17/03/2026
I gave a talk at a school this week for Neurodiversity Week.
I could talk about what I presented, but what has stayed with me most is what happened afterwards. The conversations.
Educators sharing about students they’re trying to support, moments that suddenly made more sense, things they hadn’t quite had language for before. There was a lot of care in the room, and also a lot that they’re holding.
Because educators are being asked to do so much right now. To be inclusive, to support regulation, to meet academic expectations, often all at once, and often without the kind of support that would make that feel sustainable. And still, they are showing up, trying to understand and do right by the students in front of them.
What felt most meaningful to me wasn’t just sharing information, but noticing a shift in how people were thinking. Moving from managing behaviour to becoming curious about what might be underneath it. From “what should I do?” to “what might this student need from me right now?”
Those shifts matter. They change how support is offered and, over time, shape classrooms and relationships in meaningful ways.
I think that’s the part that stays with me. The ripple effect of these spaces. When even one adult feels a little more resourced, it doesn’t just impact one moment. It reaches the students they support, and the families around them too.
And sometimes those shifts don’t stay in individual moments. They start to shape how people think about systems — how support is structured and what environments make possible.
Something else that’s been sitting with me is how much we ask educators to support regulation in young people, without always creating space for them to understand their own.
That matters, because how we show up in relationship is shaped by how resourced we are ourselves.
I often find myself thinking about the teachers who were curious about me when I was younger. The ones who didn’t rush to change me, but made space to understand me. That stayed with me. It gave me a sense of being okay as I was, and from there, space to grow.
And I think that’s what this work makes possible.