People shouldn't have to prove their worth, learn how to ask for help, navigate complex systems, or wait for services to catch up before they can access the support they need.

Why Advocacy Bridge Exists

 

Advocacy Bridge exists to build a community of people, organisations, professionals, funders, and lived-experience voices committed to ensuring vulnerable people are heard, seen, held, valued, and met where they are—with dignity, compassion, and respect.

Together, we work to remove barriers, amplify voices, protect rights, and create pathways to support, safety, and self-determination.

Too often, people are expected to prove their worth, learn how to ask for help, and navigate systems that were not designed with their needs in mind before they can access the support they need.

Advocacy Bridge exists to help bridge that gap.

We believe people shouldn’t have to face difficult situations alone, wait until they reach crisis point, or lose confidence in themselves before support becomes available.

Our aim is simple:

To help people access the right support, at the right level, at the right time.

By standing alongside people, strengthening communication, supporting informed decision-making, and helping people understand their options, we work to ensure individuals feel heard, seen, valued, and better able to move forward.

Our Approach

Advocacy Bridge provides structured, consent-led support that is collaborative, processing-aware, neurodivergent-informed, and focused on participation, communication, and accessibility.

We recognise that many systems rely on sustained organisation, communication, executive functioning, and processing capacity. During periods of stress, overwhelm, burnout, illness, disability, or increased life demands, these demands can become difficult to manage alone.

Our approach is informed by both professional experience and lived experience of neurodivergence and disability. We understand how overwhelming systems, decisions, communication, and day-to-day responsibilities can feel when things are unclear, unsupported, or moving too quickly.

Because of this, we work at a pace that is appropriate to the individual, providing structure, clarity, and practical support to help create calmer, more manageable pathways forward.

We aim to:

• Break complex situations into clear, manageable steps

• Present information in a structured and accessible way

• Repeat, clarify, or reframe information where helpful and without judgement

• Focus on realistic, achievable next steps that support progress without creating unnecessary overwhelm

• Use tools such as written notes, recordings, summaries, and structured follow-up to support continuity and understanding

• Help turn thoughts, concerns, and ideas into practical actions

• Support individuals to participate more effectively in decisions, conversations, and systems that affect their lives

    Following the initial enquiry, we may work with the individual and, where appropriate, those involved in their support, to build a fuller understanding of the situation, identify priorities and needs, and explore possible options moving forward.

    Funding & Payment Options

    Support may be funded through private self-funding arrangements, Direct Payments, Personal Budgets, local authority commissioning, or other agreed funding arrangements where appropriate.

    Funding arrangements and eligibility requirements vary depending on individual circumstances and are discussed as part of the enquiry and assessment process.

    Please note that submitting an enquiry does not guarantee that Advocacy Bridge will be able to provide ongoing support.

    Before any support can be offered, we may need to consider factors such as the nature of the request, whether it falls within our scope of service, current availability and capacity, funding arrangements, and whether Advocacy Bridge is likely to be the most appropriate service for the individual’s needs.

    Where we are unable to offer ongoing support, we will aim to provide information, signposting, or alternative options where appropriate.

    The Advocacy Bridge Journey

    Is Advocacy Bridge Right for You?

    Advocacy Bridge May Be Suited For

    Advocacy Bridge may be helpful for individuals who:

    • Need support understanding, navigating, or communicating with services and systems

    • Would benefit from additional structure, organisation, coordination, or follow-through

    • Feel overwhelmed by forms, paperwork, meetings, processes, or decision-making

    • Experience barriers relating to communication, processing, executive functioning, accessibility, disability, neurodivergence, mental health, or life circumstances

    • Need support preparing for, attending, or following up from meetings, assessments, reviews, or important conversations

    • Require advocacy, guidance, practical support, or assistance understanding available options

    • Would benefit from short-term support around a specific issue or longer-term support involving ongoing advocacy and coordination

    Advocacy Bridge May Not Be the Best Fit For

    Advocacy Bridge may not be the most appropriate service where:

    • The primary need is legal representation or specialist legal advice

    • Emergency, crisis, safeguarding, medical, or mental health intervention is required

    • The individual is seeking clinical, therapeutic, counselling, or healthcare services

    • The requested support falls outside our scope of service, expertise, or capacity

    • Another organisation, specialist service, statutory service, or professional is better placed to provide the required support

    Where Advocacy Bridge is unable to provide support, we will aim to explain why and, where appropriate, provide information about alternative services, organisations, or support pathways.

    What Happens After You Contact Us?

    Once we receive an enquiry or referral, we will review the information provided and make contact using the preferred communication method wherever possible.

    We may arrange a follow-up conversation to better understand the situation, current support in place, communication needs, and whether Advocacy Bridge is likely to be an appropriate fit.

    Some situations are straightforward, while others may require additional conversations, documents, or clarification before next steps can be identified.

    📨 We review your enquiry or referral.

    💬 We make contact using your preferred communication method.

    🔍 We gather any additional information needed.

    🧭 We explore possible options and next steps.

    🤝 Where appropriate, we discuss support arrangements.

    As Featured in Your Autism Magazine

    Michelle Shaw, Founder of Advocacy Bridge, was featured in the Spring edition of Your Autism magazine with her article “Navigating Burnout and Reduced Capacity.”

    Drawing on both professional and lived experience, Michelle explores how burnout, fluctuating capacity, and overwhelm can affect autistic adults, alongside practical strategies for navigating periods of reduced capacity with greater understanding and self-compassion.

