April: A World Through Neurodiversity
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Autism Acceptance Month Series: Beyond Awareness to Sensory Truth, Masking, and Invisible Illness
The script introduces an April autism acceptance month video series aimed at moving beyond awareness to genuine acceptance by explaining the lived experience of autism, especially profound sensory differences, masking, routines as safety, and meltdowns as overwhelm rather than tantrums. It frames autism as a different way of being human in a world built for one “type of brain,” and highlights links between autism, ADHD, and chronic invisible illnesses. The series features guides including Dr. Megan Anna Neff (burnout, unmasking, self-care), Dr. Barry Prizant (autistic behaviors as coping strategies), Dr. Jennifer Frazier (bullying’s brain impacts and healing), and memoirist Leland Vitter (resilience and family support). Weekly topics include neurodiversity, harms of functioning labels, late diagnosis, masking, burnout, sensory self-care, bullying and gaslighting, advocacy, and revisiting the highly sensitive person concept with 2026 understanding.
00:00 Sensory Overload Walkthrough
00:23 Autism Acceptance Mission
00:48 Beyond Social Struggles
01:25 Masking Routines Meltdowns
01:59 Meet the Expert Guides
02:27 Dr Prizant Uniquely Human
02:53 Bullying Brain Science
03:17 Leland Vitter Story
03:39 Week by Week Roadmap
03:54 Late Diagnosis Unmasking
04:07 Self Care and Sensory Tools
04:16 Systems Solutions Advocacy
04:35 HSP and High Masking
04:56 More Than a Series
05:11 Join the Comments
05:20 Changing the Lens
05:59 Closing and Next Episode
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When I started this podcast and YouTube Channel—and the book that came before it—I had my patients in mind. Office visits are short, but understanding complex, often misunderstood conditions like fibromyalgia takes time. That’s why I created this space: to offer education, validation, and hope. If you’ve been told fibromyalgia “isn’t real” or that it’s “all in your head,” know this—I see you. I believe you. This podcast aims to affirm your experience and explain the science behind it. Whether you live with fibromyalgia, care for someone who does, or are a healthcare professional looking to better support patients, you’ll find trusted, evidence-based insights here, drawn from my 29+ years as an MD.
Please remember to talk with your doctor about your symptoms and care. This content doesn’t replace per...