Resources
Clear, trustworthy information without the jargon — grounded in lived experience and research, and shared with your child's dignity at the center.
The stages of the journey
A gentle map of the developmental stages children move through — every stage normal and equal, with what helps in each. Recognize where your child is, and meet them there.
Open →Practical guides
Everyday strategies for food, light, sound, touch, sleep, and connecting — drawn from lived experience.
Open →Research & references
A live feed of the newest autism studies (from Europe PMC / PubMed), the evidence behind these strategies, and the full reference list.
Open →Strategies that help
A growing, curated list of supports from research — each graded honestly for how strong the evidence is.
Open →Do you relate? (self-reflection)
For adults wondering if they might be autistic — a private, affirming reflection (not a diagnosis), with where to go next.
Open →Clinical trials recruiting
Autism and ADHD studies currently enrolling, pulled live from ClinicalTrials.gov. Information only — not medical advice.
Open →Medication information
Plain look-ups of the official FDA label for medications often discussed for autism and ADHD — what it's for, use in children, and warnings.
Open →Autistic adulthood & the handover
Finding out you're autistic as an adult, and the jump from children's services to adult healthcare at 18 — a plain-language place to start.
Open →Find help near you
Who to call: search registered providers by type and place, plus a guide to insurance, funding, and getting on waitlists.
Open →About therapies and approaches
There is no single “right” path, and some common approaches — including ABA — are genuinely debated. We lay out what the evidence says and include autistic adults' perspectives alongside those of parents and clinicians. We won't use fear to push any service, and we'll never frame the goal as making your child “appear normal.”
From lived experience
Much of this material is adapted from a parent's own experience raising an autistic child. It's shared anonymously and carefully de-identified to protect the families involved.
From autistic adults
The people who understand autism best are autistic people. We point to autistic-led writing and resources so you can hear directly from them, not only from parents and professionals.