{"name": "Kind Mechanics", "short_name": "Kind Mechanics", "start_url": "https://buttondown.com/kindmechanics/archive/", "description": "Kind Mechanics  is about uncovering and repairing the hidden cogs of work and life that grind people down,  especially  neurodivergent folks. Some people move through the world cleanly because their minds downsample noise. Others do not. For many neurodivergent people, this is not a personality trait. It is a cognitive architecture. When systems ignore that architecture, people burn out. When systems respect it, people do their best work. Kind Mechanics exists to explore the mechanics beneath that difference \u2014 the hidden frictions in workplaces, tools and cultures that either support or erode. I\u2019ve been on both ends of it. I\u2019ve been the person held together by duct tape in organisations that couldn\u2019t see the invisible load they were placing on people. I\u2019ve also built and rebuilt systems across two decades in IT and security, and before that through a scatterplot of unrelated jobs. Enough to understand how environments shape minds, not the other way around. Kind Mechanics is where all of that gets distilled into: structural explanations for why some tools and systems generate friction practical methods for reducing cognitive drag and hidden stress design principles for environments that support neurodivergent cognition field notes on transforming work systems to be coherent instead of chaotic No corporate gloss. No productivity clich\u00e9s. Just frameworks for designing systems that don\u2019t grind people down. Any people. Research Kind Mechanics is also where I publish my independent research. A lot of neurodivergence writing splits in two. Stories without mechanism, or mechanism without the story. I\u2019m trying to close that gap. I want explanations that feel true to lived experience and still make clean predictions about what helps. Right now I\u2019m working on executive paralysis and initiation failure: why you can know what to do, tell yourself to do it, and still not move. I use cognitive control theory and transdiagnostic clinical models, but the aim stays practical. Find the state variables that shut initiation down, and turn that into brief checks and interventions that reduce shame and restore movement. I\u2019ve also written on ADHD and demand avoidance as institutional misfit rather than individual pathology, treating the gap between assumed and actual motivation as a design problem in workplaces and support systems (preprint:  osf.io/preprints/socarxiv/6d4px_v1 ). I write on neurodivergent burnout and shutdown as predictable outcomes of environments that ignore cognitive architecture and cumulative load. Papers from this programme are currently in review at peer-reviewed journals. I\u2019ll publish breakdowns in everyday language through the newsletter. ORCID: 0009-0004-1442-1743 Contact: brian@kindmechanics.com Human Readable By Default Clear Kind Useful Subscribe to the newsletter for  research, pointers and breakdowns that you can apply in real life.", "icons": [{"src": "https://assets.buttondown.email/images/15c2d96c-d919-4598-8756-cdff0964234a.png", "sizes": "any", "purpose": "any", "type": "image/png"}], "background_color": "#FAFAFB", "theme_color": "#0069FF", "display": "standalone", "orientation": "portrait-primary"}