This Voice is Mine: the Unquiet Podcast
For every neurodivergent mind that was masked, misread, or missed. Where identity is reclaimed and the system gets named. This Voice Is Mine is a podcast for those who were told they were too much, too sensitive, too chaotic, too intense or not enough.
Hosted by Dr Emma, a clinical psychologist, neurodivergent woman, and unapologetic system disrupter, this podcast explores what happens when difference is pathologised and what becomes possible when we drop the shame, the script, and the medical model.
Through stories, reflections, and conversations with people who were never meant to fit, This Voice Is Mine reclaims the truth of neurodivergent minds, bodies, and ways of being. This is not about fixing or fitting in. It’s about remembering who we are and unlearning everything they got wrong.
This Voice is Mine: the Unquiet Podcast
The Gut, the Brain & the Unquiet Body: A Conversation with Will Martin
In this deeply grounding episode of This Voice Is Mine: The Unquiet Podcast, Dr Emma Offord is joined by Will Martin, Nutritional Therapist, former teacher, and late-identified Dyslexic, Autistic ADHDer who helps children, adults and parents regulate their emotions and attention through holistic, evidence-based neurobiology.
Together, Emma and Will explore the unspoken internal world so many neurodivergent people carry: the internal chatter, the “work harder” conditioning, the cycles of anxiety and burnout, the longing for deep connection, and the quiet belief that you’re “not enough.”
Will shares:
- Growing up sensitive, misunderstood and unable to name his struggles
- Internalising everything because no one ever asked what was happening inside
- Late diagnosis of dyslexia, autism and ADHD — and the grief, clarity and identity shift that unfolded
- How chronic anxiety, indecision and burnout were downstream effects of masking
- Why neurodivergent mental health is often physiological and relational, not pathological
- The role nutrition, minerals, the gut-brain axis, hormones and lifestyle play in emotional regulation
- Why safety, not compliance, is the foundation of learning
- How understanding his neurobiology allowed him to parent, work and live more compassionately
Emma and Will unpack the misconceptions around nutrition in ND spaces, and explain why supporting the body is not about fixing, curing or erasing neurodivergence. Instead, it’s about returning safety to the system, reducing overwhelm, and helping individuals access the continuity of who they have always been.
Will also closes the episode by reading his original poem, From Struggle to Strength, a powerful reflection on identity, sensitivity and self-honouring.
This episode is essential listening for anyone navigating burnout, late identification, parenting neurodivergent children, or trying to understand their neurobiology with more compassion and less fear.
Follow Will on his Instagram account here and his website here.