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The AutSide Podcast

Jaime Hoerricks, PhD
The AutSide Podcast
Latest episode

618 episodes

  • The AutSide Podcast

    Sunday Morning with Jaime & Cathy: The Three C's

    07/06/2026 | 37 mins.
    A conversation about belonging, language, and meaning-making. From autistic community to reading comprehension, we explore what becomes possible when people are understood on their own terms rather than measured by performance.
    Today’s conversation felt so coherent because it was not really about three separate topics. Community, comprehension, and communication kept collapsing into one another. Each became both cause and consequence of the others. The discussion repeatedly returned to a central idea: communication flourishes when it is held inside a community that offers enough safety for genuine comprehension to emerge.
    Core Themes
    1. Communication as access, not performance
    The conversation began with communication, but quickly moved beyond speaking itself. I kept returning to something that has shaped much of my life: the difference between having thoughts and having access to the language needed to share them.
    I rarely experience meaning as a sequence. I experience the whole first. The challenge has never been a lack of thought. The challenge has been finding a route from the whole of something to the parts that make it intelligible to other people.
    Looking back across speech therapy, testimony in court, public speaking, media appearances, voice coaching, and now podcasting, the common thread is not communication difficulty alone. It is the pressure to alter oneself in order to be understood. For much of my life, communication felt like translation rather than expression.
    2. Community as relational safety
    The discussion of Cathy’s interview of Libby Hill on her Give Me 5 podcast led naturally into questions of community.
    What struck me most about that conversation was not agreement. It was recognition. Autism was being discussed from the inside rather than from the outside. It was not being pathologised. It was being lived.
    That distinction matters.
    Community is not simply a collection of people who share a diagnosis or identity. Community is the space where experience becomes legitimate knowledge. It is where people stop explaining themselves as evidence and begin speaking as participants.
    Much of my own journey—from a late autism diagnosis, through discovering gestalt processing, through finding Marge, Cathy, and so many others—has been a movement from isolation toward belonging. The internet did not replace community. It made community possible.
    3. Comprehension as meaning-making
    The conversation spent considerable time exploring reading comprehension, and I found myself returning to a question that has followed me through much of my teaching career:
    What do we actually mean when we say someone understands?
    Schools often define comprehension as recall. Can you identify the main idea? Can you cite evidence? Can you answer the questions correctly?
    But that is not how comprehension appears in my experience.
    Comprehension begins long before explanation. It begins with relationship. It begins with noticing.
    That is why I keep returning to the framework of three reads:
    * First read: entering the field of the story and experiencing the relationships within it.
    * Second read: noticing patterns, repetitions, tensions, and shifts.
    * Third read: asking what the story is saying now, to this reader, at this moment in their life.
    The origins of that framework are not academic. They come from sitting beside my grandmother whilst she read aloud and thought aloud. Reading was never a race. It was participation in meaning.
    4. Kairos and Kronos
    Running beneath the entire conversation was the tension between depth and speed.
    Cathy spoke about young children who want to hear the same book again and again, moving through the entire experience from beginning to end. I found myself recognising something familiar there.
    Many educational systems prioritise coverage. More books. More standards. More measurable outcomes. More pace.
    But understanding often emerges differently.
    The pattern has to settle. The relationship has to form. Meaning has to accumulate.
    What matters is not how quickly a learner arrives at understanding but whether understanding arrives at all.
    Again and again I find myself choosing Kairos over Kronos—depth over pace, experience over completion.
    5. Teaching as relationship
    The conversation eventually widened into a discussion about curriculum, literature, and teaching itself.
    I keep finding myself asking a simple question:
    Who are the students sitting in front of me?
    Not what should they know by June. Not what does the pacing guide require. Not what text do I personally love.
    Who are they?
    What meanings have they already made? What experiences are they bringing into the room? What relationships do they have with the topics we are asking them to encounter?
    Teaching comprehension is not simply delivering content. It is meeting learners where they already are and helping them build meaning from there.
    The Thread Beneath the Threads
    The conversation was framed around community, comprehension, and communication.
    But underneath all three was something else.
    Permission.
    Permission to communicate without performance.
    Permission to belong without masking.
    Permission to make meaning before producing evidence.
    Permission to understand something before having the words to explain it.
    The three C’s kept circling back to the same place.
    Much of human flourishing begins when people are finally allowed to be understood on their own terms.
    The AutSide is a reader-supported publication. To support my work, consider becoming a paid subscriber.



