À propos de cet épisode
<p>She spent her childhood in detention. Locked a teacher in a cupboard. Sat in corridors alone while everyone else learned. Missed the last six months of school because nobody wanted her there.She wasn't naughty. She was undiagnosed.Charlie was finally diagnosed autistic at 32 and ADHD three weeks before this conversation. By then, she'd already closed her business to become a full-time carer for her son AJ — non-verbal, tube-fed, PDA profile, sensory processing difficulties. A child the system repeatedly failed until she walked into school and said "help me or this kid's getting taken off me."Before his feeding tube, AJ didn't eat for six weeks. His lips were peeling. He was grey. His ribs were showing. He looked, in her words, dead. And still the support didn't come until she was already broken.Now she's raising three neurodivergent kids — all different, all on the spectrum, all requiring completely different approaches. She's also built Neurospicy, a clothing brand that refuses the puzzle pieces and the sanitised narratives. And she's planning something bigger: a sensory-friendly soft play hub where families like hers can actually exist in public without being stared at.This is what happens when no one catches you. And what it looks like when you decide to build the thing that should have existed all along.</p>
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Les épisodes de podcast sont l'un des moyens les plus denses d'absorber l'anglais au rythme natif. I Wasn't The Naughty Kid de Autism Dadcast t'offre des dialogues naturels, une parole non scriptée et du vocabulaire qui apparaît vraiment dans les conversations réelles.
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Épisodes pour apprendre l'anglais
- #43 | "Where Will They Be When They're 30?" | Jolanta Lasota, Ambitious about Autism 9 juil. 2026
- #42 | "I Wouldn't Pay A Penny To Change Him" | Paul Mullin On Albi, Autism & Being A Dad 26 juin 2026
- #41 | How One Wrong Word Can Ruin An Entire Day 19 juin 2026
- #40 | Toilet training, Autism & Gut Health. 11 juin 2026
- #39 | "He Opened The Door And Just Walked Off" 4 juin 2026
- #38 | "What If You Didn't Have to Fight So Hard?" 20 mai 2026
- #37 | "The Word That Broke Me in Popeye's" 12 mai 2026
- #36 | "Are We Doing As Much As We Can?" 8 mai 2026
- #35 | What Mums Wish We Knew 21 avr. 2026
- #34 | When You Die, Will They Know You Didn't Leave? 14 avr. 2026
- #33 | "We Have to Pay to Keep Parenting." 31 mars 2026
- #32 | "I Nearly Drove Away and Never Came Back" 23 mars 2026
- #31 | We Asked the Minister 17 mars 2026
- #30 | Inside the White Paper: What We Fought to Change 7 mars 2026
- #29 | EHCPs “Protected Until 2030” Then What? 18 févr. 2026
- #28 | Your SEND Stories: Where You’ve Been Failed 12 févr. 2026
- #27 | SEND Reform Leaks 29 janv. 2026
- #26 | £55,000 To Get Her Child Help 20 janv. 2026
- #25 | We're Meeting The Minister for School Minister 14 janv. 2026
- "I Didn't Want To Go Home" 31 déc. 2025
- They Put Him In A Converted Staff Room 30 déc. 2025
- "No One Has Ever Failed" 26 déc. 2025
- We Had to Hand Our Son Over 24 déc. 2025
- I Diagnosed Myself at 10 22 déc. 2025
- My Autistic Daughter Wasn't Bad. She Was In Pain. 20 déc. 2025
- #23 | Window Scares, Cold Weather Battles and Christmas Reality 24 nov. 2025
- #22 | “Strong Dads, Scary Thoughts & Small Wins” 9 nov. 2025
- #21 | “SEND Sessions, Bruises & Building Something Better” 1 nov. 2025
- #20 | “Parenting in Public: Diagnosis, Doubt & The Real Shit That Matters" 13 oct. 2025
- #19 | “Disney, Sleep Battles & The Fight for Support” 3 oct. 2025