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NeuroHub Community Ltd: February Update

Big things have happened this February. From our becoming as NeuroHub Community Ltd to the launch of our flagship offering “Re-Storying Autism”. This update is full ofnsupport for neurodivergent people.

A Month of Becoming

This month feels less like a list of updates and more like a turning point.

The biggest news first, because it frames everything else that’s unfolding.

From Consultancy to Community

DGH Neurodivergent Consultancy is now NeuroHub Community Ltd

NeuroHub Community Ltd Logo

Reads-
NeuroHub
Connect Divergently
NeuroHub Community Ltd

This isn’t a rebrand for the sake of polish. It’s a statement of intent.

The work has been moving this way for a long time; away from isolated interventions and towards something more collective, relational, and sustainable. NeuroHub Community Ltd exists to centre community connection, shared learning, peer support, and lived-experience-led knowledge.

Consultancy, training, courses, and research still matter, but they now sit inside a wider ecosystem built around people, not services. This change reflects a deep commitment to building spaces that don’t just teach neurodivergent people about themselves, but actively support us to belong, connect, and grow together.

Embracing Our Autistic Selves: Course Complete

This month also marked the completion of Embracing Our Autistic Selves

The course ran beautifully. What stood out wasn’t just engagement or feedback, but the depth of reflection, honesty, and mutual recognition that emerged in the space. It did exactly what it was meant to do; create room for Autistic people to explore identity without pressure to perform, explain, or justify themselves.

Those conversations didn’t end when the sessions did.

The reflection above is a blog exploring the themes, questions, and shared reflections that emerged from the Embracing Our Autistic Selves discussions

The piece captures the spirit of the space without breaching it; a way of carrying collective insight forward and making it accessible to those who couldn’t attend live.

We’ll be delivering Embracing Our Autistic Selves again in the future, shaped by what participants shared and what emerged together. Future iterations will be listed via the events tab on NeuroHub.

Re-Storying Autism, Official Launch: February 16th

February 16th is a big moment for NeuroHub.

Re-Storying Autism officially launches as our flagship offering

Front Cover of Re-Storying Autism by David Gray-Hammond and Helen Edgar

This project brings together years of work on Autistic identity, culture, history, language, and self-understanding. The paperback workbook is almost 400 pages; reflective, challenging, and designed to be lived with rather than rushed through. Alongside it sits a fully on-demand video course with seven modules, each expanding and deepening the themes of the workbook.

All formats are released on February 16th.

The Kindle version of the workbook is currently available for pre-order on Amazon

The on-demand video course can also be pre-ordered now for £80, a 20% discount from the usual £100

And importantly:

– The video course will be free for everyone with a paid NeuroHub subscription

This is a deliberate choice. NeuroHub exists to make sustained learning accessible through community, not locked behind repeated paywalls.

New Live Course: February 26th

On February 26th, I’ll be delivering a new live course with Kelly Mahler-

When Environments Hurt: A New Framework for Understanding Distress Beyond “Regulating the Person”

This course moves away from models that locate distress solely inside individuals and instead explores how sensory, relational, cultural, and institutional environments actively shape distress, regulation, and wellbeing.

It’s particularly relevant for practitioners, educators, parents, and advocates who are tired of frameworks that quietly blame neurodivergent people for struggling in environments that were never built for them.

Sustainable Advocacy Toolkit: Now Available

Page featured image for Sustainable Advocacy Toolkit

NeuroHub Community has launched the Sustainable Advocacy Toolkit, available for £15

This toolkit is for advocates and people in leadership or responsibility roles who want to create change without sacrificing themselves in the process. It focuses on boundaries, capacity, sustainability, and ethics; because advocacy that consumes the advocate is not justice-oriented work.

Growing Community Spaces

Alongside courses and resources, NeuroHub continues to grow as a living community.

We now offer:

  • Weekly Peer Support Sessions
  • Weekly Mindfully Divergent sessions
  • A fortnightly neurodivergent reading group


More offerings are already in development, shaped by what members are asking for and what feels genuinely supportive rather than overwhelming.
NeuroHub isn’t trying to be everything to everyone. It’s trying to be enough — a place where learning, connection, and mutual recognition can coexist.
Looking Ahead
There is a lot more coming.
New courses. New collaborations. New community-led projects. And more space for ideas to grow at a humane pace rather than being forced into productivity timelines.
NeuroHub is becoming what it was always meant to be: a community built with care, intention, and trust.

If you’d like to join us, you can

More offerings are already in development, shaped by what members are asking for and what feels genuinely supportive rather than overwhelming.

NeuroHub isn’t trying to be everything to everyone. It’s trying to be enough; a place where learning, connection, and mutual recognition can coexist.

Looking Ahead

There is a lot more coming.
New courses. New collaborations. New community-led projects, and more space for ideas to grow at a neurodivergent pace rather than being forced into productivity timelines.

NeuroHub is becoming what it was always meant to be: a community built with care, intention, and trust.

Author

  • David Gray-Hammond

    David Gray-Hammond is an Autistic, ADHD, and Schizophrenic author. He wrote “The New Normal: Autistic musings on the threat of a broken society” and “Unusual Medicine: Essays on Autistic identity and drug addiction”.

    He runs the blog Emergent Divergence (which can be found at https://emergentdivergence.com ) and is a regular educator and podcast host for Aucademy.

    He runs his own consultancy business through which he offers independent advocacy, mentoring, training, and public speaking.

    He has his own podcast “David’s Divergent Discussions” and can also be found on substack at https://www.davidsdivergentdiscussions.co.uk

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