26/11/2025
Just a quick update.
We’re taking a short pause from intervention sessions this week.
There’s illness in the house, and my body doesn’t bounce back quickly.
Hypermobility, asthma, dysautonomia and neurodivergence mean even small viruses can hit hard and take longer to clear.
Background work can still continue in a paced way, and there is some admin cover,
so essential tasks will keep moving.
If anyone needs urgent feedback or has a time-sensitive question,
please email and flag this clearly, and admin will make sure it’s prioritised and brought straight to my attention.
Anything that requires full physical capacity or in-person delivery will restart once I’m safe and steady again. I’ll review things at the weekend and update everyone about next week.
Running a very small limited company means there isn’t a large team to rotate through.
It’s me, holding the clinical work, the admin, the emotional load and the structure.
So when my body says slow down, I’ve learned that listening early prevents a much longer disruption later.
What has been sitting with me today is how familiar all of this is across the neurodivergent community.
Many of us experience more frequent bouts of illness or stronger immune responses than people expect.
Externally, this can look like inconsistency or unreliability.
Internally, it creates a quiet burden. The sense of always trying to catch up, always trying to keep pace, always worrying that we’re falling short.
And that feeling, the “never enough”, “I’m behind again”, “I can’t keep up”, is something I see reflected every day in the children and families I support.
Because our wider systems don’t make room for unpredictability.
They treat illness, pacing and recovery as inconveniences rather than realities.
You see it clearly in education.
Missed days become a crisis.
A couple of days off can trigger pressure, shame and panic.
Policies and attendance narratives don’t reflect the complexity of neurodivergent bodies or the longer recovery times many children genuinely need.
And when society frames every pause as a setback, everyone ends up carrying more strain than their nervous system can hold.
I don’t have neat answers for any of this.
But I do think it matters to name it.
Neurodivergent bodies often need more recovery,
and the guilt we feel around that is learned, not deserved.
Thank you for your understanding.
And if your own body or your child’s body goes through these cycles too, more illness, stronger reactions, slower recovery, heavier pressure please know you’re not unreliable and not alone.
You’re doing the best you can in a system that moves quicker than our physiology.