
Non Linear Learning - Rethinking Education for Neurodivergent Learners
by Dr. Vaish Sarathy
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Recent episodes
205. Why the Smartest Brains Are Also the Most Dysregulated | Dr. Andrew Hill
Apr 30, 2026
Unknown duration
204. Do Support Groups Actually Work? The Hard Truth About Finding Your People - with Sara Intonato
Apr 2, 2026
Unknown duration
203. Your student with Down Syndrome belongs in a mainstream Physics Class
Mar 11, 2026
Unknown duration
202. Inflammation, Energy, and Learning: A Functional Medicine Lens with Dr. Kendall Stewart
Feb 2, 2026
Unknown duration
201. Is School Costing Your Child Too Much? A Homeschooling Conversation
Jan 20, 2026
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| Date | Episode | Description | Length | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 4/30/26 | ![]() 205. Why the Smartest Brains Are Also the Most Dysregulated | Dr. Andrew Hill | What if your autistic / non-speaking learner's most overwhelming traits e.g., sensory sensitivity, pattern obsession, emotional upheavals are the exact same features that make their brain extraordinary? Dr. Andrew Hill is a cognitive neuroscientist, founder of Peak Brain Institute, and author of Gifted and Tortured. He has spent decades mapping real human brains and has worked with CEOs, athletes and people with disabilities. In this episode, we talk about what the neuroscience of dysregulation actually looks like, why standard IQ tests are built to miss your child, and what parents of non-speaking and autistic learners can do right now to support regulation and reveal the intelligence that's already there. What we cover: Why gifted brains and dysregulated brains are often the same brain — and what that means for your child Brain mapping (quantitative EEG): what it measures, what it reveals, and how to access it affordably Why IQ tests fail non-speaking autistic learners and kids with Down syndrome — and the three physiological factors that actually predict intelligence Neurofeedback for autistic and non-speaking kids: how it works and why it requires almost no active participation The single most important thing you can do for your child's regulation (hint: it starts the night before) and more… Resources mentioned: Get Dr. Hill's Book here: giftedandtortured.com Peak Brain Institute (brain mapping + neurofeedback): peakbraininstitute.com Work with Vaish: Non Linear Education — teaching, courses, and support for parents of autistic and non-speaking learners:Non Linear Education RPM lessons and consultation: drvaishsarathy.com/rpm | — | ||||||
| 4/2/26 | ![]() 204. Do Support Groups Actually Work? The Hard Truth About Finding Your People - with Sara Intonato | Do support groups actually help, or do they reinforce the very mindset that keeps parents stuck? In this episode, I sit down with Sara Intonato to unpack this difficult question. Both of us (and probably you) have lived the same reality: Hypervigilance, burnout, the constant demand of raising a non-speaking child. When we went looking for help, what we found in traditional support spaces was not growth or even help. Unfortunately we found: cycles of venting without direction low expectations presented as acceptance and a normalization of hopelessness This is a hard but beautiful conversation, that digs deep and lets us find out what really helps. We talk about: A simple 1-minute regulation tool you can use in crisis The HALT framework (Hungry, Angry/Anxious, Lonely, Tired) How to think about self-care when even 5 minutes feels impossible Sara introduces a different model: community with leadership, structure, and high expectations. Effort is great, but our kids need our regulated presence more! If you've ever felt unsupported in "support" spaces, listen to this episode now. Links: Find more about Sara here. Sara's free podcast mini-series Autism Changemakers Dr. Vaish Sarathy: Get on the waitlist for Non Linear Education here. | — | ||||||
