Refrigerator Moms
Julianna Scott and Kelley Jensen sit down with Jean Mayer — Texas-based disability advocate, school board trustee, co-host of Moms Talk Autism, and mother of a 12-year-old autistic son — for a candid cross-generational conversation about what has and hasn't changed in the autism parenting journey. From the early days of dial-up internet and therapy waiting rooms to today's social media overwhelm and policy battles, the three moms compare experiences, swap hard-won wisdom, and get real about guilt, grief, advocacy, and the long game of raising a child with complex needs. Key Takeaways: * The nucleus of the autism parenting experience — love, fear, guilt, and responsibility — remains constant across generations, even as systems, language, and access points shift. * Therapy waiting rooms once served as an unplanned but vital community hub for autism families; that informal peer connection has largely disappeared. * Information overload today can be as harmful as the information dearth of the early 2000s; discernment and curating a small, trusted circle matters more than volume. * Navigating a fragmented medical and educational system often turns parents into "reluctant experts" — managing treatment plans, insurance denials, and IEP meetings without a roadmap. * Policy is the upstream driver of access: understanding the difference between school practice and actual written policy is a powerful tool for parents. * Lived experience is inherently subjective and should not be the sole basis for policy decisions, even though it is an essential voice in advocacy. * Transition planning for autistic young adults should remain flexible and evolving, not fixed — and parents building themselves as trusted resources (not just caretakers) is underrated advice. * Loneliness in disability housing is a growing and underaddressed crisis; intentional community models deserve more attention. * The coming DSM-6 changes are already creating fatigue among behavioral health professionals and uncertainty for families still building identity around shifting diagnostic criteria. * Finding your people — even just a very small circle — is more protective and actionable than scrolling social media for answers. 🔗 Learn More: Website: refrigeratormoms.com Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/refrigeratormoms/ LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/refrigeratormoms Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/refrigeratormoms/ TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@RefrigeratorMoms Refrigerator Moms is sponsored by Brain Performance Technologies, a specialty mental health clinic that offers neuromodulation treatments including SAINT (Stanford Accelerated Intelligent Neuromodulation Therapy) for treatment-resistant depression and major depressive disorder, as well as MeRT (Magnetic e-resonance therapy) for autistic people aged three or older. Learn more at https://brainperformancetechnologies.com 00:00 Introduction & guest welcome 00:53 Jean introduces her family 01:50 From hospitality career to autism mom 04:13 Who told you to pivot careers? 06:43 The acute vs. forever reality of autism 07:23 Comparing generations of autism parents 08:34 The guilt that never erodes 08:58 Then vs. now: information dearth vs. glut 09:55 The early internet & dial-up days 10:40 The value of therapy waiting rooms 11:19 How waiting rooms built community 14:22 When connection was hard even in person 15:02 The phone problem in waiting rooms today 16:54 Safe spaces where everyone understands 17:33 Navigating today's information overload 18:03 Leaving toxic Facebook groups for Instagram 20:08 Finding your people online 21:24 Drowning in information & needing a lifeline 21:49 Lived experience vs. policy 22:34 How advocacy began with insurance denials 24:55 Policy gaps & IEP meetings in Texas 26:31 Walking in the dark: the early autism era 27:14 Autism as emerging industry 27:37 The DSM shifts & changing diagnosis 29:27 What will DSM-6 change? 30:35 How Jean's advocacy evolved step by step 33:57 The looming fear: what happens after I'm gone? 35:57 School board, lobbying & statewide impact 40:27 What the next generation of autism parents faces 41:18 Transition planning for autistic adults 42:13 Kelley's son: evolving transition & loneliness in housing 43:33 Julianna's son: independent living & losing control 45:42 Being a trusted resource vs. caretaker 47:08 Speed round begins 47:19 Greatest extravagance 47:54 When do you cry? 49:03 What do you deplore most about autism? 49:44 What have you learned to love? 50:10 What are you reading right now? 51:31 Upward Bound & Moms Talk Autism shoutout 53:31 Closing & thank you 55:27 Legal disclaimer & outro
48 episodios
Comentarios
0Sé la primera persona en comentar
¡Regístrate ahora y únete a la comunidad de Refrigerator Moms!