
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


In this solo episode, Dr. Marianne Miller explores the powerful and often overlooked connection between masking neurodivergence and eating disorders. If you've ever felt like you're performing just to get through the day—suppressing your sensory needs, camouflaging your communication style, or overriding your body’s cues to fit societal expectations—this episode will resonate deeply.
Dr. Marianne breaks down what masking looks like in autistic and neurodivergent individuals, including social, sensory, emotional, and cognitive masking, and how these patterns can lead to or exacerbate disordered eating behaviors like restriction, bingeing, and compulsive exercise. She also explains the systemic pressures—including ableism, fatphobia, and white supremacy—that reinforce masking, and how this contributes to burnout, identity confusion, and food-related distress.
Most important, Dr. Marianne offers a compassionate look at what it means to unmask as part of eating disorder recovery. You'll learn how reclaiming your sensory needs, autonomy, and embodied preferences can help you heal—not by becoming someone else, but by honoring exactly who you are.
🔗 Learn more about Dr. Marianne’s self-paced, neurodivergent-affirming, ARFID and Selective Eating Course here: https://www.drmariannemiller.com/arfid
KEY TOPICS COVERED:
What is masking and how does it show up in neurodivergent people
How masking contributes to disconnection from the body and food
The role of sensory processing differences in eating disorders
Systemic factors that reinforce masking (ableism, fatphobia, etc.)
The emotional and physical toll of long-term masking
How unmasking can support meaningful, sustainable recovery
🎧 LISTEN TO OTHER EPISODES ON AUTISM, NEURODIVERSITY, & EATING DISORDERS
INTERESTED IN HANGING OUT MORE IN DR. MARIANNE-LAND?
 By mariannemillerphd
By mariannemillerphd5
1111 ratings
In this solo episode, Dr. Marianne Miller explores the powerful and often overlooked connection between masking neurodivergence and eating disorders. If you've ever felt like you're performing just to get through the day—suppressing your sensory needs, camouflaging your communication style, or overriding your body’s cues to fit societal expectations—this episode will resonate deeply.
Dr. Marianne breaks down what masking looks like in autistic and neurodivergent individuals, including social, sensory, emotional, and cognitive masking, and how these patterns can lead to or exacerbate disordered eating behaviors like restriction, bingeing, and compulsive exercise. She also explains the systemic pressures—including ableism, fatphobia, and white supremacy—that reinforce masking, and how this contributes to burnout, identity confusion, and food-related distress.
Most important, Dr. Marianne offers a compassionate look at what it means to unmask as part of eating disorder recovery. You'll learn how reclaiming your sensory needs, autonomy, and embodied preferences can help you heal—not by becoming someone else, but by honoring exactly who you are.
🔗 Learn more about Dr. Marianne’s self-paced, neurodivergent-affirming, ARFID and Selective Eating Course here: https://www.drmariannemiller.com/arfid
KEY TOPICS COVERED:
What is masking and how does it show up in neurodivergent people
How masking contributes to disconnection from the body and food
The role of sensory processing differences in eating disorders
Systemic factors that reinforce masking (ableism, fatphobia, etc.)
The emotional and physical toll of long-term masking
How unmasking can support meaningful, sustainable recovery
🎧 LISTEN TO OTHER EPISODES ON AUTISM, NEURODIVERSITY, & EATING DISORDERS
INTERESTED IN HANGING OUT MORE IN DR. MARIANNE-LAND?

3,065 Listeners

977 Listeners

713 Listeners

8,505 Listeners

107 Listeners

367 Listeners

341 Listeners

41,486 Listeners

95 Listeners

225 Listeners

149 Listeners

37 Listeners

584 Listeners

45 Listeners