Psychology for everyone everywhere all at once

Episode 8. Sandhya Menon on being a changemaker and neurodivergent brown psychologist.

37 min · 9. heinä 2026
jakson Episode 8. Sandhya Menon on being a changemaker and neurodivergent brown psychologist. kansikuva

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Sandhya Menon (she/her) is an Education and Developmental Psychologist who works with ADHDer/Autistic children and their families to support them in leading an authentically neurodivergent life.  She also works with educators and professionals who want to support neurodivergent kids in ways that feel respectful, connected and grounded in real-life beyond textbook theory.  Sandhya runs trainings, speaks at conferences, and partners with schools and services to embed neuro-affirming practice that lasts.  She migrated from Singapore 18 years ago. Sandhya also an author and has created beautiful resources that make tricky things easier to talk about, such as the What's Up Flip Chart, The Brain Forest and My Body’s Power Pack.  Aileen and Sandhya chatted in this episode about what it is like for her to stand up for intersectional voices in the neurodivergent community, the various forms of masking and unmasking, and mothering neurodivergent kids of colour.

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jakson Episode 8. Sandhya Menon on being a changemaker and neurodivergent brown psychologist. kansikuva

Episode 8. Sandhya Menon on being a changemaker and neurodivergent brown psychologist.

Sandhya Menon (she/her) is an Education and Developmental Psychologist who works with ADHDer/Autistic children and their families to support them in leading an authentically neurodivergent life.  She also works with educators and professionals who want to support neurodivergent kids in ways that feel respectful, connected and grounded in real-life beyond textbook theory.  Sandhya runs trainings, speaks at conferences, and partners with schools and services to embed neuro-affirming practice that lasts.  She migrated from Singapore 18 years ago. Sandhya also an author and has created beautiful resources that make tricky things easier to talk about, such as the What's Up Flip Chart, The Brain Forest and My Body’s Power Pack.  Aileen and Sandhya chatted in this episode about what it is like for her to stand up for intersectional voices in the neurodivergent community, the various forms of masking and unmasking, and mothering neurodivergent kids of colour.

9. heinä 202637 min
jakson Episode 7. Prof Damien Riggs ponders lived experience and psychology in context kansikuva

Episode 7. Prof Damien Riggs ponders lived experience and psychology in context

Damien Riggs (he/him) is a professor of psychology at Flinders University and a psychotherapist in private practice.  He writes extensively (over 200 publications!) about family diversity, including gender, sexuality, surrogacy, out of home care, animal companions, and the intersections of race and queerness.  His PhD, completed in 2006, was entitled "Belonging, benevolence and the repression of white violence."  Damien's psychotherapy practice focuses on working with trans children and their families.  Anita chatted with Damien about what it means to have lived experience in an area, what that means about what you're allowed to talk about, and psychology's failure to talk about its context and limitations. 58m0WwVOCI1lF9XMIFF9

23. maalis 202659 min
jakson Episode 6. Smruthy Nair on being a migrant psychologist in Australia. kansikuva

Episode 6. Smruthy Nair on being a migrant psychologist in Australia.

Smruthy Nair (she/they) is a Psychologist and Board Approved Supervisor with a passion for simplifying the idea of mental health. She has extensive experience working with children, adolescents and adults, both in India and Australia since qualifying in 2011. Smruthy is committed to intersectionality and collaboration, uses anti-oppressive and systems focused lens, and has worked in clinical, inclusion and advocacy roles in mental health, education, youth mental health and multiculturalism in private and public settings. Smruthy and her Unhyphen Psychology colleague Bimba Chavan run The Other Chair, a peer supervision and support network for psychologists who are People of Colour. She currently works on Larrakia country (Darwin) for the Department of Education and Training, leading the implementation of the Respectful Relationships Education program across all schools in the Northern Territory. Aileen and Smruthy shared their varied experiences of being migrant psychologists in Australia. ***Apologies for poor audio quality at times***

12. marras 202549 min
jakson Episode 5. Den Abreu on supporting a complex workforce and safety in the profession. kansikuva

Episode 5. Den Abreu on supporting a complex workforce and safety in the profession.

Den Abreu (they/them) is the Principal Psychologist, Founder and CEO of Haven Psychology, a private practice with offices in Brisbane/Meanjin and Melbourne/Naarm. They are a Board Approved Supervisor, Psychosexual Therapist, a person of colour and identifies as NeuroQueer (ADHDer, Genderfluid and Queer). Haven Psychology is a trauma-informed, sex-positive and identity-inclusive and affirming practice. Den has a special interest in complex mental health, such as complex and developmental trauma, psychosis, dissociative disorders, and personality vulnerabilities. Their favourite ways to work include EMDR, Internal Family Systems, Ego State Therapy, and Narrative Therapy. Anita appreciated the opportunity to talk to and learn from Den.

3. syys 202541 min
jakson Episode 4. Prof Pat Dudgeon on being a pioneer in Indigenous mental health and wellbeing. kansikuva

Episode 4. Prof Pat Dudgeon on being a pioneer in Indigenous mental health and wellbeing.

Professor Pat Dudgeon (she/her) is a Bardi woman from the Kimberley region of Western Australia.  She was the first Aboriginal person to qualify as a Psychologist in Australia in 1985, and since then has had a long and distinguished career as a leader in Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander mental health and wellbeing, Indigenous suicide prevention, decolonising psychology education and practice.  Pat is the Director of the University of Western Australia’s Centre of Best Practice in Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Suicide Prevention and was the head of the Centre for Aboriginal Studies at Curtain University for 17 years. She was a founding Chair of the Australian Indigenous Psychologists Association and a founding board member of Gayaa Dhuwi Proud Spirit Australia.  Her list of achievements and publications is far too long for me to list but hopefully this gives you a taste of Pat’s role as a pioneer in Indigenous psychology and mental health in Australia.  Anita was honoured to have this conversation with Pat, who generously talked about her experience of studying and creating change in psychology, about self-determination, and also about the Working Together book which celebrates it’s 15th anniversary this year (downloadable for free here [https://timhwb.org.au/working-together-book/]). Pat spoke to me from Whadjuk Noongar country in Perth, while I was on Wurunjeri woi-worrung country in Melbourne.

7. heinä 202535 min