    This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit autside.substack.com/subscribe
  • The AutSide Podcast

    Episode 571: The Field is Shared—Autistic Perception and Relational Literacy

    05/06/2026 | 18 mins.
    Today’s episode challenges the clinical perception of autism by reframing hyper-empathy and sensitivity as accurate forms of perceptual resolution. Rather than viewing the autistic experience as a failure to maintain boundaries, the author of the source articles, Dr. Jaime Hoerricks, argues that these individuals are often acutely aware of a shared human field that others ignore. This heightened field literacy allows for the registration of subtle atmospheric shifts and interdependence that modern psychology frequently pathologises as malfunction. Dr. Hoerricks suggests that neurodivergent distress is often a rational response to contradictory environments survived by others through dissociation. Ultimately, she advocates for a gestalt model of development where the goal is not to become a sealed unit, but to master the ability to live skillfully within connection.
    Here are the links to the source articles:
    The Wrong Unit - https://autside.substack.com/publish/post/198466173
    Field Literacy - https://open.substack.com/pub/autside/p/field-literacy
    Let me know what you think.
    The AutSide is a reader-supported publication. To support my work, consider becoming a paid subscriber.



    This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit autside.substack.com/subscribe
  • The AutSide Podcast

    Episode 570: The Architecture of a Field Processor

    04/06/2026 | 11 mins.
    In today’s episode, Dr. Jaime Hoerricks describes her life navigating an autistic brain that functions as a high-speed field processor, absorbing and analysing information without traditional filters or hierarchies. Initially, this internal intensity led to a systemic collapse, resulting in years of being over-medicated by a medical community that misidentified her cognitive style as a disorder. Her trajectory shifted through the guidance of mentors who provided the operating knowledge necessary to understand her mind as a powerful tool rather than a broken mechanism. By learning to trust her subconscious pattern recognition and utilising lifestyle adjustments, she transformed her overwhelming sensory experiences into a foundation for professional and academic success. Her narrative serves as a powerful testament to the importance of proper framing and self-advocacy in reclaiming one's identity from restrictive clinical labels. Ultimately, she celebrates her neurodivergent identity, viewing her unique mental architecture as the primary source of her life's work and resilience.
    Here’s the link to the source article:
    https://autside.substack.com/p/what-i-love-about-being-autistic
    Let me know what you think.
    The AutSide is a reader-supported publication. To support my work, consider becoming a paid subscriber.



    This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit autside.substack.com/subscribe
  • The AutSide Podcast

    Episode 569: Sensual Residue—Desire as Pattern and Trace

    03/06/2026 | 18 mins.
    Today’s episode explores desire as a form of pattern recognition and environmental intelligence rather than a fixed preference for specific objects or identities. The author of the source articles, Dr. Jaime Hoerricks, reframes attunement and sensory regulation as the primary drivers of human connection, tracing how early experiences of absence and imposed gender narratives shape the body’s search for safety. By examining autistic and trans perspectives, Dr. Hoerricks suggests that intimacy is less about anatomical attraction and more about the coherence of nervous systems meeting in a shared relational field. Her perspective promotes queer multiplicity and friendship as essential infrastructures that allow for distributed care and more resilient relational ecosystems. Ultimately, her work advocates for a relational ethic based on mutual sensing, responsiveness, and the recognition of kin who prioritise presence over performance.
    Here are the links to the source articles for the series, Desire as Trace, Not Truth:
    * Desire as Trace, Not Truth: The Field Before the Body.
    * Desire as Trace, Not Truth: The Body That Was Given.
    * Desire as Trace, Not Truth: The First Languages of Contact.
    * Desire as Trace, Not Truth: Scripts That Land / Scripts That Don’t.
    * Desire as Trace, Not Truth: Counterfeit Attunement.
    * Desire as Trace, Not Truth: Queer Multiplicity as Expanded Field.
    * Desire as Trace, Not Truth: Desire Without Object.
    * Desire as Trace, Not Truth: The Body That Refused Its Assignment.
    * Desire as Trace, Not Truth: Sensual Residue.
    * Desire as Trace: What This Way of Desiring Makes Possible.
    Let me know what you think.
    The AutSide is a reader-supported publication. To support my work, consider becoming a paid subscriber.