| 3/11/26 | ![]() 203. Your student with Down Syndrome belongs in a mainstream Physics Class | Most special education systems operate on this premise: Students with disabilities must master small foundational skills before they are allowed access to academic content. In practice, this often means students spend years repeating the same goals - decoding, counting, basic worksheets - while their peers move forward into real subjects like science, history, and mathematics. But what happens when a student with significant disabilities is simply included in a high school physics class? In this episode of Non Linear Learning, I speak with Sruthi Muralidharan, a high school physics teacher who is testing that question in a public school classroom. Sruthi teaches general education physics where students with significant cognitive disabilities - including students with Down syndrome - participate alongside their peers in labs, engineering activities, and scientific investigations. Her work challenges several assumptions that dominate special education today. Sruthi did not begin her career in education. She holds an MS in Physics and a PhD in Electrical Engineering and spent more than ten years working in the semiconductor industry. In This Episode We discuss: • Why mastery-based IEP goals often keep students repeating the same material year after year • The limitations of self-contained special education classrooms • What happens when students with significant disabilities join general education science classes • Why educators often confuse communication challenges with cognitive limitations • How inclusive classrooms can actually improve regulation and engagement • Why the burden of proving intelligence should never fall on the child About Our Guest Sruthi Muralidharan is a high school physics teacher and advocate for inclusive education. She previously worked for more than a decade in the semiconductor industry and holds an MS in Physics and a PhD in Electrical Engineering. Links & Resources Sruthi's Substack on lesson modification and inclusive teaching Vaish's course on making academics possible: Non Linear Education If You Enjoyed This Episode • Share it with a parent, teacher, or school leader • Leave a review on Apple Podcasts or Spotify | — | ||||||
| 2/2/26 | ![]() 202. Inflammation, Energy, and Learning: A Functional Medicine Lens with Dr. Kendall Stewart | Dr. Vaish Sarathy speaks with Dr. Kendall Stewart (former surgeon turned functional medicine + genomics clinician) about the biochemistry of learning: how inflammation, metabolic factors, neurotransmitter balance, and genetics can influence regulation, sensory stability, and why some kids respond to interventions while others don't. What we cover: Why progress can look like "good days/bad days" when inflammation fluctuates Nutrigenomics vs exome sequencing vs pharmacogenetics (and why personalization matters) A parent-friendly clinical framework: inflammation → autophagy/insulin tendencies → neurotrophic factors → glutamate/GABA → methylation Sensory stability (vestibular/visual) and why eye contact can reduce listening for some learners Microbiome basics: inflammation load, butyrate, absorption/biofilms Resources Dr. Kendall Stewart: www.drkendalstewart.com Non Linear Education (NLE): https://www.drvaishsarathy.com/nonlineareducation Medical disclaimer (important): This episode is for educational purposes only and does not provide medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult your qualified clinician for medical decisions—especially for children and complex conditions. | — | ||||||
| 1/20/26 | ![]() 201. Is School Costing Your Child Too Much? A Homeschooling Conversation | Homeschooling sometimes begins when parents realize the education system is not serving their child. In this episode of Non Linear Learning, Dr. Vaish Sarathy speaks with Victoria Lenormand, a former detective turned holistic health practitioner and homeschooling parent, about what it takes to trust a child's internal compass and let go of conventional definitions of success. Victoria brings an evidence-based perspective to homeschooling. Trained to observe patterns and follow facts, she applied that same mindset to her son's learning and recognized that a linear schooling model was taking enormous energy just to maintain — without supporting his identity or growth. Together, Vaish and Victoria explore: How to build the mindset needed for homeschooling The 3 factors learning is built around when done right. How to interpret stubbornness or "wilfulness" in a way that works for your child, and Why the energy cost of education is critical information for parents This conversation is for parents considering homeschooling, questioning traditional schooling, or feeling the constant friction between who their child is and what school expects. As we reflect in the episode: "When something in education takes enormous energy just to maintain, it's worth asking whether it's actually working." Resources Victoria Lenormand's parent community: https://www.geminidirections.co.uk You can find Vaish at www.instagram.com/drvaishsarathy | — | ||||||
