31/12/2025
2025 has been a year of shedding.
Not the loud kind.
The real kind.
The kind where you quietly outgrow what no longer fits, and you stop apologising for what your nervous system actually needs.
At the beginning of the year, I wrote about saying YES to calm, rest, joy, innovation, organisation, nature, inclusion, and trusting the universe.
One of my biggest lessons has been this:
When my nervous and immune systems have been overloaded, I’ve honoured them.
I’ve had a couple of periods where the momentum didn’t stay consistent because I’ve needed to recoup, restock, and genuinely rest. But the difference this year is that I didn’t push through like I used to.
I took the right amount of time.
I phased my return.
I protected my energy.
That’s been huge for me, because burnout prevention isn’t a theory for neurodivergent people. It’s a practice, and it often means unlearning people-pleasing and lifelong masking.
Two phrases have become my mantras this year:
“You live and learn.”
“You only know what you know.”
And I’ve really held onto them, because even with 22 years of experience, I’m still always learning. The difference now is that those years of living and learning have given me the confidence to speak my truth with more clarity, and to stand firmly in what I know helps.
And I’ve also realised something important: learning is only sustainable when you’re doing it in spaces that feel safe, aligned, and non-shaming. That’s where growth happens, for adults, for children, and for families. Safety is the foundation of success.
This year I’ve also gone deeper into nervous system work, not just professionally, but personally. I’ve spent a lot of time researching regulation, burnout prevention, and what actually helps neurodivergent nervous systems feel safe and steady. And then I’ve been practising it in real life, not perfectly, but consistently. That’s included leaning into the things that genuinely shift my state, like singing (which has been surprisingly powerful for regulation,), being more intentional with clean living and environment, and getting grounded through nature. I’ve become more committed to building a life and a business that doesn’t just talk about wellbeing, but actually protects it.
And in the midst of all of that, parenting has been its own kind of deep nervous system work. It’s made me even more aware of how easy it is for parents to judge themselves, and how much families need support that is practical, human, and non-shaming. Living it has deepened my empathy in a way that no training ever could, and it reminds me constantly that regulation is not a performance, it’s a relationship. That lived understanding is part of what makes me a stronger therapist, because I don’t just “know” the concepts, I hold the reality of them.
This year has also been about finding alignment.
I’ve been refining who I’m here to serve, and being honest about this truth:
I’m not everyone’s cup of tea.
And I’m okay with that now.
I’m here for the families who value neuroaffirming support, grounded truth, and practical strategies that protect a child’s nervous system and dignity. I’ve shed overgiving, blurred boundaries, and the pressure to be endlessly available.
I’ve created boundaries that keep me safe, so I can keep doing this work with integrity.
Professionally, 2025 has been intense.
I attended several SEN tribunals, where in previous years it often didn’t even reach that stage. That alone reflects the ever-changing landscape of SEN and the ongoing crisis so many families are living in.
And despite how hard it’s been out there, I’ve supported a number of families to secure more appropriate EHCP provision. That matters. Deeply.
This year I published my second book, and that feels like a milestone I’m still letting myself fully receive.
And I’ve pushed myself out of my comfort zone in ways that are genuinely massive for me.
I attended a local event with a stall.
I joined business growth training.
I’ve started networking more.
And I’ve done it while living with social and communication anxiety, and a history of selective mutism in those exact environments.
But this year, I didn’t shrink.
I spoke to new people.
I showed up in rooms that used to shut me down.
I owned my space.
I openly talked about my diagnoses and lived experience, which is a completely different version of me compared to the past, and I’m proud of that.
And because demand has been so high, I’ve also had to close my doors to new families for a while. That hasn’t been an easy decision, but it’s been a necessary one. Sustainability has to come before expansion, always.
So if 2025 had a theme, it would be this:
🐍 I shed what drained me.
✨ I chose alignment over approval.
🔥 I practised what I preach.
🌿 I honoured rest as part of the work.
💛 I kept going with integrity, even when it was hard.
Thank you to every family who trusted me this year.
You’ve reminded me why this work matters.
Part 2 tomorrow: what’s coming for 2026. ✨