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    <title>socialbias &amp;mdash; mindyourmegan</title>
    <link>https://megan.madamgreen.xyz/tag:socialbias</link>
    <description></description>
    <pubDate>Fri, 08 May 2026 08:50:42 +0000</pubDate>
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      <title>The Unseen Variable: Why Neurodivergent Women Are Still Misread  </title>
      <link>https://megan.madamgreen.xyz/the-unseen-variable-why-neurodivergent-women-are-still-misread?pk_campaign=rss-feed</link>
      <description>&lt;![CDATA[The Unseen Variable: Why Neurodivergent Women Are Still Misread  &#xA;Subtitle: A journalist’s reflection on perception, projection, and power  &#xA;&#xA;Author: Megan A. Green  &#xA;Project: Field Notes – Cognitive Culture Series  &#xA;Date: October 2025  &#xA;&#xA;---&#xA;&#xA;Abstract  &#xA;Neurodivergent women often navigate a paradox of visibility: simultaneously “too much” and “not enough.”  &#xA;They are praised for resilience while punished for the same traits that make resilience necessary.  &#xA;This essay examines the social and cognitive biases that keep neurodivergent competence undervalued, and how those biases distort both data and empathy.&#xA;&#xA;---&#xA;&#xA;The Performance of “Normal”  &#xA;In most workplaces and communities, women who disclose ADHD, autism, or trauma histories are measured against an unspoken behavioral script: calm, compliant, endlessly empathetic.  &#xA;When they diverge — by info-dumping, stimming, pausing, or refusing small talk — the environment frames it as aggression or arrogance.  &#xA;What’s rarely discussed is that neurotypical discomfort masquerades as objectivity. The label “difficult” often just means different pacing.  &#xA;&#xA;---&#xA;&#xA;Emotional Labor in Disguise  &#xA;Many neurodivergent women become experts in emotional triage.  &#xA;They read tone like data, forecast burnout in others, and quietly patch every interpersonal leak in a system that doesn’t notice their maintenance work.  &#xA;Yet the moment they set boundaries, the feedback loop turns: “cold,” “robotic,” “unfeeling.”  &#xA;It’s not lack of compassion; it’s compassion with throughput control.  &#xA;&#xA;---&#xA;&#xA;Cognitive Agility as Competence  &#xA;The capacity to context-switch — between languages, registers, technical fields, or emotional terrains — is often treated as inconsistency rather than skill.  &#xA;Society still values linear specialization over adaptive synthesis, even though survival now depends on synthesis.  &#xA;Neurodivergent women frequently lead in this domain, but their leadership is invisible because it doesn’t resemble hierarchy.  &#xA;&#xA;---&#xA;&#xA;Reframing the Narrative  &#xA;Instead of asking neurodivergent women to mask better, the ethical question should be:  &#xA;  “Why are we still designing cultures that interpret clarity as hostility and boundaries as ego?”  &#xA;&#xA;Until that question becomes standard in HR meetings, classrooms, and family dynamics, every neurodivergent success story remains an act of quiet rebellion.  &#xA;&#xA;---&#xA;&#xA;TL;DR  &#xA;Underestimation isn’t just prejudice; it’s misclassification.  &#xA;Neurodivergent women aren’t unpredictable — they’re operating on richer data sets.  &#xA;The world’s lag in reading that data is its own limitation, not theirs.  &#xA;&#xA;---&#xA;&#xA;Tags  &#xA;#Neurodiversity  #WomenInSTEM  #ADHD  #Autism  #Ethnography  #SocialBias  #CognitiveCulture  #MeganWrites]]&gt;</description>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<h2 id="the-unseen-variable-why-neurodivergent-women-are-still-misread" id="the-unseen-variable-why-neurodivergent-women-are-still-misread">The Unseen Variable: Why Neurodivergent Women Are Still Misread</h2>

<p><strong>Subtitle:</strong> A journalist’s reflection on perception, projection, and power</p>

<p><em>Author:</em> <strong>Megan A. Green</strong><br/>
<em>Project:</em> Field Notes – Cognitive Culture Series<br/>
<em>Date:</em> October 2025</p>