| 1/1/26 | ![]() 200. Five "Helpful" Parenting Tips That Limit Autistic Learning | Parents of Autistic children and children with Down syndrome are often given advice that sounds compassionate, reasonable, and supportive. But much of it slowly limits learning, flexibility, autonomy, and long-term growth. In this milestone Episode 200 of Non Linear Learning, Dr. Vaish Sarathy challenges 5 common pieces of parenting and education advice that unintentionally lower expectations and shift focus away from real learning. In this episode, you'll learn why Dr. Vaish challenges: • Strict routines and rigid structure — and how too much predictability reduces tolerance for learning and change • Traditional support groups — and how shared grief can quietly stall progress ... and more This episode is for parents who: • Have been told academics can wait • Feel uneasy about advice that sounds kind but feels limiting • Want age-appropriate, intellectually rich education for their child Resources Learn how to teach real academics non-linearly, without waiting for "readiness," inside Non Linear Education. | — | ||||||
| 12/8/25 | ![]() 199 Evidence, Rage, and Relief: A Mom–Son Team on Finding Spelled Communication | When 8-year-old non-speaking autistic Rafael found text-based communication, he didn't just start "answering questions." He started telling the truth about his body, his anxiety, and the frustration of being misunderstood. If you've ever looked at your non-speaking child and thought, "I know there's more in there… I just don't know how to reach it," this conversation is for you. Today I'm joined by Daria and her 8-year-old autistic, non-speaking son Rafael, co-creators of Spelling the Tea on Autism on Substack and Instagram. After discovering text-based communication, they realized how deeply Rafael had been misunderstood - and started documenting both his words and the science that helps explain them. Inside the episode, we talk about: Rafael's "goner mindset" before communication and what typing changed about his sense of the future. How apraxia creates a gap between intention and movement and why that gap gets mislabeled as "low IQ," "behavior," or "non-compliance." The concept of an "interference score" for food! How Rafael would redesign first in schools for non-speakers. Why regulation, communication, and learning are inseparable… and why independence in cognition does not mean independence in motor and sensory systems. This is a humbling, practical, and very human reminder that: We can't keep separating "behavior," "sensory," and "cognitive" boxes. Research on autism that excludes non-speakers cannot be our only compass. And most importantly: sitting still is not a pre-requisite for real thinking or rigorous education. You can find Daria and Rafael at https://www.instagram.com/spelling_the_tea_on_autism/ and https://spellingthetea.substack.com/ You can find Dr. Vaish Sarathy at https://www.instagram.com/drvaishsarathy/ Check out her 6 foundational tips on education at https://www.drvaishsarathy.com/nonlinearlearning | — | ||||||
| 11/28/25 | ![]() 198 How Understanding Apraxia changes your child's Education - with Dana Johnson | I first spoke with Dana Johnson nearly 4 years ago, and that conversation completely changed how I saw vision and learning. I call it my "ocular motor awakening" when I truly understood that vision has three components, and only one of them is corrected by glasses. Dana is the co-creator of the Spellers Method and the founder of multiple centers dedicated to helping non-speaking individuals communicate and learn with purpose. As both an occupational therapist (OT) and a Spellers Method practitioner, she brings a unique approach to supporting individuals with autism, apraxia, dyspraxia, and sensory-motor differences. In this episode, we talk about the power of purposeful motor skills, breaking down barriers for non-speakers, and what real communication means. Key Takeaways: Vision isn't just about eyesight it's about how the brain processes what we see. Apraxia is a motor planning challenge, not a cognitive one. Communication is possible when we focus on purposeful motor skills. What does right support look like? Get in Touch: 👉 Learn more about Dana Johnson's work at Spellers Method Tampa 👉 Connect with Dr. Vaish Sarathy on Instagram: @drvaishsarathy | — | ||||||
