DiscoverThe Autistic VOICE ProjectEpisode 13: Tylenol, Smoke Screens, and Why Awareness and Acceptance Doesn’t Require Suffering
Episode 13: Tylenol, Smoke Screens, and Why Awareness and Acceptance Doesn’t Require Suffering

Episode 13: Tylenol, Smoke Screens, and Why Awareness and Acceptance Doesn’t Require Suffering

Update: 2025-10-04
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Matt, Erin, and guest Tiffany Hammond (of Fidgets and Fries and A Day With No Words) are here this week — and we dive into the Tylenol conspiracy circus, the politics of distraction, and why autistic advocacy has to push past dehumanizing narratives. We talk about balancing anger with connection, what happens when parents are left isolated in “severe autism” groups, and how telling stories with dignity changes the conversation.
We cover:

  • The absurd scapegoating of Tylenol as “the cause” of autism
  • How political smoke bombs distract from gutting Medicaid, Medicare, and education
  • Why dehumanizing language (“low functioning,” “destroyers of lives”) harms both kids and parents
  • The trap of socially “acceptable” suffering vs. authentic autistic needs
  • Using stories instead of slogans to actually shift hearts, minds, and policies
  • Tiffany’s book A Day With No Words and the family practices behind it


Also: fangirling, Peppa Pig echolalia, the Bachelor as cultural proof, and why “awareness” without action is just noise.

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Episode 13: Tylenol, Smoke Screens, and Why Awareness and Acceptance Doesn’t Require Suffering

Episode 13: Tylenol, Smoke Screens, and Why Awareness and Acceptance Doesn’t Require Suffering

The Autistic VOICE Project