<hr/>

<h3 id="abstract" id="abstract">Abstract</h3>

<p>Neurodivergent women often navigate a paradox of visibility: simultaneously “too much” and “not enough.”<br/>
They are praised for resilience while punished for the same traits that make resilience necessary.<br/>
This essay examines the social and cognitive biases that keep neurodivergent competence undervalued, and how those biases distort both data and empathy.</p>

<hr/>

<h3 id="the-performance-of-normal" id="the-performance-of-normal">The Performance of “Normal”</h3>

<p>In most workplaces and communities, women who disclose ADHD, autism, or trauma histories are measured against an unspoken behavioral script: calm, compliant, endlessly empathetic.<br/>
When they diverge — by info-dumping, stimming, pausing, or refusing small talk — the environment frames it as aggression or arrogance.<br/>
What’s rarely discussed is that neurotypical discomfort masquerades as objectivity. The label “difficult” often just means <em>different pacing</em>.</p>

<hr/>

<h3 id="emotional-labor-in-disguise" id="emotional-labor-in-disguise">Emotional Labor in Disguise</h3>

<p>Many neurodivergent women become experts in emotional triage.<br/>
They read tone like data, forecast burnout in others, and quietly patch every interpersonal leak in a system that doesn’t notice their maintenance work.<br/>
Yet the moment they set boundaries, the feedback loop turns: “cold,” “robotic,” “unfeeling.”<br/>
It’s not lack of compassion; it’s compassion with <em>throughput control</em>.</p>

<hr/>

<h3 id="cognitive-agility-as-competence" id="cognitive-agility-as-competence">Cognitive Agility as Competence</h3>

<p>The capacity to context-switch — between languages, registers, technical fields, or emotional terrains — is often treated as inconsistency rather than skill.<br/>
Society still values linear specialization over adaptive synthesis, even though survival now depends on synthesis.<br/>
Neurodivergent women frequently lead in this domain, but their leadership is invisible because it doesn’t resemble hierarchy.</p>

<hr/>

<h3 id="reframing-the-narrative" id="reframing-the-narrative">Reframing the Narrative</h3>

<p>Instead of asking neurodivergent women to mask better, the ethical question should be:<br/>
&gt; “Why are we still designing cultures that interpret clarity as hostility and boundaries as ego?”</p>

<p>Until that question becomes standard in HR meetings, classrooms, and family dynamics, every neurodivergent success story remains an act of quiet rebellion.</p>

<hr/>

<h3 id="tl-dr" id="tl-dr">TL;DR</h3>

<p>Underestimation isn’t just prejudice; it’s misclassification.<br/>
Neurodivergent women aren’t unpredictable — they’re operating on richer data sets.<br/>
The world’s lag in reading that data is its own limitation, not theirs.</p>

<hr/>

<h4 id="tags" id="tags">Tags</h4>

<p><a href="https://megan.madamgreen.xyz/tag:Neurodiversity" class="hashtag" rel="nofollow"><span>#</span><span class="p-category">Neurodiversity</span></a>  <a href="https://megan.madamgreen.xyz/tag:WomenInSTEM" class="hashtag" rel="nofollow"><span>#</span><span class="p-category">WomenInSTEM</span></a>  <a href="https://megan.madamgreen.xyz/tag:ADHD" class="hashtag" rel="nofollow"><span>#</span><span class="p-category">ADHD</span></a>  <a href="https://megan.madamgreen.xyz/tag:Autism" class="hashtag" rel="nofollow"><span>#</span><span class="p-category">Autism</span></a>  <a href="https://megan.madamgreen.xyz/tag:Ethnography" class="hashtag" rel="nofollow"><span>#</span><span class="p-category">Ethnography</span></a>  <a href="https://megan.madamgreen.xyz/tag:SocialBias" class="hashtag" rel="nofollow"><span>#</span><span class="p-category">SocialBias</span></a>  <a href="https://megan.madamgreen.xyz/tag:CognitiveCulture" class="hashtag" rel="nofollow"><span>#</span><span class="p-category">CognitiveCulture</span></a>  <a href="https://megan.madamgreen.xyz/tag:MeganWrites" class="hashtag" rel="nofollow"><span>#</span><span class="p-category">MeganWrites</span></a></p>
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      <pubDate>Wed, 08 Oct 2025 07:31:20 +0000</pubDate>
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