| 11/17/25 | ![]() 197 Beyond Burnout: GABA Support, Mitochondria, and Realistic Help for Parents of Autistic Kids | If you're parenting an Autistic child and living in a state of constant alert (sensory overwhelm, dysregulation, sleepless nights, meltdowns, and the never-ending to-do list), this episode gives you a concrete biochemical map for how to get back to baseline. In today's conversation,I'm joined by Dr. Scott Sherr board certified internal medicine physician, certified practitioner of Health Optimization Medicine, and COO of Troscriptions, a company making physician formulated, precision-dosed buccal troches for focus, stress, sleep, and immune function. We talk about: What is the "sympathetic spiral of doom." What GABA deficiency actually looks like (and why calming down isn't as simple as "go meditate"). Why mitochondrial dysfunction and chronic inflammation show up so strongly in autistic and disabled kids and how supporting cellular energy can actualy reduce hyper-excitability. The real problem with giving kids 10–20 supplements at once. How targeted support can help caregivers feel better now, while they work the longer game of diet, lifestyle, and environment. Links Mentioned Dr. Scott Sherr's clinical practice: https://drscottsherr.com Troscriptions Products: https://troscriptions.com (Please work with a practitioner before using any product with a child.) If you found this episode helpful: Please share it with a caregiver who feels stuck in stress, burnout, or dysregulation. And grab my free guide: Gut Health Toolkit | — | ||||||
| 11/7/25 | ![]() 196 Oxytocin, Autism, and how Autism Research works | In this episode, psychiatrist and researcher Dr. Eric Strobl joins Dr. Vaish Sarathy to talk about a new re-analysis of the SOARS-B trial on oxytocin and autism. While earlier studies found no clear benefit, Dr. Strobl's fine-grained, item-level analysis using machine learning uncovered consistent evidence that oxytocin can enhance social-emotional reciprocity the ability to engage, connect, and respond in social contexts. Together, they discuss: Why most autism drug trials fail to show benefit What "blunt outcome measures" really mean in clinical research How machine learning can extract signal from noise in complex data What oxytocin actually does (and doesn't do) in real life How future studies could use more nuanced, individualized measures Resources and Links Mentioned Study Discussed: Strobl E et al. (2024). "Item-Level Analysis Reveals Oxytocin Improves Social-Emotional Reciprocity in Autism Spectrum Disorder." Preprint Original SOARS-B Trial: Parker KJ et al. (2017). "A Randomized Clinical Trial of Oxytocin in Children and Adolescents with Autism Spectrum Disorder." Journal of the American Medical Association (JAMA Psychiatry) Link Related Reading: Oxytocin and Social Behavior On machine learning in psychiatry: Nature – Machine learning in mental health research Key Takeaways Oxytocin may help but not for everyone. Its most reliable effect seems to be reducing social anxiety and improving comfort in social exchanges. Measurement matters. "Blunt" outcome scales can bury meaningful results under noise. Item-level, data-driven analysis reveals nuance traditional methods miss. Autism heterogeneity is real. The same outward behavior can stem from different root causes - so future trials need precision tools, not averages. Hope through better science. New methods aren't about hype—they're about accuracy, compassion, and smarter research design. About Dr. Eric Strobl Dr. Strobl is a psychiatrist and data scientist at the University of Pittsburgh who develops innovative machine-learning algorithms to uncover hidden structure in medical data. His current work focuses on autism, neurodevelopmental conditions, and the use of AI to improve clinical trial design. About Dr. Vaish Sarathy Dr. Vaish Sarathy is a TEDx speaker, PhD chemist, educator, and mom to a non-speaking autistic teen poet with Down syndrome. She hosts the Non Linear Learning podcast and leads the Non Linear Education course for parents and educators who believe that every brain can learn, given the right way to teach. Stay Connected Instagram: @drvaishsarathy Free Guide: Turn ON Your Child's Learning Switch Join the Non Linear Education Waitlist: Get on the list here → | — | ||||||
