The Longer Road

By: Mattia Maurée
  • Summary

  • For people with multiple marginalized identities who may feel behind because they’ve had to work harder to overcome structural barriers. We‘re providing hope, support, and knowing that you‘re not alone.
    Mattia Maurée
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Episodes
  • 081 When to Stop the Self-Help
    Jul 21 2023

    I'm a naturally growth-oriented person... however, I often find myself changing or "fixing" things that others think are a problem. What happens when I reorient to what's actually important to me?   The self-help industry will happily sell us solutions, whether or not the problem was actually bothering us before we heard about it.   Many of us feel like we're struggling alone. But not only are most people silently struggling, many neurodivergent folks feel that they're uniquely broken. It's such a common experience!   It's totally fine to choose to change something about your life. However, it can be helpful to check in with yourself to make sure it's really what you want.   The questions I offered around choosing to change something (and especially purchasing a self-help product): Is this actually causing me any harm? Is it harming anyone at all? If yes, is that harm actually meaningful, or am I mostly being harmed by the shame around it? If I changed this about myself, what might "better" look like? Is that definition or desire coming from me, or suggestions outside of myself? Is paying attention to this popular "problem" keeping my attention away from anything deeply important to me? If I didn't put time, attention, or money into this, what might I want to do instead? If I never changed again, would I (still) love and accept myself?   Here are the messages I need to hear: It's okay to take breaks from personal growth. It's okay to give up on changing things about yourself just because they might make other people more comfortable. It's okay to focus on what your body and mind actually want and need, whether or not those line up with messaging from people around you. I bet you're actually doing a great job with the circumstances you've been given. Even if you never change or fix another thing, I love and accept you.   Cross-posted from the AuDHD Flourishing podcast


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    16 mins
  • 080 Healing Relational Trauma with Pasha Marlowe
    Jul 14 2023
    Pasha Marlowe speaks brilliantly about how to navigate trauma in relationships as an AuDHD person.   Making it concrete, we both talk about a recent meltdown with our respective partners, and how we navigated those during and after.   This is a deeply un-shaming episode—we still struggle with relational trauma despite all the "work" we've done. It's okay to have a lot of needs in relationships. And we talk about how hard it can be to figure out what those are and communicate them effectively.   If your neurodivergent relationship needs extra support, Pasha is one of the rare practitioners who's ND, trained in family therapy, and works with couples!   Episode originally posted on the AuDHD Flourishing podcast.   Resources mentioned: Pasha's website Neuroqueering podcast and Mattia's guest episode @neuroqueercoach on TikTok @neuroqueercoach on Instagram Neuroqueer Heresies book
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    46 mins
  • 079 Autism Without the Disorder with Nat Smith
    Jul 7 2023
    Nat Smith is a vulnerability coach, playwright, and connection witch. They're also my sibling, so you'll hear stories about our childhood. Nat has known they're ADHD for years, and only recently has been exploring the label autistic. One reason it's been a slow realization: they don't experience it as a disorder and don't need a lot of external support day-to-day. Because of that experience, we also touch on the "levels" of autism currently being given in diagnosis. Many Level 1 folks are never diagnosed. And while I would probably be labeled Level 1, I'm actually more Level 2... I've just managed to have family and partners meet my daily needs. Nat's perspective is incredibly helpful for anyone who wonders what autism looks like when it's NOT an obviously disabling condition. This is where the word "Neurotype" is so useful! Disclaimer:  And I would hope it goes without saying... every autistic person is different and has their own experience! Many if not most autistic people (and especially those who receive an official diagnosis) do experience autism as a disability for many reasons. Nat's experience does not at all detract from that! AND I feel it's important for more autistic people to be "out," even if they have a less common presentation.    Originally recorded for the AuDHD Flourishing podcast.   Resources: Nat mentioned Devon Price's book Laziness Does Not Exist and the article of the same name. Nat's Substack newsletter/articles Nat's Facebook AuDHD Flourishing newsletter
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    53 mins

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