Recommended by Autistic Ang
Such a thoughtful newsletter - without being vague and honest without being performative. It looks closely at how care, power, and freedom actually work in everyday life, especially the parts we miss until something breaks. The writing feels grounded and it leaves you seeing yourself and others a little more clearly.
Jen’s newsletter is a rare blend of clarity, compassion, and real-world wisdom. She doesn’t just talk about neurodivergence and career but redefines how we think about value, voice, and visibility. If you’ve ever felt out of place in traditional spaces, her work offers both a mirror and a map. Thoughtful, actionable, genuinely empowering.
A thoughtful, honest look at late-diagnosis autism from someone who's figuring it out in real time. Richard's a lifelong writer asking sharp questions, sharing real moments, and building a LEGO-covered space for reflection, connection, and a little laughter.
David’s newsletter is for people who like their fiction a little strange, a little sharp, and totally outside the algorithm. If you miss the feeling of stumbling on a story that doesn’t try to be a brand, just a world—you’ll feel at home here.
Barbara's Writing on the Spectrum is an honest look at creativity shaped by neurodivergence, curiosity, and persistence. She shares paranormal romance alongside reflections on craft, diagnosis, learning how her mind actually works. I find her stuff thoughtful and grounded in the real work of making art without forcing yourself into forms that never fit.
If you're looking for writing that’s honest, thoughtful, and rooted in real community, I can’t recommend The Ubuntu Journey enough. Amberhawk weaves personal experience, deep reflection, and practical insight into something that's not just powerful—it’s necessary. It’s about belonging, resilience, and building a world where everyone has a place. If that speaks to you, go subscribe!
A therapist’s insights and a fellow traveler’s honesty—this is a newsletter that feels like both a guide and a companion on the path home to yourself.
A sharp, insightful, and deeply personal look at late-identified autism, filled with education, exploration, and just the right amount of feminist rage.
Writing the Real World is one of those rare newsletters that’s both intellectually sharp and emotionally honest. Eleanor brings real-world insight to topics like compassion, creativity, and the ways we seek meaning and recognition.
Lindsay's writing is tender, unguarded, and deeply alive. They move through neurodivergence, gender, sexuality, and creativity with honesty that doesn’t smooth things over or ask for permission. It’s a soft place to hang out but it doesn’t look away from pain, confusion, or longing, and that combination feels rare.
For the ones who’ve been told to “let it go” one too many times—Chelsey holds the line. She writes for the feelers, the thinkers, the ones who’ve been trying to unlearn shame and remember their power. There’s no fluff here. Just recognition.
If mental health, self-inquiry, and reclaiming your inner authority matter to you, this is a space where you’ll feel seen and supported.


