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| 10/30/25 | ![]() 195 What's Your Excuse? Lessons on Problem-Solving, Asking for Help, and Doing the Next Thing | This may be the most heartfelt episode I've ever recorded. In this deeply human conversation, Maxwell Ivey: The Blind Blogger, and I talk about what it means to keep moving when life doesn't hand you easy options. Maxwell lost his sight as a child, taught himself to code, built a business, and learned to ask for help without shame. We talk about the quiet power of asking, the courage to act before conditions are perfect, and a rare take on gratitude-not as politeness, but as the willingness to use what's been given. Somewhere along the way, we find ourselves reflecting on The Four Agreements and how "don't take things personally" and "don't make assumptions" become essential mindsets in the world of disability and education. It's unpolished, honest, and full of wisdom that only comes from lived experience. Stay to the end to hear Maxwell sing his original song, Don't Wait on Someday. You can find Maxwell at theblindblogger.net. | — | ||||||
| 10/16/25 | ![]() 194 Every Skill Can Be Built: Inside Non Linear Education with Daria Kotenko | In this special episode, NLE student and mom of a non-speaking speller, Daria Kotenko, interviews me about the ideas behind Non Linear Education: why "readiness" is a myth, how to teach anything through interest and tolerance, and what it really means to assume intelligence aggressively. We talk about the Web vs Bridge model of learning, building sensory capacity, and how parents can make education joyful and age-appropriate in just 10–15 minutes a day. 👉 Join Non Linear Education before doors close (Friday 11:59 PM PT) | — | ||||||
| 10/13/25 | ![]() 193 The Myth of Readiness: Why Waiting Holds Our Kids Back | How long have you been waiting for your child to be ready? Ready to sit still, focus, or "start learning"? In this episode, Dr. Vaish Sarathy dismantles one of the most persistent myths in special education: the idea that readiness must come before learning. Drawing on neuroscience and real-world experience, she explains experience-driven neuroplasticity how the brain builds readiness through meaningful action, not waiting. You'll learn 3 practical ways to start teaching complex ideas right now no perfect calm, no perfect focus required. If you're ready to move from waiting to learning, join Vaish inside Non Linear Education, her signature course for parents and educators teaching advanced academics to every kind of brain. 🔗 www.drvaishsarathy.com/nonlineareducation [LIVE FOR A VERY SHORT TIME] | — | ||||||
| 10/3/25 | ![]() 192 The Cost of Low Expectations (and the #1 Shift to Break Free) | The biggest barrier in your child's education isn't Autism, Down syndrome, or even learning disabilities. It's low expectations. When a 12-year-old is handed board books or toddler math, the hidden message is: "This is all I think you can do." That belief shapes motivation, behavior, trust, and hope for the future. In this episode of Non Linear Learning, Dr. Vaish Sarathy unpacks the true cost of low expectations and shares the #1 shift to break free: speaking to your child with age appropriate language. You'll hear: Why "presuming competence" isn't enough How low expectations create a vicious cycle of poor behavior and lost trust ONE Simple way to change this and expand your child's thought process 👉 Ready to raise the bar? Join Dr. Vaish for her free live webinar on How to Teach your Child ANYTHING!. Save your spot here: www.drvaishsarathy.com/learningskills. | — | ||||||
| 9/30/25 | ![]() 191. When Compliance Fails: Dr. Robin Harwick on Democratic Education for Neurodivergent Teens | In this episode of Non Linear Learning, Dr. Vaish Sarathy speaks with Dr. Robin Harwick, founder of The Pearl Remote Democratic High School, a groundbreaking online school designed for teens who don't fit into traditional education especially autistic, ADHD, and otherwise neurodivergent learners. Together, we explore: Why compliance-based systems harm learning (and why they persist) How democratic education gives back autonomy, voice, and safety What it actually looks like to co-create curriculum with neurodivergent students How to spot when your child's IEP is a red flag, not a lifeline Why some students with PDA or ODD thrive when given real choice Whether you're homeschooling, advocating at an IEP meeting, or simply wondering if there's any alternative to the status quo—this episode will expand your thinking and offer a glimpse into what education could be. 🔗 Learn more about The Pearl: https://thepearlhighschool.org 🧠 Join the limited time free workshop offered by Dr Vaish Sarathy "What if your Autistic child could learn Anything?" https://www.drvaishsarathy.com/learningskills 🎧 Like the show? Leave a rating or review and share this episode with someone who's tired of the compliance trap. | — | ||||||
