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Advocacy is often talked about as being loud, confident, or knowing exactly what to say in the moment.
In this episode, I talk about the quiet, exhausting, ongoing work of advocating for your child:
I share a personal story about advocating for my own child as a paediatric speech pathologist, and how subtle concerns around speech, hearing, and sleep were initially dismissed... until they weren’t.
We unpack:
why advocacy can feel especially hard for neurodivergent parents
how “wait and see” can trigger self-doubt and old wounds
what advocacy actually is (and what it isn’t)
practical, low-energy advocacy tools you can use in appointments
how to ask for next steps without needing certainty
why getting a second opinion isn’t being dramatic or disloyal
This episode isn’t about being confrontational or proving something is wrong.
By Not Just TheoriesAdvocacy is often talked about as being loud, confident, or knowing exactly what to say in the moment.
In this episode, I talk about the quiet, exhausting, ongoing work of advocating for your child:
I share a personal story about advocating for my own child as a paediatric speech pathologist, and how subtle concerns around speech, hearing, and sleep were initially dismissed... until they weren’t.
We unpack:
why advocacy can feel especially hard for neurodivergent parents
how “wait and see” can trigger self-doubt and old wounds
what advocacy actually is (and what it isn’t)
practical, low-energy advocacy tools you can use in appointments
how to ask for next steps without needing certainty
why getting a second opinion isn’t being dramatic or disloyal
This episode isn’t about being confrontational or proving something is wrong.