Surviving an ever changing world. When the news cycle spins too quickly

Urgent

Why the "News Cycle" is a Workplace Accessibility Issue for Autistic Professionals.

​For many autistic people, "the news" isn't just information. It is a daily exercise in sensory and emotional navigation.

While the world often misunderstands autism as a lack of empathy, the reality is frequently hyper-empathy. 

When we see headlines about war, suffering or injustice, we don't just "read" it; many of us feel it, as if it’s happening to us personally. This is often referred to as vicarious trauma.

Our brains frequently use "bottom-up processing," absorbing every intense detail before we can find the "big picture" to compartmentalize it. This makes "tuning it out" feel almost impossible.

​If we want to support neurodivergent talent, we must recognize the mental toll of the current global climate.

​Here is how I (and many others) manage the noise to maintain focus and well-being.

The Hard "Turn Off": If the news is about an event I cannot personally influence, I give myself full permission to stop looking. 

It is not "ignorance"—it is self-preservation.

​A Digital Sensory Diet: I treat news consumption like any other sensory input.

I choose text-only sources to avoid visual/auditory "jump scares" like sirens, flashing banners, or graphic footage.

Energy Accounting: Before I open a news app, I ask: "Do I have the mental 'spoons' for this today?" 

If my anxiety is already high, the news is a hard "no."

​For my neurodivergent colleagues: Your peace is more important than being "up-to-the-minute" on trauma. 

Turning it off is an act of radical self-care. It allows us to show up fully where we can make a difference.

Parents
  • I find the whole A.I thing on social media extremely worrying. It's getting increasingly difficult to differentiate these images from reality.

    It should go back to cats singing karaoke or Artax the horse escaping from the swamp of sadness (childhood trauma eased).

Reply
  • I find the whole A.I thing on social media extremely worrying. It's getting increasingly difficult to differentiate these images from reality.

    It should go back to cats singing karaoke or Artax the horse escaping from the swamp of sadness (childhood trauma eased).

Children
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