| 9/11/25 | ![]() 190. Exploring the science of Failure for you and your Autistic learner | In this edition of Non Linear Learning, Dr. Vaish Sarathy and co-host Searmi Park unpack the buzz around "productive failure"and flip it on its head for neurodivergent learners. Inspired by Manu Kapur's work and his recent conversation on 10% Happier, Vaish and Searmi explore when failure can deepen learning, when it harms, and why the word we're actually looking for is exploration, not failure at least for this audience. In this episode Productive failure what we think it means Why we don't "design failure" for autistic students Parents as the ones who "fail productively" Real-life stories A challenge for listeners Key takeaways Exploration > evaluation. Our learners already face constant performance tests; they don't need "engineered" failure. Hold the bar high, detach from outcomes. You can keep rigor and still protect nervous systems. Make the "failure" yours. Parents and educators can iterate on the environment, task, and supports instead of labeling the child. Build a web, not a bridge. Let detours teach the terrain. Resources & Links Book: Productive Failure: Unlocking Deeper Learning Through the Science of Failing by Manu Kapur Podcast that sparked this convo: 10% Happier with Dan Harris "Let's Normalize Failure (The Right Kind) | Manu Kapur." (Spotify) Try this at home (Quarterly Challenge) Pick one stretch experience your child "can't do"—museum hour, library time, a short concert, a new trail, and scaffold it respectfully (sensory-wise, regulation-wise). Debrief afterwards: What worked? What needs one tweak? What surprised you? About your hosts Dr. Vaish Sarathy — TEDx speaker, PhD educator, creator of Non Linear Education, and mom to a non-speaking autistic poet with Down syndrome. Searmi Park — Concertmaster, Eugene Symphony; founder of Autism Mustang Alliance; mom to a non-speaking autistic young adult. Support the show 💌 Get the free guide: Turn ON your child's learning switch 🎓 Join the Non Linear Education waitlist ⭐ If this episode helped, please leave a 5-star review—and if it didn't… maybe skip the review this time 😉 | — | ||||||
| 9/1/25 | ![]() 189. What Dyslexia Research Can Unlock for YOUR Autistic Learner | When we think of dyslexia, most people imagine a reading problem. But the real story is far more complex and non linear - and the lessons from dyslexia research can open new doors for autistic learners (yay!). In this episode, I talk with Russell Van Brocklen, founder of Dyslexia Classes and known as The Dyslexia Professor. Russell shares why dyslexia is less about reading and more about how the brain organizes ideas - and how strategies that work for dyslexic learners may also translate to autistic students who think and learn in unique ways. We explore: Why dyslexia is not just a reading issue but a brain organization issue. How focusing on a child's special interest unlocks motivation and comprehension. Why writing (typing) before reading is the breakthrough many students need. The crossover between dyslexic and autistic learners as specialists, not generalists. And of course, what you can do RIGHT NOW! Listen, I know your autistic child may struggle outside their super special interests - and you may be struggling with how to help them move laterally to a different topic. THIS conversation will give you some ideas to think about. Here's the freebie Russell mentioned in the podcast: https://dyslexiaclasses.com/nonlinearlearning/ You are a non linear parent, and you deserve a non linear path! Next Step: Get on the waitlist for my course, Non Linear Education, where I teach parents how to build advanced, age-appropriate learning for their kids with disabilities. And if you found this episode helpful, please leave a review. Your words may be exactly what another parent needs to discover this podcast and know they're not alone. | — | ||||||
| 8/8/25 | ![]() 188 Rethinking College Readiness: Why Life Skills Aren't Enough for Students with Disabilities | In this episode of Nonlinear Learning, we challenge the conventional path parents often take when preparing children with disabilities for higher education. We discuss why focusing solely on life skills, physical independence, and basic academics can leave students unprepared for the real demands of college. Instead, I outline the true foundation that fosters genuine readiness for higher education and guess what - there is a key factor there - MOTIVATION. How do we build that? Tune in to learn more. You'll discover: Why physical independence, while valuable, doesn't guarantee college readiness. How fluent academic communication—whether through speech, AAC, or spelling-based systems—unlocks learning potential. and more... Links & Resources: Join the waitlist for the Nonlinear Education Learn more about Dr. Vaish Sarathy | — | ||||||
