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Stimpunks.org Changelog for Week 13 2026: From Checklists to Patterns
Week 13 was about translation.
Taking what we know — about access, about co-regulation, about communication — and making it actionable. Turning checklists into infrastructure. Turning citations into frameworks. Turning style notes into principled stances.
The theme: access as design, not aftercare.
From Checklists to Patterns
The biggest publication this week was From Checklists to Patterns—a page that does exactly what it says.
Most accessibility guidance lives in checklists. Checklists require:
That’s burden, not access.
Patterns reframe the question. Instead of asking “What does this person need?”—patterns build environments where fewer people need to ask at all.
This page translates common accessibility guidance into reusable patterns like:
Access as infrastructure, not aftercare.
This is the Stimpunks design method in its most practical form.
Co-regulation Gets Ecological
We updated Co-regulation with an excerpt from the 2026 paper Toward an Emergent Paradigm for Neurodiversity and Health by Lori Hogenkamp, Dhwani Sanghavi, and Heini Natri.
The update situates co-regulation not as an interpersonal skill, but within a broader paradigm shift:
From: individual responsibility
To: relational and environmental support
This is the same shift we’re making across the design system. Co-regulation isn’t a coping technique. It’s an ecological condition—something that either exists in an environment or doesn’t.
The new citation connects our glossary directly to emergent research backing that framing.
Traits Are Still Moving
From Traits to Patterns continues to be one of our highest-traffic pages.
This week, we expanded the intro and added a “Build Your Livable World” section—turning a page that helps people recognize themselves into a page that helps them act.
Recognition without direction is incomplete.
Now the page doesn’t stop at “here’s how you might be wired.” It continues: here’s what to build.
Async Gets Its Due
We updated Asynchronous Communication with a quote from “It’s a kind of magic”: The unity of asynchronous communication—a piece that takes async seriously as a communication philosophy, not just a scheduling preference.
Async isn’t a workaround for people who can’t do real-time.
It’s a legitimate—and often superior—mode of thought, care, and collaboration.
That framing belongs in our glossary.
The Covenant Gets Patterns
We added two new sections to the Covenant:
The Covenant is where Stimpunks articulates how we want to live and work together. These additions address a real dynamic: how distress can become a tool of control, and what it looks like when relational patterns start working against people.
Naming these patterns is part of the work.
Defending the Em Dash
We added quotes from The Em Dash Is NOT an AI Tell: Justice for the Em Dash! by Ann Handley to the Stimpunks.org House Style Guide.
The em dash—used well—creates rhythm, emphasis, and a kind of syntactic breathing room that suits how a lot of neurodivergent writers actually think.
Treating it as an AI artifact erases a legitimate stylistic choice and, implicitly, a way of communicating. We’re not having it.
The style guide is where we defend our voice.
The Throughline
Week 13 did three things:
The through line is infrastructure: building environments, glossaries, and norms that reduce the ongoing cost of being here.
Changelog
Learn how to enable and monitor changelog in ForgeRock DS 7.2 for effective synchronization and auditing processes.