2017
A father’s suicide sends a family of eight on a journey through childhood memories and treacherous emotional waters in this poignant documentary.
109 min
CLEAR ALL
Wendy Lampen works as a lecturer for a university of applied sciences. She got diagnosed with Aspergers syndrome herself. Trained as a teacher in English, History and Ethics she later on worked with adolescents with autism in a school setting.
This video explains in pictures the difference between ADHD and autism and the neurodiversity rainbow.
When it comes to space, we're always separate. When it comes to time, we're always together. Step with me into time and out of space. ---- Subscribe: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCM3foQCmdNo-xrYSRhqBMrg?sub_confirmation=1 ---- Most Recent Video: https://www.youtube.
“Neurodivergent” is an umbrella term for people with a variety of disabilities, conditions, and experiences that are neurologically different from the norm, such as ADHD, autism, high sensitivity, and more.
Membership in my community Divergent Design Studios is now open for enrollment, and the theme for the month of December 2021 is Spiral Time!
Is ADHD having a negative impact on your productivity and focus? Is ADHD holding you back from achieving your goals and desires? If you find it hard to prioritize and have a low frustration tolerance then this book is for you! ADHD Workbook for Adults can help you manage these and other problems,...
What happens when you make it to adulthood before finding out you're autistic? As A.J. Odasso writes in this anthology: “You spend a lot of time wondering what’s wrong without ever knowing why.” This anthology includes essays from a diverse group of adult-diagnosed autistic people.
If time and space held no constraints upon you — what would you change? who would you protect? what would you be willing to sacrifice? Welcome to A Neurodivergent Guide to Spacetime.
Many people with neurological conditions such as autism spectrum disorder and dyslexia have extraordinary skills, including in pattern recognition, memory, and mathematics. Yet they often struggle to fit the profiles sought by employers.
Just because you value neurological differences doesn’t mean you’re denying the reality of disabilities. This piece is in response to another Scientific American article by Simon Baron-Cohen.