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Atypical Kids, Mindful Parents PodcastAuthor: Kate Lynch
Welcome to Atypical Kids, Mindful Parents, a neurodiversity-affirming podcast for parents of neurodivergent kids of all ages. Im Kate Lynch, a mindfulness coach on a mission to create a kinder, more inclusive future. If you're navigating the joys and struggles of raising your unique kids, follow us here for grounding mindfulness practices, relatable stories, and empowering strategies. Subscribe to Atypical Kids Mindful Parents Blog: a community that understands your experience and reminds you that you are never alone. Language: en Genres: Kids & Family, Parenting Contact email: Get it Feed URL: Get it iTunes ID: Get it Trailer: |
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Why My Neurodiverse Family Inspired Me To Rethink My Career
Episode 1
Friday, 6 March, 2026
A chat with neurodivergent coach Talia Zamora about parenting, burnout, authenticity, and why doing things differently can open doors we never expected. A lot of parents (moms) of neurodivergent kids don’t leave traditional careers because they want to, or because they lack ambition. They leave because caring for their kids requires a level of flexibility most workplaces simply don’t offer.If you’re raising neurodivergent kids, this may sound familiar:You’ve reduced work hours or left a job because the school called constantly.Therapies and IEP meetings make traditional schedules impossible.You’ve wondered if there’s another way to build a career that fits your reality.You’re exhausted trying to follow norms that simply don’t work for your family.In this conversation with Talia Zamora, we talk about parenting autistic kids, burnout, authenticity, and what happens when families start building lives that work for them.Talia didn’t originally plan to become an entrepreneur. She spent years working in business improvement roles. But when her children were young, the traditional workplace stopped fitting her life. Her two sons (now teenagers) are autistic. As their needs became clearer, the logistics of parenting, appointments, and school meetings made conventional work increasingly difficult. “I needed flexibility. I needed to be able to go to school meetings or take time when my kids needed me.”“Sometimes the battles we’re fighting are really about society’s expectations, not what’s best for our child.”“I was mimicking what other moms were doing. But it was to my own detriment.”“The more you accept yourself, and realize not everybody is going to like you, the easier it becomes to show up authentically.” Burnout is extremely common among parents of neurodivergent children. Between advocacy, appointments, school challenges, and the supercharged emotional rollercoaster we’re strapped into, many parents run on empty for years.Talia and I agree that preventing burnout is easier than recovering from it.Small moments of self-regulation matter. If you’re trying to build a life that actually works for your neurodiverse family, you’re in the right place. Subscribe for conversations, tools, and honest reflections about raising atypical kids with compassion for them and for ourselves. To read transcripts, receive new posts & support my work, become a subscriber at Atypical Kids, Mindful Parents. https://katelynch.substack.com












