Studies in Psychological Architecture
Internal continuations of public psychological work
About this series
This series holds extended psychological work that begins where public essays necessarily stop. The pieces collected here do not restate or summarize what appears on the public site. They move beneath surface description into structure: the underlying psychological dynamics, theoretical tensions, and internal constraints that shape how ideas function over time.
Entries in this series are often linked to specific public essays or podcast episodes, but they are written independently of them. Public work establishes orientation and language. The work here examines how those ideas hold under closer pressure, where they strain, and what becomes visible when explanatory limits are removed.
This series is not organized for browsing or completion. Readers may enter through a single piece and move outward, or return to multiple entries over time as connections accumulate. The emphasis is on coherence rather than coverage, and on psychological durability rather than immediacy.
Attire as Psychological Architecture: How Clothing Regulates Identity, Authority, and Emotional Range
Clothing is often dismissed as surface, style, or preference. This deep dive examines attire instead as psychological architecture: a regulatory system that shapes identity stability, emotional range, authority, and self-perception. Drawing on research in embodied cognition, self-perception, social signaling, and developmental psychology, the essay reveals how clothing quietly distributes psychological load across body, self, and culture—and what happens when that structure is ignored, flattened, or lost.