    This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit autside.substack.com/subscribe
  • The AutSide Podcast

    Sunday Mornings with Jaime & Cathy: The Ecology of Support

    31/05/2026 | 37 mins.
    What if support succeeds so well that it becomes invisible? A conversation on autism, GLPs, assessment, adulthood, Kairos and Kronos, and why affirming practice begins not with labels, but with ecology.
    This week’s conversation with Cathy began with a deceptively simple question: what does it actually mean to be neurodiversity affirming? The longer we talked, the less interested I became in labels and declarations and the more interested I became in environments. The discussion moved through diagnosis, assessment, education, adulthood, accommodation, and support, but a deeper thread kept returning. What happens when we mistake adaptation to an environment for evidence about the person? What happens when success inside a supportive ecology becomes justification for removing the very supports that made success possible?
    One of the first questions we explored was who gets included when people talk about neurodiversity-affirming practice. Too often, a narrow slice of autistic experience becomes the template against which all other autistic experiences are measured. Autistic women, autistic people of colour, those who were socialised female, late-diagnosed adults, and those whose presentations do not match traditional expectations frequently report that they do not see themselves reflected in professional discourse. Before we can claim to affirm a population, we must first understand who that population actually contains. Inclusion is not a slogan. It is a methodological question.
    We also spent time discussing evidence and what counts as evidence. Contemporary practice often privileges randomised controlled trials and standardised measures as the highest form of knowledge. Yet much of the evidence professionals claim to seek already exists inside the diagnostic records, educational assessments, and lived experiences of autistic people themselves. The issue is often not a lack of evidence but a failure to recognise what the evidence is already telling us. If autistic people repeatedly describe the same patterns of language, communication, sensory experience, burnout, and adaptation, perhaps the problem is not that the evidence is absent. Perhaps the problem is that we have trained ourselves not to see it.
    A recurring theme throughout the conversation was adulthood. Much of the professional literature seems to stop at childhood, as though autistic lives reach some natural conclusion once formal schooling ends. Yet adulthood is where many of the most important questions begin. What happens when someone develops access to language decades later? What happens when services end at twenty-two but support needs remain? What happens when a person spends most of their life without the words required to explain their own experience? These are not edge cases. They are central questions that remain largely unaddressed.
    The conversation also returned repeatedly to the distinction between Kairos and Kronos. Kronos is clock time, industrial time, curriculum pacing guides, assessment schedules, deadlines, transition timelines, and age-based service cut-offs. Kairos is ripening time. It is the time required for understanding to emerge, for language to arrive, for learning to take root. Much of modern education assumes that all learners move according to Kronos. Many autistic people experience something very different. The question becomes whether our systems are designed to support learning itself or merely compliance with a timetable.
    Perhaps the clearest example of this tension emerged when I described requesting professional development materials in advance from my own school district. As an autistic educator and gestalt language processor, advance access allows me to prepare language, reduce cognitive load, and participate more fully. The request was denied. This was not a story about a hostile institution openly rejecting neurodiversity. It was a story about an institution that publicly describes itself as affirming whilst failing to recognise accommodation needs when they appear directly in front of it. The gap between affirming language and affirming practice remains one of the most significant challenges facing our field.
    Underlying all of these discussions was a pattern that appears repeatedly across education, therapy, and support services. A student receives an accommodation and begins to succeed. The accommodation is removed because success is interpreted as evidence that it is no longer needed. An autistic adult develops effective scripts and communication strategies. Their support needs are questioned because those strategies are working. A person survives a hostile environment and is told they no longer require assistance because they appear capable. Again and again, the support itself becomes invisible. The very thing that enables success is used as proof that support was unnecessary all along.
    By the end of the conversation, I found myself returning to a simple conclusion. Neurodiversity-affirming practice is not a credential, a badge, or a marketing statement. It begins with understanding. It requires listening to the people whose lives are being discussed. It asks us to consider not only the individual but the ecology in which that individual exists. Most importantly, it asks us to stop treating successful accommodation as evidence that accommodation can be removed. The goal is not merely to help people survive the environments they find themselves in. The goal is to build environments where they can genuinely flourish.
    The AutSide is a reader-supported publication. To support my work, consider becoming a paid subscriber.



    This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit autside.substack.com/subscribe
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About The AutSide Podcast
AutSide: A podcast from an autistic trans woman that explores critical issues at the intersection of autism, neurodiversity, gender, and social justice. Dive deep into the realities of living as an autistic adult, critiques of education systems, and the power of storytelling to reshape public narratives. With a unique blend of snark, sharp analysis, and personal experience, each episode challenges societal norms, from the failures of standardized testing to the complexities of identity and revolution. Join the conversation on AutSide, where lived experience and critical theory meet for change. autside.substack.com
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