Surviving a Neurotypical Industry: What "Janky" Workarounds Get You Through the Day?
There is a running expectation in software engineering that everyone processes work exactly the same way. You are expected to read walls of linear documentation, jump seamlessly through rapid conte...

Source: DEV Community
There is a running expectation in software engineering that everyone processes work exactly the same way. You are expected to read walls of linear documentation, jump seamlessly through rapid context-switching, and track everything chronologically in Jira. But if you have a neurodivergent brain, that standard corporate workflow often feels like it was actively designed to work against you. We spend an astronomical "cognitive tax" every day just trying to operate in a business world set up for a completely different neurotype. Whether you are untangling a massive C# architecture, writing complex SQL joins, or wrestling with JavaScript dependencies, the friction is real. For a long time, many of us focused on trying to "fix" our brains—trying to focus harder, read faster, or cope better. But we are engineers. When a system is broken, we fix it or build better systems. The Graveyard of Polished Products To survive, we don't wait for permission. We build scripts to manage executive dysfunc