The Ecosystemic Model: Understanding Neurodivergent Experience as an EcologyFrom where does our experience of the world originate?
We have spent decades trying to locate neurodivergent experience inside the individual; inside the brain, inside the genes, inside the diagnostic category. In doing so, we have built an entire infrastructure of intervention designed to fix, manage, or contain the person, while leaving the environments that shape their experience almost entirely untouched. This is the foundational error of the medical model, and it is one we keep making. What I want to offer here is a different frame entirely. Not the brain as a broken machine, and not distress as a symptom to be treated; Neurodivergent experience as something that emerges within (and is co-produced by) a complex, dynamic, living ecosystem. An Ecology, Not A Pathology Ecology teaches us that no organism exists in isolation. The health, behaviour, and survival of any living thing is inseparable from the conditions in which it finds itself. A plant is not simply “healthy” or “diseased” in the abstract, it is healthy or diseased in relation to soil composition, light availability, temperature, the presence or absence of other organisms, water, and a hundred other interdependent variables. Neurodivergent people are not simply “functioning” or “not functioning”. We are functioning or not functioning within specific environments, under specific conditions, in relation to specific demands, with or without the resources our bodyminds actually need. This is the core premise of the Ecosystemic Model of Distress and Wellbeing; a framework developed to move beyond the flattened language of diagnosis and symptom, and towards something that captures the genuine complexity of how neurodivergent experience is shaped. The Three Environments The Ecosystemic Model understands wellbeing as emerging across three interconnected levels of environment, each embedded within and inseparable from the others. The first is the bodymind; this is the terrain of interoceptive signals, nervous system states, trauma histories, fatigue, sensory processing, and the way the body meets the world moment to moment. But (and this is critical) just because distress appears in the bodymind does not mean it originates there. The bodymind is a receiver as much as a generator, it is shaped by everything pressing in from the environments around it. The second is the immediate environment; this is the lived, daily texture of a person’s life, the sensory qualities of the spaces they inhabit, the relationships they navigate, the expectations placed on them, the routines (or absence of them), the demands stacking up across a day. This is the level at which distress most often becomes visible, and where it is most frequently misread as behaviour to be managed, rather than communication to be understood. The third is the level of systems and power; institutions, policies, services, the structures that determine access to safety, autonomy, and resource. The ideologies embedded in healthcare, education, and social care that decide whose needs are legible and whose are not. This level is the most invisible and the most consequential; it shapes the second level, which shapes the first, which shapes the person, and we rarely name it. When we look at a neurodivergent person in distress, we are almost never looking at a problem located in that person, we are looking at an ecosystemic consequence. The Autistic Rhizome Gilles Deleuze and FĂ©lix Guattari gave us the concept of the rhizome; a model of thought, being, and growth that moves not in straight lines from root to branch, but laterally, multiply, in all directions at once, with no fixed centre and no singular point of origin. Unlike the tree (the hierarchical, branching structure that Western knowledge loves, with its single trunk, its organised levels, its clear taxonomy) the rhizome spreads, connects, resurfaces, breaks apart and reconstitutes elsewhere. I find myself returning to this image again and again when I try to describe Autistic experience. Autistic cognition is not arborescent. It does not move in tidy, sequential, hierarchically organised flows, rather, it branches unpredictably. It forms dense, passionate connections between things that are not supposed to connect. It loops back, goes underground, it resurfaces somewhere unexpected. The monotropic tunnel, that intense, all-absorbing focus that pulls the whole attentional system into depth, is a rhizomatic movement. It is the mind finding its own path through terrain that was not designed with it in mind. To pathologise this as deficit is to measure a rhizome by the standards of a tree and declare the rhizome broken. The Autistic rhizome does not need to be straightened, it needs an environment that knows how to grow alongside it. Mycelial Communities Beneath every forest is a mycelial network; a vast, underground web of fungal threads connecting root system to root system, tree to tree, organism to organism. The forest is not a collection of isolated individuals competing for resources, it is a community, networked at the root level, sharing nutrients, transmitting signals, supporting one another through stress and scarcity. This is what neurodivergent community actually is, when we allow it to be. When Autistic people, ADHDers, PDA folks, Dyspraxic