Webinars

Self-Care That Actually Fits Into A Caregiver's Life

June 18 | 7 PM

Realistic, doable strategies for recharging your energy, without guilt and without extra overwhelm.

Smiling woman with blonde hair against dark background.

Trish Law

Trish is a nervous system facilitator and trauma-informed life coach. Through her work she helps individuals reconnect with their authentic selves, building emotional resilience, self awareness, and the capacity to live and lead with clarity and self-trust.

Finding the Funny in Frustrating

July 16 | 7 PM

An honest and meaningful conversation about how humor becomes survival, connection, and perspective for autism families.

Smiling middle-aged man with curly hair and beard in a blue shirt and dark jacket.

Frank Campagna

The father of a nonspeaking autistic son. He is the founder of Autism Daddy and an Emmy-winning producer who shares honest insight on high-support-needs parenting and navigating
adult services.

and the capacity to live and lead with clarity and self-trust.

Holding on to Faith When it Feels Impossible

August 20 | 7 PM

Whether you lean on faith, question it, redefine it, or don’t identify with it at all…This conversation explores how caregivers wrestle with suffering, endurance, doubt, and hope along a long journey.

A smiling man wearing glasses and a casual shirt.

John Kolwaite

He is the Abbot of the Cambridge Zen Center and a Dharma Teacher in the Kwan Um School of Zen. A longtime educator at the Boston Higashi School, he spent 30 years supporting students on the autism spectrum and now serves as an educational consultant.

Professional woman smiling, dressed in business attire.

Rabbi Allison Berry

Directs the Betty Ann Greenbaum Miller Center for Jewish Healing at Jewish Family & Children’s Service in Waltham, MA. Her work focuses on supporting people through illness, grief, and life transitions while expanding mental health support and inclusion.

The Things We Never Say: A Reflective Journal Writing Experience for Mothers of Autistic Individuals

July 13 | 6:30 - 8:30 PM

Over the years, I’ve had countless conversations with mothers who have shared pieces of their stories that rarely get spoken aloud: the fears, the grief, the resilience, the humor, the exhaustion, the unexpected joy, and the lessons learned along the way.
 
I’m hosting a small, intimate journaling experience where we can gather to reflect, write, connect, and help create something meaningful. This is part of a forthcoming book. You can choose to participate in the book or opt out.
 
This won’t be a lecture or traditional workshop. It will be a safe space for mothers and caregivers of autistic individuals to explore guided writing prompts, share stories (if they choose), and contribute to a collaborative journal/book project that captures the real experiences of caregiving and autism.
 
Participants can:
✨ Write anonymously
✨ Use their first name
✨ Share their full name if comfortable
 
There is absolutely no pressure to read your writing aloud or share anything you don’t want to.
 
This event is free, and participation is limited to just 15 women to keep the experience warm, supportive, and authentic.
Because sometimes the things we never say are the things that most need to be heard.