| 7/31/25 | ![]() 187 Not a "Math Person"? That's a Myth - even if your child has Down Syndrome | Why are so many of us terrified of math—but not history, art, or reading? In this episode of Nonlinear Learning, Dr. Vaish Sarathy sits down with Dr. Aditya Nagrath, founder of Elephant Learning, to why math anxiety exists and why it disproportionately affects children with disabilities. Tune in to learn: Why math anxiety shows up earlier and more intensely than other academic anxieties How early gaps in understanding compound into full-blown learning trauma by 3rd grade What the phrase "I'm not a math person" is really masking—and how to dismantle it The problem with waiting until a child is "ready" for math This is for parents burned out by the grind of addition, AND educators trying to find a new way forward ... Key Quotes: "The real problem isn't the math—it's the meaning we've assigned to our struggles with it." — Dr. Aditya Nagrath "There is no diagnosis that disqualifies someone from understanding math. You just have to meet them at their level." — Dr. Vaish Sarathy Resources & Mentions: Learn more about Dr. Nagrath and Elephant Learning: www.elephantlearning.com Listen to Vaish's TEDx talk: "Who Decides How Smart You Are?" https://www.drvaishsarathy.com/ | — | ||||||
| 7/18/25 | ![]() 186 Allowing Imperfection - The Teaching Strategy that leads to the most growth | One of the biggest hurdles in disability education is the Insistence on Completion / Perfection. In this episode, Dr. Vaish Sarathy breaks down the one rule that every parent and educator of disabled children needs to hear: Progress in Learning requires gaps. And refusing to move forward until every milestone is mastered is the fastest route to stagnation. She uses the lens of game theory to map out a "payoff matrix" that compares the risks of moving forward (even when skills are shaky) to the devastating cost of waiting. Spoiler: the risks of progressing are minimal. The potential payoff? Life-changing. You can sign up for the waitlist for Vaish's path breaking course: Non Linear Education here: www.drvaishsarathy.com/nonlineareducation Drop a queestion for Vaish to answer at nonlinearlearningpodcast@gmail.com | — | ||||||
| 7/2/25 | ![]() 185 Ancient Wisdom, Modern Needs - Ayurveda, Regulation & Learning with Anuradha Gupta | I am joined by Ayurvedic practitioner Anuradha Gupta in this episode to look at how Ayurveda can support emotional regulation, and learning of neurodivergent children and their caregivers. We talk about: What doshas and gunas really are, and how they shape your child's emotions, attention, and learning The Ayurvedic principle of chatushpad and why a child's progress is inseparable from a parent's wellbeing Strategies for Vata, Pitta, and Kapha imbalances in autistic and non-speaking children How to regulate when breathwork isn't possible, and why co-regulation matters more than ever Why honoring your child's natural tendencies isn't permissive parenting—it's transformational Learn Sudarshan Kriya (SKY Breath Meditation): https://www.artofliving.org/us-en/sky | — | ||||||
| 6/27/25 | ![]() 184: Gestalt, Scripting, Echolalia and the Speech vs Language problem! | Is your child's speech meaningful? In this unfiltered episode of Non Linear Learning, co-hosts Dr. Vaish Sarathy and Searmi Park talk about the difference between speech and language, and why that may be everything in educating our kids with disabilities. Here's what they talk about: Why scripting and echolalia aren't proof of limited cognition The danger of over-labeling learners as "gestalt processors" How presumed competence starts where speech ends Why academics—not behavior—is the best way to detect intention This is the episode for you if you've ever wondered: Is my child's speech meaningful? How do I know if they understand but can't express it? What should I do when I don't know what's motor, comprehension, or behavior? 👉 If this episode made you think or gave you hope, please leave a review so others can find us. It makes all the difference. | — | ||||||
