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Matt and Erin sit in that strange in-between space after Christmas and before New Year’s, where everyone’s supposed to feel hopeful but most of us are just tired. This episode is a grounded, funny, very Autistic conversation about why New Year’s expectations don’t work the way people think they do—and what actually does help.
Highlights from the episode:
• Why New Year’s resolutions rely on dopamine, not sustainability—and why that backfires for autistic nervous systems
• Systems over habits: menus instead of time-blocking, meds placement, and designing life around how your brain actually works
• Process complexity, perfectionism, and needing to see the whole plan before starting anything
• Preparation as regulation: go bags, multi-tools, and why being ready reduces anxiety about the unknown
• Letting go of “fresh start” pressure and focusing on survival, scaffolding, and realistic support
There are also clocks (a lot of clocks), Daylight Saving Time joy, lightsabers that must be perfectly level, Batman toasts “to survival,” barking dogs, cat food reminders, and a reminder that you don’t need a new personality in January—you need systems that meet you where you are.
You made it here. That counts.
We’ll see you in the new year.
By The Autistic VOICE Project5
1919 ratings
Matt and Erin sit in that strange in-between space after Christmas and before New Year’s, where everyone’s supposed to feel hopeful but most of us are just tired. This episode is a grounded, funny, very Autistic conversation about why New Year’s expectations don’t work the way people think they do—and what actually does help.
Highlights from the episode:
• Why New Year’s resolutions rely on dopamine, not sustainability—and why that backfires for autistic nervous systems
• Systems over habits: menus instead of time-blocking, meds placement, and designing life around how your brain actually works
• Process complexity, perfectionism, and needing to see the whole plan before starting anything
• Preparation as regulation: go bags, multi-tools, and why being ready reduces anxiety about the unknown
• Letting go of “fresh start” pressure and focusing on survival, scaffolding, and realistic support
There are also clocks (a lot of clocks), Daylight Saving Time joy, lightsabers that must be perfectly level, Batman toasts “to survival,” barking dogs, cat food reminders, and a reminder that you don’t need a new personality in January—you need systems that meet you where you are.
You made it here. That counts.
We’ll see you in the new year.

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