Listen

Description

David welcomes clinical psychologist Dr. Debra Brause, a California-based writer for Psychology Today and mother of a neurodivergent teen, to discuss “structural grief,” which Brause notes was coined by Dr. Michael Hogue: grief not about the child, but about ableist, capitalist systems (school, healthcare, benefits) and collapsed normative timelines. In an autism fact-or-fiction segment, Brause challenges the belief that parents must grieve the child they expected, reframing grief as systemic and inviting a reorientation toward presence, care, and community. They discuss homeschooling after harmful school experiences, and distinguish autonomy (self-direction with support) from independence (doing things alone). Brause’s tip urges parents to notice triggers, address unresolved trauma, and avoid shaming behaviors like stimming; she recommends mindful self-compassion resources and community support such as Tilt Parenting.

Topics

00:36 Meet Dr Debra Brause

03:00 Her Journey to Autism

05:17 Autism Fact or Fiction

06:02 Rethinking Parental Grief

12:25 Defining Structural Grief

14:52 School System Breaking Points

19:56 Autonomy vs Independence

22:50 Fear of Disability Culture

24:13 Setting Up Tip Segment

24:39 Do Your Own Work

25:07 Triggers and Stimming

26:58 Compliance vs Acceptance

27:47 Fears and Behavior Therapy

31:03 Rupture and Repair

33:47 Forgiveness and Trauma Time

35:48 Mindful Self Compassion

39:02 Writing and Advocacy

41:20 Parent Confession Fix It Mode

44:55 Community and Support

47:15 Connect and Wrap Up