Welcome to The Neuro Digest

Welcome to The Neuro Digest — a curated home for neurodivergent stories, resources and conversations from across the internet.

The online world is full of brilliant content about ADHD, autism, dyslexia, AuDHD and other forms of neurodivergence. Some of it is practical. Some of it is deeply personal. Some of it is funny because it is painfully accurate. Some of it helps people feel understood for the first time.

But it is also scattered across social platforms, news sites, blogs, forums, newsletters and creator accounts.

The Neuro Digest exists to make that easier.

Our aim is to find useful, thoughtful and interesting neurodivergent content and bring it together in one place. We will share news, lived experience, research updates, creator posts, resources, humour and community discussions — always with clear credit to the original source.

This is not another algorithmic feed. It is a human-curated digest, organised by what people actually care about.

Each post we feature will include a short note explaining why we chose it, who it may be useful for, and where it originally came from.

Over time, we’ll be building sections around topics such as:

  • ADHD
  • Autism
  • AuDHD
  • Dyslexia
  • Adult diagnosis
  • Workplace life
  • Parenting
  • Education
  • Research
  • Neurodivergent humour

The site is new, so it will grow gradually. But the goal is simple: to make the internet a clearer, kinder and more useful place for neurodivergent minds.

If you have a story, creator, post, resource or piece of news you think we should feature, we’d love to hear from you.

Thanks for being here.

The Neuro Digest

Important note: The Neuro Digest is an information and curation site. We do not provide diagnosis, therapy, medical advice, crisis support or professional mental health support. Content shared on this site is for general information, lived experience and discussion only. If you need advice about diagnosis, treatment, medication, education support or mental health, please speak to a qualified professional. If you are in immediate danger or feel unable to keep yourself safe, contact emergency services or a crisis support service in your country.

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