Images and art coming soon.
In the mean time…..
Explore More…
Inspiring websites and work that have hugely influenced my thoughts and ways of being.
Stimpunks.org is a radically inclusive space led by and for neurodivergent and disabled people. Blending mutual aid, community care, and educational resources, it reimagines learning, working, and living through the lens of neurodiversity, disability justice, and lived experience. The site offers rich content on neurodivergent design, sensory access, monotropism, and noncompliant pedagogy—centering voices that move through the world differently and advocating for systems rooted in access intimacy, creativity, and interdependence.
I am proud to be a co-creative director and volunteer at Stimpunks, contributing to its vision of a more just, accessible, and neurodivergent-affirming world. Together we have collaborated on projects such as Neuroqueer Learning Spaces and The Map of Monotropic Experiences.
Neuroqueer.com is the official website of Dr. Nick Walker, featuring a collection of writings on neurodiversity, neuroqueer theory, transformative justice, and embodiment. The site includes essays such as “Throw Away the Master’s Tools”, “Neurodiversity: Some Basic Terms & Definitions”, and “Neuroqueer: An Introduction”. It serves as a hub for exploring the intersections of neurodivergence, queerness, creativity, and liberation, with links to books, talks, and further resources. Nick Walker’s work has deeply inspired all of my writing and transformed my life! Thank you – highly recommended!
CulturalAutismStudiesAtYale.space (CASY) is the online home of the Cultural Autism Studies initiative at Yale University, a community driven project exploring Autistic experiences through the lenses of culture, arts, critical theory, and neurodivergent community based practice and conversations. It brings together academics, artists, and activists to reimagine autism beyond medicalised frameworks, centering lived experience, creativity, and cross-disciplinary inquiry. The site and the associated social media platforms hosts essays, community events, and experimental projects that challenge normative assumptions and celebrate Autistic ways of knowing and being.
I am an active member, volunteer, and supporter of this initiative, and I help to maintain and support the development of their website.
EmergentDivergence.com is the platform of David Gray-Hammond, an Autistic and multiply neurodivergent writer, public speaker, and advocate. The site explores topics such as monotropism, psychosis, addiction, neurodivergence, and Mad liberation through lived experience and critical reflection. David’s work is grounded in community, activism, and transformative care. I work closely with David as a collaborator on writing projects, co-created resources, and the delivery of webinars. Together, we explore neurodivergent experience through shared values of justice and neuroqueer liberation.
Monotropism.org is the central hub for exploring monotropism—a theory of Autistic experience developed by Dinah Murray, Wenn Lawson, and Mike Lesser. The site offers foundational writings, research summaries, community resources, and personal reflections that illuminate how monotropic minds work, particularly in relation to attention, flow, and Autistic embodiment. It also houses the archives of Dinah Murray.
I collaborate with Fergus Murray to help maintain the website. I also co-write the seasonal updates, curating and sharing the latest monotropism-related research and community-created resources.
ThePolyphony.org is an interdisciplinary platform for health humanities, publishing essays, reflections, and reviews at the intersection of medicine, art, culture, and critical theory. It brings together diverse voices—scholars, artists, clinicians, and activists—to explore topics such as neurodiversity, disability, embodied experience, and care through a creative and critical lens. With contributions on neuroqueer knowledge, Mad studies, posthumanism, and lived experience research, The Polyphony offers a space for nuanced, reflective writing that challenges medical norms and foregrounds complexity, subjectivity, and relational ways of knowing.
krmoorhead.com/neuroqueering-your-creative-practice is the course platform of K.R. Moorhead, a writer, teacher, and facilitator whose work bridges neuroqueer theory, creative practice, and embodied exploration. The Neuroqueering Your Creative Practice course invites participants to reimagine creativity through a neurodivergent, anti-normative lens—centering sensory experience, nonlinear process, and radical self-trust. It combines reflective prompts, theoretical grounding, and space for imaginative experimentation. I have attended this course and highly recommend it for anyone seeking to deepen their creative practice in neuroaffirming, liberatory, and deeply personal neuroqueeringly creative ways.
hmirra.net is the online portfolio of artist, writer, and walker HM (Helen Mirra), whose work traverses the boundaries between conceptual art, embodied practice, and ecological attunement. Rooted in slowness, repetition, and attention to place, her minimalist works often emerge through walking, weaving, and text-based forms. The site offers an archive of her exhibitions, publications, and meditative writings, inviting quiet engagement with materiality, temporality, and more-than-human relations. Mirra’s practice resonates deeply with themes of holotropism, liminal embodiment, felt time, and sensory presence.
QueerRiver.com is the creative practice site of artist-researcher James Aldridge, exploring environmental connection, queer ecology, and inclusive place-making through participatory arts. Rooted in sensory experience, queer theory, and ecological awareness, Queer River documents collaborative walks, exhibitions, and workshops that engage with rivers, bodies, and more-than-human relations. Through projects like Queer River, LGBTQ+ Natural History, and Ecologies of Care, Aldridge invites us to reimagine how we relate to place, identity, and environmental justice in tangled, fluid, and felt ways.
OmbreTarragnat.com is the creative and academic home of Ombre Tarragnat, a neurodivergent philosopher, researcher, and writer whose work explores biodiversity, neurodiversity, ethodiversity, and more-than-human ways of being. Their writing weaves together posthumanist theory, ecological thought, and lived experience to reimagine ways of being, sensing, and relating beyond normative structures. Through essays, talks, and visual work, Tarragnat invites readers into tangled, relational worlds shaped by neuroqueer rhythms and entangled kinships. Their work has been a key influence on my own thinking, particularly around neuroqueer time, ethodivergence.
NDHumanities.com is the home of the Neurodivergent Humanities Network, a vibrant interdisciplinary space for exploring neurodiversity through the lenses of critical theory, arts, culture, and lived experience. The site showcases research, creative practice, and events that challenge pathologising narratives and foreground neurodivergent ways of knowing, sensing, and creating. I attended the Critical Neurodiversity Studies Conference 2025 hosted by the network and highly recommend checking it out for anyone interested in transformative, justice-oriented, and radically imaginative neurodivergent scholarship and exploring community driven ideas.