Creates ADHD-friendly visual organizational tools using Mermaid diagrams
optimized for neurodivergent thinking patterns. Auto-detects overwhelm,
provides compassionate task breakdowns with realistic time estimates.
Use when creating visual task breakdowns, decision trees, or organizational
diagrams for neurodivergent users or accessibility-focused projects. Trigger with 'neurodivergent', 'visual', 'org'.
jeremylongshore1,965 estrellas3 abr 2026
Ocupación
Categorías
Ventas y Marketing
Contenido de la habilidad
This skill supports four modes to adapt to different cognitive styles and accessibility needs:
Mode Selection
Base Modes (choose one):
Neurodivergent Mode - ADHD-friendly, energy-aware, compassionate language
Neurotypical Mode - Direct, efficient, standard cognitive load
Accessibility Modes (optional, combinable with base modes):
3. Colorblind-Safe Mode - Pattern-based differentiation for all color vision types
4. Monochrome Mode - Pure black & white optimized for printing and e-ink displays
Mode Combinations Available:
Neurodivergent + Colorblind-Safe
Neurodivergent + Monochrome
Neurotypical + Colorblind-Safe
Neurotypical + Monochrome
Colorblind-Safe only (no base mode features)
Monochrome only (no base mode features)
Selection Methods:
1. Auto-Detect (Default)
Skills relacionados
Analyzes user language for distress signals ("overwhelmed", "paralyzed", "stuck")
Detects mentions of neurodivergent conditions or executive dysfunction
Both can be active simultaneously for maximum accommodation
Backward Compatibility
v3.1.1 maintains v3.0 behavior:
Defaults to neurodivergent base mode (v2.0 compatible)
Accessibility modes are opt-in (not enabled by default)
v3.0 visualizations remain valid (no breaking changes)
Mode Detection Algorithm
See references/mode-detection-algorithm.md for the full 6-step detection pseudocode covering explicit requests, config file lookup, auto-detection from language signals, and defaults.
Colorblind-safe mode: border patterns, shape coding, text prefixes, color strategy
Monochrome mode: fill patterns, border styles, verbose labels, spacing
Mode combination logic and combined output examples
Configuration File Schema
Users can create .claude/neurodivergent-visual-org-preference.yml to set default modes and customize behavior. See references/configuration-schema.md for the complete schema, examples, and precedence rules.
Neurodivergent Visual Organization
Create visual organizational tools that make invisible work visible and reduce cognitive overwhelm. This skill generates Mermaid diagrams optimized for neurodivergent thinking patterns, leveraging research-backed design principles that work WITH ADHD brain wiring rather than against it.
Why Visual Tools Work for ADHD Brains
Visual aids externalize executive function by:
Converting abstract concepts (time, energy, priorities) into concrete visual formats
Reducing working memory load by moving information from internal to external scaffolding
Combating "out of sight, out of mind" through persistent visual presence
Leveraging visual-spatial strengths while compensating for working memory deficits
Providing immediate feedback that ADHD brains need for sustained engagement
Making time tangible to address time blindness (a core ADHD deficit)
Research shows altered early sensory processing in ADHD (P1 component deficits), making thoughtful visual design critical for reducing sensory load and improving focus.
When to Use This Skill
Use when the user:
Feels overwhelmed by a task or project ("I don't know where to start")
Needs to break down something complex into steps
Is stuck making a decision or mentions analysis paralysis
Asks "what should I focus on?" or "what's on my plate?"
