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Show Notes
In this episode of were talking about infantilizing — what it is, how it shows up, and why it matters.
To infantilize someone is to treat them as younger or less capable than they are. For people with disabilities, this often shows up in subtle but harmful ways: baby talk, lowered expectations, behavior plans for age-appropriate teen behavior, speaking about someone as if they aren’t in the room, or limiting choices because we assume immaturity.
We share real stories:
When typical high school behavior is labeled as a disability issue
How communication differences get mistaken for lack of intelligence
The risk of tying maturity to verbal skills
The hidden cost of withholding autonomy and choice
How even we, as parents, have had to unlearn assumptions
We talk about the radical assumption of competence — and how dignity starts with how we speak.
Our kids’ age is their age.
Their interests don’t define their intelligence.
And adults deserve to be treated like adults.
This conversation is nuanced. It’s uncomfortable at times. But it’s necessary.
Let’s raise expectations.
Let’s offer real choices.
And let’s stop talking to adults like they’re toddlers.
CONNECT WITH THE PODCAST
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IG: THELUCKYFEWOFFICAL
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THIS IS DOWN SYNDROME
CONNECT WITH MERCEDES LARA
IG: HOORAY4THELARAS
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IG: ACEFACEISMYFRIEND
IG: MICHABOYETT
LISTEN TO THE SLOW WAY
DISCOUNT CODE
Friends, grab your narrative shifting gear over on The Lucky Few Merch Shop and use code PODCAST for 10% off!
HELP US SHIFT THE NARRATIVE
Interested in partnering with The Lucky Few Podcast as a sponsor? Email [email protected] for more information!
LET’S CHAT
Email [email protected] with your questions and Good News or Shout Outs for future episodes.
By The Lucky Few Podcast4.9
334334 ratings
Show Notes
In this episode of were talking about infantilizing — what it is, how it shows up, and why it matters.
To infantilize someone is to treat them as younger or less capable than they are. For people with disabilities, this often shows up in subtle but harmful ways: baby talk, lowered expectations, behavior plans for age-appropriate teen behavior, speaking about someone as if they aren’t in the room, or limiting choices because we assume immaturity.
We share real stories:
When typical high school behavior is labeled as a disability issue
How communication differences get mistaken for lack of intelligence
The risk of tying maturity to verbal skills
The hidden cost of withholding autonomy and choice
How even we, as parents, have had to unlearn assumptions
We talk about the radical assumption of competence — and how dignity starts with how we speak.
Our kids’ age is their age.
Their interests don’t define their intelligence.
And adults deserve to be treated like adults.
This conversation is nuanced. It’s uncomfortable at times. But it’s necessary.
Let’s raise expectations.
Let’s offer real choices.
And let’s stop talking to adults like they’re toddlers.
CONNECT WITH THE PODCAST
WEBSITE
INSTAGRAM
FACEBOOK
CONNECT WITH HEATHER AVIS
WEBSITE: THE LUCKY FEW OFFICIAL
IG: THELUCKYFEWOFFICAL
FACEBOOK
I LIKE YOU SO MUCH
THIS IS DOWN SYNDROME
CONNECT WITH MERCEDES LARA
IG: HOORAY4THELARAS
IG: HUMANLY.TV
FACEBOOK
CONNECT WITH MICHA BOYETT
MICHABOYETT.COM
IG: ACEFACEISMYFRIEND
IG: MICHABOYETT
LISTEN TO THE SLOW WAY
DISCOUNT CODE
Friends, grab your narrative shifting gear over on The Lucky Few Merch Shop and use code PODCAST for 10% off!
HELP US SHIFT THE NARRATIVE
Interested in partnering with The Lucky Few Podcast as a sponsor? Email [email protected] for more information!
LET’S CHAT
Email [email protected] with your questions and Good News or Shout Outs for future episodes.

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