeaa2a9a1a0

    Here I am to spirit bond over the A type personality traits:

    1. You email yourself to ensure you remember things or add items to the list. I WhatsApp myself through the direct chat feature on WhatsApp which was a revelation and something that was as exciting for me to discover existed as it probably was for the cave men to discover fire. Watch this space as I one day progress from text WhatsApping myself to full on voice-noting myself!
    2. Deadlines – My job is very deadline orientated, but that alone is not enough for me. I put myself to stricter and tighter deadlines than the Clients or Courts require. Oh you said you want this by close of business Thursday, well here it is close of business Monday even if I had to delve into a frenzy to achieve it. In my eulogy they will say she sent herself to an early grave but man was she efficient.
    3. RSVP’s and timekeeping – I like you cannot ignore any invitation or meeting request or anything of that nature and must respond and ensure it is penciled in as quickly as I can manage. By the same token I organize events and send out save the date / invitations months in advance even for something like a supper club / child’s party. I then send those who have RSVP’s google Calander or outlook Calander invitations. This largely due to my need for organization but also because of the knowledge of the lack of other peoples organization which I must then overcompensate for.
    4. Packing for a trip – This involves making a list of what needs to be packed far in advance and adding items like passports to that list even though my memory has never failed me to the extent of forgetting something so basic and vital on the list it goes.
    5. Sick leave – what sick leave? I too am incapable of ignoring any kind of communication that is “work related” I answer my phone, respond to emails, answer WhatsApp’s – even if it concerning a discussion about what shade the sky is on a particular day. Least people think I am shirking. The inability to entirely disconnect and switch off plagues me.

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    1. Melissa Carrington Avatar

      Ha Ha, I LOVE this. The WhatsApping yourself takes the cake – this is definitely AA+ type :) You are superwoman!!!

      Like

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