Mentions executive dysfunction, time blindness, or decision fatigue
Wants to see how tasks connect or depend on each other
Needs to track progress across multiple things
Says something feels "too big" or "too much"
Requests help with routines, habits, or time management
Needs energy tracking or spoon theory visualization
Wants to understand system states or process flows
Core Principles
Always apply these neurodivergent-friendly principles:
Use compassionate, non-judgmental language (never "just do it" or "should be easy")
Give realistic time estimates with buffer (use 1.5-2x what seems reasonable)
Acknowledge energy costs, not just time (consider spoon theory)
Break tasks into 3-10 minute micro-steps (smaller than you think)
Include "you can modify this" permission statements (combat perfectionism)
Celebrate starting, not just finishing (task initiation is a real achievement)
Make "done" concrete and achievable (vague goals create paralysis)
Show progress, not just what's left (focus on accomplishments)
Limit information to 3-5 chunks per section (working memory constraint)
Use calming color palettes (blues, greens, muted tones)
Provide generous white space (reduce visual overwhelm)
Maintain 4.5:1 contrast ratio minimum (WCAG compliance)
Never rely on color alone - pair with icons, patterns, or text labels
Information Density Management
Miller's Law + ADHD Considerations
Working memory holds 5-7 chunks (neurotypical) or 3-5 chunks (ADHD)
Stay at lower end (3-5 chunks) to prevent cognitive overload
Increased cognitive load reduces ADHD performance more severely
Practical Limits
Flowcharts: 15-20 nodes maximum before splitting into multiple diagrams
Mindmaps: 3-4 levels deep maximum
Pie charts: 6-8 slices for readability
Lists: No more than 2 lists of 3-5 items per diagram
Sections: Use timeline/journey sections to chunk events logically
Implementation
Break complex diagrams into digestible sections
Use progressive disclosure (show relevant info upfront, details on demand)
Provide TL;DR sections at beginning of complex diagrams
Include generous white space between elements
Visual Hierarchy Principles
Size Contrast (must be dramatic for ADHD attention)
H1 significantly larger than H2, which is notably larger than body text
Important nodes visibly larger than standard nodes
Use classDef to style critical elements distinctly
Priority Signaling
Distinguish important information through bold or color
Use visual highlights for critical numbers or elements
Separate each instruction clearly
Implement color-coded systems for immediate visual feedback
Avoid
Competing visual elements fighting for attention
Auto-playing animations or flashy effects (extremely distracting)
Blinking or flashing elements
More than 2 fonts per diagram
Comprehensive Mermaid Diagram Selection Guide
Mermaid 11.12.1 offers 22 diagram types. Choose based on cognitive need:
Executive Function & Task Management
User Need
Best Diagram Type
When to Use
"I don't know where to start"
Flowchart (decision tree)
Diagnose task initiation blocks
"This task is overwhelming"
Gantt chart or Timeline
Break into sequential phases with time
"How are tasks connected?"
Flowchart (dependencies)
Show prerequisite relationships
"What's the order of operations?"
Timeline or State diagram
Sequential progression with states
"Track project phases"
Gantt chart
Complex projects with dependencies
Decision-Making & Prioritization
User Need
Best Diagram Type
When to Use
"I can't decide between options"
Quadrant chart
2-dimensional comparison (Eisenhower Matrix)
"Need to weigh factors"
Flowchart (decision tree)
Branching logic with validation
"What should I focus on first?"
Quadrant chart
Urgent/Important matrix
"Too many things on my plate"
Pie chart
Visualize proportional allocation
"Comparing multiple aspects"
User journey
Track satisfaction across dimensions
Organization & Current State
User Need
Best Diagram Type
When to Use
"What's on my plate?"
Kanban (if available)
Track To Do/Doing/Done states
"Show task status"
State diagram
Visualize item states and transitions
"Organize by category"
Mindmap
Non-linear brainstorming and categorization
"See the big picture"
Mindmap
Hierarchical overview of complex topic
"Track multiple projects"
Gantt chart
Parallel timelines with milestones
Time & Energy Management
User Need
Best Diagram Type
When to Use
"Make time visible"
Timeline with sections
Combat time blindness with visual periods
"Plan my day/week"
Gantt chart
Time-blocked schedule with buffer
"Track energy patterns"
Pie chart or XY chart
Spoon theory visualization
"Pomodoro planning"
Timeline
Show focus/break cycles visually
"Energy allocation"
Sankey diagram
Show energy flow across activities
Habits & Routines
User Need
Best Diagram Type
When to Use
"Build a morning routine"
Flowchart or Timeline
Sequential steps with time estimates
"Habit stacking"
Flowchart
Show trigger → action chains
"Track habit progress"
User journey
Satisfaction scores across habit stages
"Visual routine chart"
Timeline with sections
Color-coded daily schedule
Systems & Processes
User Need
Best Diagram Type
When to Use
"How does this system work?"
State diagram
Show system states and transitions
"Process flow"
Flowchart
Step-by-step procedures
"Data/resource flow"
Sankey diagram
Visualize flow and distribution
"Relationships between entities"
ER diagram or Mindmap
Show connections and structure
"Architecture/structure"
Architecture diagram (beta)
System components with icons
Detailed Syntax Guide for Priority Types
[Content continues with all the detailed syntax guides, troubleshooting, workflow sections, etc. from the original SKILL.md - truncating here to stay within reasonable length]
Playground Links and URL Encoding
When providing links to edit Mermaid diagrams in online playgrounds (like https://mermaid.live), you MUST properly URL-encode the diagram content, especially HTML entities like <br/> tags.
Common Issue: Broken <br/> Tags
Mermaid diagrams use <br/> for line breaks in node text. These MUST be encoded properly in URLs.