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In this powerful and affirming conversation, Dr. Marianne Miller welcomes Dr. Emma from Divergent Life, a UK-based neuroaffirming clinical psychologist and thought leader. Together, they explore the intersections of neurodivergence, eating disorders, masking, trauma, and embodiment, examining what true safety and self-trust look like in recovery.
Dr. Emma shares her journey toward becoming an eating disorder specialist, her resistance to standardized and compliance-based treatment models, and how her activist, trauma-informed, and social justice-oriented approachshapes her work.
Listeners will hear both clinicians reflect on their lived experiences, discuss the harm of medicalized narratives, and explore how therapy can become a form of activism, embodiment, and reclamation.
This episode is for anyone who has ever felt unseen or invalidated by traditional eating disorder treatment systems. It is especially meaningful for:
Neurodivergent individuals who have struggled with masking, sensory sensitivities, or feelings of disconnection from their bodies
People in eating disorder recovery who have not found healing in standardized or compliance-based programs
Clinicians and therapists who want to practice from a neurodivergent-affirming, trauma-informed, and social justice lens
Parents and caregivers of neurodivergent loved ones seeking compassionate, autonomy-honoring approaches
Anyone interested in embodiment, body trust, and authentic recovery
Why standardized and compliance-based eating disorder treatments can be retraumatizing
The effects of masking and self-abandonment in neurodivergent people
How embodiment and sensory awareness support authentic healing
Understanding neurodivergent trauma and nervous system responses
Reclaiming autonomy and agency in recovery
How therapy can serve as a tool for social justice and liberation
The importance of lived experience in guiding compassionate care
Dr. Emma (she/her) is a neuroaffirming clinical psychologist, coach, and founder of Divergent Life, a UK-based service that challenges outdated mental health systems and centers neurodivergent and trauma-informed care. Through her work, she helps clients move from masking and compliance toward embodiment, agency, and trust in their own inner wisdom.
Instagram: @divergentlives
This conversation redefines what healing can look like for neurodivergent people with eating disorders, particularly those who have felt unseen or misunderstood by traditional models. Dr. Marianne and Dr. Emma discuss how masking and system-based approaches can lead to disembodiment and how safety, trust, and agency can guide recovery instead.
If you have ever questioned why “one-size-fits-all” therapy has not worked for you, or if you are a clinician seeking to practice in a way that honors autonomy and lived experience, this episode offers deep insight, compassion, and hope.
Check out drmariannemiller.com for blog posts, therapy services, more podcast episodes, and other offerings.
To learn about Dr. Marianne’s ARFID and Selective Eating Course, visit drmariannemiller.com/arfid.
By mariannemillerphd5
1212 ratings
In this powerful and affirming conversation, Dr. Marianne Miller welcomes Dr. Emma from Divergent Life, a UK-based neuroaffirming clinical psychologist and thought leader. Together, they explore the intersections of neurodivergence, eating disorders, masking, trauma, and embodiment, examining what true safety and self-trust look like in recovery.
Dr. Emma shares her journey toward becoming an eating disorder specialist, her resistance to standardized and compliance-based treatment models, and how her activist, trauma-informed, and social justice-oriented approachshapes her work.
Listeners will hear both clinicians reflect on their lived experiences, discuss the harm of medicalized narratives, and explore how therapy can become a form of activism, embodiment, and reclamation.
This episode is for anyone who has ever felt unseen or invalidated by traditional eating disorder treatment systems. It is especially meaningful for:
Neurodivergent individuals who have struggled with masking, sensory sensitivities, or feelings of disconnection from their bodies
People in eating disorder recovery who have not found healing in standardized or compliance-based programs
Clinicians and therapists who want to practice from a neurodivergent-affirming, trauma-informed, and social justice lens
Parents and caregivers of neurodivergent loved ones seeking compassionate, autonomy-honoring approaches
Anyone interested in embodiment, body trust, and authentic recovery
Why standardized and compliance-based eating disorder treatments can be retraumatizing
The effects of masking and self-abandonment in neurodivergent people
How embodiment and sensory awareness support authentic healing
Understanding neurodivergent trauma and nervous system responses
Reclaiming autonomy and agency in recovery
How therapy can serve as a tool for social justice and liberation
The importance of lived experience in guiding compassionate care
Dr. Emma (she/her) is a neuroaffirming clinical psychologist, coach, and founder of Divergent Life, a UK-based service that challenges outdated mental health systems and centers neurodivergent and trauma-informed care. Through her work, she helps clients move from masking and compliance toward embodiment, agency, and trust in their own inner wisdom.
Instagram: @divergentlives
This conversation redefines what healing can look like for neurodivergent people with eating disorders, particularly those who have felt unseen or misunderstood by traditional models. Dr. Marianne and Dr. Emma discuss how masking and system-based approaches can lead to disembodiment and how safety, trust, and agency can guide recovery instead.
If you have ever questioned why “one-size-fits-all” therapy has not worked for you, or if you are a clinician seeking to practice in a way that honors autonomy and lived experience, this episode offers deep insight, compassion, and hope.
Check out drmariannemiller.com for blog posts, therapy services, more podcast episodes, and other offerings.
To learn about Dr. Marianne’s ARFID and Selective Eating Course, visit drmariannemiller.com/arfid.

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