    Key Topics Discussed

    • Burnout and reduced capacity

    • Executive functioning and processing demands

    • Communication, accessibility, and support needs

    • Self-compassion and realistic expectations

    • Sustainable approaches to everyday life


    Why Advocacy Bridge Was Created

    The experiences discussed in this article reflect many of the challenges faced by the individuals who contact Advocacy Bridge.

    Our work is built around helping people navigate systems, communicate effectively, access support, and move forward in ways that are realistic, manageable, and tailored to their circumstances.

    ✨ The Strengths We Learn to Hide

    A reflection on neurodivergence, childhood messages, and the skills we never realised we were building

    There are some conversations that stay with you long after they end.

    Not because they were dramatic or difficult, but because they reveal something quietly profound about how we move through the world — and how the world responds to us in return.

    This week, I had one of those conversations.

    We weren’t talking about labels or diagnoses.
    We were talking about lived experience — the kind that shapes people quietly, deeply, and often invisibly.

    And it reminded me just how many neurodivergent adults either grew up feeling — or were repeatedly told — things like:

    • “too much”
    • “too sensitive”
    • “too emotional”
    • “too messy”
    • “too slow”
    • “too intense”
    • “too forgetful”
    • “too different”
    • or simply “not enough”

    And so often, these messages came not because anything was wrong with them — but because their brains didn’t behave in the way the world expected.

    Instead of support, they got labels:

    “difficult.”
    “lazy.”
    “unfocused.”
    “scatterbrained.”
    “awkward.”
    “overreacting.”
    “dramatic.”
    “in their own world.”
    “not trying hard enough.”

    So they hid the parts that made them stand out.
    Masked. Over-adapted. Over-performed.
    Held everything together while quietly wondering why life seemed easier for everyone else.

    But here’s the truth that struck me most deeply:

    👉 Many of the traits people once criticised are the roots of someone’s greatest strengths.
    👉 The “unusual” ways of thinking they were shamed for are often the source of their creativity and insight.
    👉 The workarounds they invented as children became the strategies shaping their careers and relationships.
    👉 The resilience they built in silence became their strongest asset.

    And this is something most people never get told:

    You’re skilled because of your wiring and the clever workarounds you built to survive — not despite any of it.

    Most neurodivergent strengths don’t look like strengths when you’re younger.
    They look like problems other people want you to fix.

    Yet later in life, they reveal themselves as:

    ✨ creative solutions
    ✨ pattern spotting
    ✨ deep empathy
    ✨ intense focus
    ✨ intuition
    ✨ innovation
    ✨ adaptability
    ✨ problem-solving
    ✨ strategic insight
    ✨ emotional intelligence
    ✨ leadership rooted in lived experience

    None of this comes from fitting in.
    It comes from navigating a world that never adjusted for you — and surviving anyway.

    And this matters, because so many late-diagnosed or self-discovered neurodivergent adults believe they are “behind,” “failing,” or “not getting it,” when in reality:

    There has never been anything wrong with them.
    Their wiring is not the problem.
    A world that only rewards one style of wiring is.

    Unmasking isn’t about becoming someone new.
    It’s about finally allowing yourself to be who you’ve always been underneath the survival strategies.


    Let’s take this one step further.

    If so much of your strength, creativity, resilience, and clarity came from the parts you once hid…

    Here’s the real question:

    What are you still covering up because of how you were treated back then?

    What parts of you learned to shrink?
    What abilities did you mute because they made someone else uncomfortable?
    What dreams did you bury because you were told they didn’t belong to someone like you?
    What aspects of your identity still sit in the shadows because of the labels others placed on you?

    And then — the question that changes everything:

    What could you do with all of that… if you knew you couldn’t ever get it wrong?

    Not in a reckless sense, but in a permission-giving sense.

    ✨ If every detour was information, not failure.
    ✨ If every trait you were shamed for became a tool.
    ✨ If every workaround you created in childhood became a resource.
    ✨ If every sensitivity became a signal rather than a flaw.
    ✨ If every “difference” was simply a different kind of intelligence.

    And then imagine combining all of that — every lived experience, every instinct, every workaround, every reflection, every skill you’ve developed — and asking:

    What becomes possible when nothing about you is wrong anymore?

    Because here’s the truth:

    You’ve already built a life on strength you didn’t know you had.
    You’ve already navigated challenges most people will never understand.
    You’ve already adapted to systems not designed for your needs.
    You’ve already succeeded under conditions that would have broken others.

    So imagine what becomes possible
    — in your work, your relationships, your confidence, your creativity, your decisions —
    when you stop treating the real you as something that needs approval.

    What expands?
    What softens?
    What becomes clearer?
    What becomes easier?
    What finally feels possible?


    And one final reflection — a gentle but powerful one:

    What passion from your childhood have you quietly or unknowingly carried into your adult life?

    There is almost always a thread.
    A spark.
    A pull.
    Something that never left, even when you didn’t have the language for it.

    It might show up now through your work, your art, the way you help others, the way you think, or the way you solve problems.

    If you can trace that thread…
    you can often find your truest direction.

    And if you weave that thread together with everything you’ve gained —
    your wiring, your insight, your intuition, your lived experience, your hard-earned strengths —
    you unlock a version of yourself that feels both familiar and finally free.

    We spend so long trying to get ourselves “right” by someone else’s definition
    that we forget: we were never wrong to begin with.

    You’re not here to shrink.
    You’re here to arrive — fully.

    And the moment you stop trying to be who the world wanted,
    you make space for who you’ve always been.

    💛 Michelle Shaw
    Neurodivergent Mentor & Life Strategist
    Helping people rebuild confidence, clarity, structure and self-trust — without masking who they truly are.