| 6/20/25 | ![]() 183 When Speech Isn't Language: Understanding the Real Barrier to Communication | Does your child echo everything you say—but struggle to express their own thoughts? In this episode of Non Linear Learning, Dr. Vaish Sarathy tackles one of the most misunderstood differences in developmental education: the gap between speech and language—and why recognizing this difference can completely shift how you teach your autistic child. You'll learn: How speech apraxia and motor planning issues can mask true intelligence Why "presuming competence" often means "presuming apraxia" A powerful mindset shift that could change everything for your child's learning journey Free Resource Download your free guide to Non Linear Learning: www.drvaishsarathy.com/nonlinearlearning Do :) Leave a Review If this episode gave you a new perspective, help us reach more parents and educators by leaving a review wherever you listen. | — | ||||||
| 6/13/25 | ![]() 182 Breath, Burnout, and Beginning Again: Syed Abbas on Meditation, Disability, and Healing | In this deeply honest episode, I talk with Syed Abbas—global meditation teacher, disability advocate, and father—about how a life-altering diagnosis of muscular dystrophy pushed him into the world of breathwork, mindfulness, and inner transformation. We talk about: His journey from depression and chronic medication use to mental clarity and peace What it's like to live with a progressive disability—and find pride and power in it The science and simplicity of breathwork Why caregivers, especially parents of children with disabilities, are stuck in constant fight-or-flight—and what they can actually do about it How just a few deep breaths can shift your nervous system, your energy, and your life 🔗 Resources Mentioned: Learn Sudarshan Kriya (SKY Breath Meditation) Sahaj Samadhi Meditation course info: Sahaj Samadhi 🧪 Studies & Science Behind Breathwork and Pranayama Breath-based meditation can reduce anxiety and enhance well-being: Streeter, C.C., et al. (2020). Effects of Yoga on the Autonomic Nervous System, Gamma-aminobutyric-acid, and Allostasis in Epilepsy, Depression, and Post-traumatic Stress Disorder. Frontiers in Psychiatry, 11: 782. Read the full study on PubMed Central Pranayama improves cardio-respiratory efficiency and endurance in healthy young adults: Satheesh, R., & Bindu, C.B. (2020). Pranayama improves cardio-respiratory efficiency and physical endurance in young healthy volunteers. International Journal of Research in Medical Sciences, 8(7), 2421–2425. Read the full article on MSJOnline.org Pranayama and aerobic exercise enhance heart rate variability and VO₂ max in sedentary middle-aged men: Hariprasad, R., Prabhu, N., & Karishma, S. (2024). Effect of Aerobic Exercise and Pranayama on Heart Rate Variability and Maximal Oxygen Consumption in Sedentary Middle Aged Males. International Journal of Current Medical and Applied Sciences, 42(2), 20–25. Read the full article on IJCMAA | — | ||||||
| 5/28/25 | ![]() 181 Beyond Inclusion: Civil Rights, Communication, and Crip Time with Dr. Edlyn Peña | Access to communication is the first step—what comes after? In this episode of Non Linear Learning, Dr. Vaish Sarathy and Searmi Park sit down with award-winning researcher and advocate Dr. Edlyn Peña to talk about inclusion, spelled communication, and what happens when we stop settling for access and start building actual community. Dr. Peña shares her journey raising her non-speaking son Diego—from fighting for AAC in preschool to full inclusion in high school using a letterboard. She also opens up about her newest venture: the DREAM Community Center, a post-high school model for neurodivergent teens and adults that centers autonomy, learning, and joy. We talk about: Why spelled communication is a civil rights issue The real risks (and rewards) of pushing for inclusion in traditional systems How to navigate accusations of influence—and why "proof" standards for non-speakers are inherently unjust Why college doesn't have to follow a neurotypical timeline The power of "crip time," self-defined success, and post-secondary options beyond degrees This episode is a grounded and generous look at what advocacy looks like in real life—and what happens when parents, educators, and communities believe that communication is non-negotiable. Links + Resources Learn more about the DREAM Center: dreamcommunitycenter.org Leaders Around Me by Edlyn Peña: Amazon link Communication Alternatives in Autism (Edlyn Peña, editor): Amazon link Follow Vaish on Instagram: @drvaishsarathy | — | ||||||
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Chart Positions
4 placements across 4 markets.
Chart Positions
4 placements across 4 markets.