people, people with dissociative and psychotic experience, those marked by trauma and marginalisation; when we find each other, something mycelial happens. We do not simply exchange information, we recognise each other at a level that bypasses the social scripts that fail us everywhere else. We form neurokin bonds, transmitting something vital; the knowledge that we are not alone in our experience, that the problem was never us, that our ways of being in the world have value and coherence and dignity. The mycelial metaphor is networked, not hierarchical; there is no central hub through which all connection must pass. It is distributed, resilient. When one node is damaged, the network finds another path. This is what peer support looks like when it’s done right, this is what the NeuroHub Community is trying to build. Nested Environments And The Conditions For Becoming The Ecosystemic Model draws on nested environment frameworks (the understanding that no level of experience exists independently of the levels surrounding it). The bodymind is nested inside the immediate environment, the immediate environment is nested inside systems and power. Change at one level sends ripples through all the others. This has profound implications for how we think about wellbeing and support. If someone is in Autistic burnout, we cannot address that burnout by targeting only the bodymind; by teaching more coping strategies, more regulation techniques, more masking skills dressed up as resilience. Burnout is an ecosystemic consequence, it emerges from the accumulated injury of living in an environment that demands the constant misperformance of one’s actual neurocognition. To address it at only the level of the individual is to keep scooping water out of a flooding boat while refusing to look for the hole. We have to look at the immediate environment. What demands are being placed on this person? What sensory conditions are they navigating? What relationships are supporting or depleting them? What expectations are being communicated about how they should present, communicate, process, perform? Then we have to look further still; what systems are generating those demands? Whose standards are being normalised as the baseline of acceptable functioning? Which institutional logics are rendering this person’s needs invisible, pathological, or inconvenient? Neurodivergent distress is a signal from the ecosystem that something in the relationship between this person and their environment is wrong. The Right Conditions For Growth Ecology also teaches us this; every organism, given the right conditions, will do what it is built to do. The rhizome spreads, the mycelium networks, the tree reaches toward light. Not because it is trying hard, nor because it is choosing to succeed; because the conditions are right. Neurodivergent people do not need to be fixed. We need the right conditions. We need environments where monotropic depth is allowed, not perpetually interrupted. Where sensory needs are taken seriously rather than dismissed. Where communication differences are met with curiosity rather than correction. Where the full range of neurodivergent experience (including the parts the mainstream finds inconvenient or frightening) is understood as legitimate expression of a different neurology navigating a world that was not built for it. We need communities that function like mycelial networks; lateral, distributed, nourishing, held together by genuine recognition rather than institutional management. We need systems that stop treating neurodivergent distress as evidence of individual deficit and start treating it as evidence of environmental mismatch; an ecosystemic signal that demands an ecosystemic response. A Different Question The medical model asks; what is wrong with this person? The Ecosystemic Model asks; what conditions is this person living inside, and what does this ecosystem need to change? That is a complete reorientation of how we understand wellbeing, distress, and what it means to support a neurodivergent life. The forest is not just the trees, it is the soil, the roots, the mycelium, the light, the water, the climate, the organisms in relationship with one another across time. Neurodivergent wellbeing is no different. It grows (or fails to grow) in relation to everything surrounding it. Please check out our Professional Gateway subscription for access to our resource bank, our latest course on Supporting Autistic People, and our upcoming Autistic Mental Health Conference on August 14th to 16th 2026. You're currently a free subscriber to NeuroHub Community Journal | Newsletter | Announcements. For the full experience, upgrade your subscription.
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Thursday, 11 June 2026
The Ecosystemic Model: Understanding Neurodivergent Experience as an Ecology
Wednesday, 10 June 2026
If Trump loses the mid-terms, all hell will break loose!
If Trump loses the mid-terms, all hell will break loose!Do you want voter suppression with that?
Trump should be in jail, considering January 6
Trump is already threatening to reject a vote against him and his party
Voter suppression is as old as the hills
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The Ecosystemic Model: Understanding Neurodivergent Experience as an Ecology
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