chore: update dependencies and fix blog styling #24

Merged
naomi merged 8 commits from feat/style into main 2026-03-03 19:38:00 -08:00
4 changed files with 18 additions and 4 deletions
Showing only changes of commit 952224cf75 - Show all commits
+8 -1
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@@ -2,5 +2,12 @@
"editor.codeActionsOnSave": {
"source.fixAll.eslint": "explicit"
},
"eslint.validate": ["typescript"],
"eslint.validate": [
"typescript"
],
"cSpell.words": [
],
"cSpell.dictionaryDefinitions": [
],
}
+7
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@@ -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",
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@@ -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.
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@@ -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.