The ND Pride Education Campaign is a structured educational initiative designed to help students understand neurodiversity in a clear, accessible, and age-appropriate way.
Most schools still don’t teach what neurodiversity is, how different brains work, or why inclusion matters—leaving many students to navigate these topics socially, where misunderstanding can easily turn into stigma, bullying, or silence.
The campaign provides classroom-ready lesson materials and educational resources that support awareness, respect, and inclusive thinking. Designed for use in schools, classrooms, awareness weeks, special events, and teacher-led discussions, the program helps create a more informed and supportive environment for neurodivergent students.
The What’s STRONG With You? Campaign is an awareness and culture-change initiative built around a simple but powerful shift in perspective: moving from asking “What’s wrong with you?” to “What’s strong with you?” Too often, schools, workplaces, healthcare systems, and support services focus primarily on deficits—what needs fixing, what is not working, or what is missing—even when the intention is to help.
Over time, people can become defined by problems, gaps, and limitations, shaping both identity and expectations in damaging ways. This campaign encourages a strengths-based approach by reframing language, changing the questions we ask, and inviting people to see neurodivergent individuals through the lens of capability, potential, and contribution.
Through storytelling, public engagement, and practical resources, the campaign supports more positive and empowering conversations in schools, workplaces, coaching environments, public awareness initiatives, and community discussions.
The We’re Nuts Campaign is a bold public awareness campaign that challenges the way neurodivergent people are labeled, perceived, and dismissed by reclaiming language that has often been used against them.
Neurodivergent individuals are frequently subjected to dismissive language, pathologizing labels, and casual insults that shape not only perception, but also behavior, treatment, and social acceptance.
When harmful language goes unchallenged, it reinforces stigma, dehumanizes difference, and helps justify exclusion. This campaign confronts that dynamic directly by reclaiming charged language, flipping its meaning and perspective, and creating powerful moments of reflection, discomfort, and conversation.
Through public storytelling and unapologetic messaging, the campaign encourages people to question the words they use and the assumptions behind them. Designed for awareness campaigns, education and training, social media engagement, and public discourse, it is intended to spark conversations that are often avoided rather than soften them.
The Brain Strengths Card Deck is a card-based reflection tool designed to help people identify, understand, and talk about their strengths in a way that feels natural, flexible, and free from judgment.
Many traditional strengths tools can feel more like tests, evaluations, or subtle performance reviews, which often causes people to shut down rather than engage openly. People frequently struggle to describe their strengths because the language around strengths is limited, success is often tied only to measurable output, and speaking positively about oneself can feel uncomfortable or performative.
This card deck takes a different approach by encouraging exploration instead of assessment. Each card represents a different type of strength and includes open-ended prompts, reflections, and conversation starters that support curiosity, self-awareness, and discussion without scoring, ranking, or pressure.
Designed for both individual and group use, the deck can be used in coaching sessions, team workshops, educational settings, and personal reflection practices to help people recognize strengths in a more human and meaningful way.
The EFURM Program is a program focused on energy, regulation, and long-term sustainability for neurodivergent people. It is not about productivity hacks, constant self-optimization, or pushing people to perform beyond their limits. Instead, the program centers on building ways of living and working that are actually sustainable over time, both emotionally and physically.
Many systems teach people to push through exhaustion, ignore discomfort, disconnect from their needs, and treat burnout as a personal failure rather than a warning sign. For neurodivergent people especially, this often creates repeated cycles of overextension, collapse, recovery, and burnout again. The program challenges those patterns by helping people better understand energy variability, recognize overload and shutdown patterns, separate self-worth from output, and redesign expectations in more realistic and supportive ways.
Through reflection, practical frameworks, and sustainable approaches to regulation and recovery, the EFURM Program supports people in rebuilding rhythms that work with their nervous system rather than against it. It is designed for personal development, coaching and facilitation settings, workplace wellbeing initiatives, and long-term recovery and sustainability journeys.
The Narrative Arc Framework is a communication framework designed to help people explain complex, sensitive, or challenging topics without losing clarity, creating unnecessary resistance, or compromising dignity. Rather than focusing only on what is being communicated, the framework focuses on the order and structure in which ideas are introduced, recognizing that sequence strongly shapes how people receive and respond to information.
When communication skips important stages, conversations often break down into defensiveness, confusion, misunderstanding, or disengagement. People may feel overwhelmed, judged, or disconnected before shared understanding has even been established. The Narrative Arc Framework addresses this by creating a more intentional pathway through difficult conversations and complex ideas.
The framework is built around five stages: Story, which creates a human entry point; Philosophy, which introduces the underlying worldview; Meaning, which builds shared understanding; Invitation, which encourages voluntary engagement rather than pressure; and Dignity, which reinforces unconditional human worth throughout the process. Missing one of these stages can weaken communication and reduce trust or engagement. The framework is designed for keynotes, campaigns, policy communication, training, facilitation, and situations involving mixed, resistant, or skeptical audiences where careful communication structure matters most.
The Neurodignity Framework is the ethical foundation that underpins the entire ecosystem. It defines the principles, boundaries, and standards for what meaningful inclusion, support, and participation should actually look like in practice. Rather than treating dignity as something conditional, aspirational, or secondary to performance, the framework establishes it as a non-negotiable starting point.
Many initiatives described as “inclusive” can still cause harm when they prioritize productivity over wellbeing, treat accessibility as optional, or expect neurodivergent people to constantly prove their value, adaptability, or worthiness of support. Neurodivergent individuals are often expected to endlessly adapt to systems that were never designed with them in mind, perform gratitude for basic inclusion, or earn dignity through output and compliance. The Neurodignity Framework rejects those assumptions entirely.
The framework is used to guide the design of tools, programs, policies, partnerships, governance decisions, and internal organizational choices across the ecosystem. It also acts as a reference point for evaluating whether initiatives genuinely align with neuroinclusive values in practice rather than only in language. Without a framework like this, inclusion can easily become performative or inconsistent. With it, dignity remains central, protected, and embedded into decision-making at every level.
Neuroprofiler is a reflective tool designed to help individuals and teams better understand how neurodivergent patterns show up in everyday life, without reducing people to diagnoses, labels, fixed identities, or simplistic personality categories. Many neurodivergent experiences are routinely misunderstood or misinterpreted: exhaustion is seen as a lack of motivation, overwhelm is mistaken for resistance, and difference is treated as deficit rather than context-dependent variation.
Traditional diagnostic pathways are often slow, inaccessible, expensive, or heavily medicalized, while many personality tools flatten complexity and ignore the real-world needs, environments, and pressures that shape how people function. Neuroprofiler was created to sit between these extremes by offering a more human, contextual, and practical way to reflect on patterns of thinking, energy, communication, regulation, and interaction.
Rather than producing rigid labels or definitive categories, Neuroprofiler generates pattern-based insights that describe tendencies, friction points, and support needs in ways that encourage understanding and conversation. It can be used to prepare for workplace adjustments, improve team collaboration, support educator–student understanding, and help individuals reflect on their own patterns and needs more clearly. It is not a diagnosis, a hiring tool, a performance predictor, or a personality test. Instead of asking “What is wrong with this person?”, Neuroprofiler shifts the focus toward a different question: where is the mismatch between the person and the system around them?