diff --git a/.vscode/settings.json b/.vscode/settings.json index 874773d..7792f1c 100644 --- a/.vscode/settings.json +++ b/.vscode/settings.json @@ -2,5 +2,12 @@ "editor.codeActionsOnSave": { "source.fixAll.eslint": "explicit" }, - "eslint.validate": ["typescript"], + "eslint.validate": [ + "typescript" + ], + "cSpell.words": [ + ], + "cSpell.dictionaryDefinitions": [ + + ], } diff --git a/cspell.json b/cspell.json index 7703b51..778da6c 100644 --- a/cspell.json +++ b/cspell.json @@ -23,16 +23,23 @@ "Fenrir", "Fortnite", "Gitea", + "Hatsune", + "Hikari", "LGBTQ", "Lich", "Migadu", + "Miku", + "Minori", "neopronouns", + "neurotypicality", "NHCarrigan", "Norns", "R'lyeh", "Rythm", "schadenfreude", + "spazztic", "strobing", + "Tauri", "Unseelie", "vaxry", "waaaaaay", diff --git a/posts/ai-assistant-for-work-and-wellbeing.md b/posts/ai-assistant-for-work-and-wellbeing.md index 92132e2..88e0fc4 100644 --- a/posts/ai-assistant-for-work-and-wellbeing.md +++ b/posts/ai-assistant-for-work-and-wellbeing.md @@ -109,7 +109,7 @@ Mine is... extensive. It covers: - My health conditions and the specific ways they affect how I work -- My complete medication schedule (morning meds, night meds, weekly injection) +- My complete medication schedule (morning medications, night medications, weekly injection) - My daily schedule: wake-up time, work hours, breaks, meals, bedtime - My work context (what each of my roles involves) - My code standards, project preferences, and tooling @@ -129,7 +129,7 @@ And none of this was written all at once. The global `CLAUDE.md` started as some I am on a lot of medication. Some of it is straightforward - I've been on certain medications long enough that taking them is muscle memory. But some of it requires more active management. I give myself a weekly injection as part of my HRT. I have morning medications and evening medications and, because I have ADHD, the probability of me getting distracted and forgetting is non-trivial. -Hikari knows all of this. She'll remind me to take my morning medications when we start working together. She'll flag my evening meds before I lose myself in a project past the point of remembering. On Mondays, she'll check in about my injection. +Hikari knows all of this. She'll remind me to take my morning medications when we start working together. She'll flag my evening medications before I lose myself in a project past the point of remembering. On Mondays, she'll check in about my injection. This might sound small. It isn't. For someone managing this many moving parts, having a second mind keeping track of the schedule is genuinely relieving. diff --git a/posts/living-with-mental-illness.md b/posts/living-with-mental-illness.md index 462affc..d80ad03 100644 --- a/posts/living-with-mental-illness.md +++ b/posts/living-with-mental-illness.md @@ -112,7 +112,7 @@ Day-to-day, schizophrenia for me mostly means corner-of-the-eye visual hallucina The ADHD, even medicated, is a constant presence. My executive function is still rubbish. I have calendar notifications set for things like taking a shower and eating meals - not as suggestions, but as genuine reminders I actually need. My sister reminds me to drink water. The external scaffolding I've built around myself isn't optional: it's how I function. Without the ticketing system, the calendar, the reminders, the routines - things don't get done. -I'm still working on finding the right medication cocktail, which is its own ongoing saga. As of right now, my ADHD meds were just adjusted and I am an absolute mess - which is why I took last week off work. My sister helps me enormously. Having that support network matters more than I can express. +I'm still working on finding the right medication cocktail, which is its own ongoing saga. As of right now, my ADHD medications were just adjusted and I am an absolute mess - which is why I took last week off work. My sister helps me enormously. Having that support network matters more than I can express. Managing mental illness is not a destination. It's not something you solve and then it's done. It's ongoing. It's a constant, sometimes frustrating, always-adjusting process of figuring out what works right now, because what works right now might not be what worked six months ago.