Autistic Identity With NeuroHub

NeuroHub Community Ltd

Official podcast of the NeurHub Community exploring Autistic identity. We bring you a range of short scripted podcasts to longer discussion based episodes. One thing we don't do though is invalidate Autistic identities. https://neuro-hub.org www.dghndconsultancy.org

Episodes

  1. Who Gets To Tell Our Stories?

    4D AGO · BONUS

    Who Gets To Tell Our Stories?

    Who gets to tell the story of autism? For many of us, our earliest understandings of autism came from professionals, reports, and systems that framed Autistic lives through deficit, risk, and correction. Long before we encountered Autistic voices, we were often handed stories about what autism is; and what it supposedly means for a person’s future. In this episode of Autistic Identity with NeuroHub, David explores autism as story rather than symptom. We look at how narratives shape identity, how internalised deficit stories quietly turn into self-surveillance and self-contempt, and how re-storying autism can become a gentle, ongoing practice of reclaiming meaning, dignity, and self-trust. This conversation is for: • Autistic people exploring their own identity• Families and carers wanting to move beyond “fixing” narratives• Professionals seeking relational, neurodivergence-competent ways of understanding Autistic lives It’s an invitation to notice the stories we’re living inside — and to ask whether they are helping us breathe. 🔗 Explore Re-Storying Autism (workbook, PDF, Kindle, and on-demand video course): 🌱 Support the Re-Storying Autism Kickstarter campaign, we have until2nd April to raise £5000 but currently have £20!: 🤝 Join the NeuroHub Community (peer support, learning, and Autistic-led spaces): NeuroHub Community is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber. This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.dghndconsultancy.org/subscribe

    12 min
  2. Masking, Meaning, and Becoming Yourself

    JAN 30

    Masking, Meaning, and Becoming Yourself

    This episode of Autistic Identity With NeuroHub is an invitation to slow down and sit with Autistic identity as something lived, negotiated, and continually re-formed; not a static label or a checklist of traits. We explore how Autistic identity emerges through relationship, memory, masking, unmasking, and the stories we’re told about who we are allowed to be. Rather than treating identity as something to “discover” once and for all, this conversation frames it as relational and ecological, shaped by environments, power structures, and the quality of connection available to us over time. The episode touches on being “authentically Autistic” as another mask rather than a goal to aim for, the joourney to self-acceptance through struggle, and the quiet labour involved in translating ourselves for a world that often refuses to listen. We also explore what happens when Autistic people begin to tell their own stories; not to seek permission, but to reclaim authorship. This is not a how-to guide or a diagnostic explainer. It’s a reflective, grounded conversation about meaning, belonging, and the ongoing work of becoming yourself in a world that prefers you to be less complex than you really are. Expect nuance, honesty, and a refusal to reduce Autistic lives to narratives of deficit or triumph. This episode is about that complexity, and the freedom that comes from finally being allowed to keep it. NeuroHub Community is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber. This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.dghndconsultancy.org/subscribe

    7 min

About

Official podcast of the NeurHub Community exploring Autistic identity. We bring you a range of short scripted podcasts to longer discussion based episodes. One thing we don't do though is invalidate Autistic identities. https://neuro-hub.org www.dghndconsultancy.org