Upcoming Events
We host events in our local community in partnership with Inclusive Change At Work CIC. Take a look at the list below to find out whats on.
Our online events are designed to inform and educate. We have a range of free and on demand events online.

Our team are experienced speakers and can be booked to educate and entertain at your next event - get in touch to find out how we can help.

16th - Neurodiversity Pride Day 🌈, National events
15th-21st - Learning Disability Week, National events
22nd - Leadership, Neurodiversity & Decision-Making workshop, The Courtyard Hotel, Exeter
All Month - Disability Pride Month 🌈, National events

Lucy Smith joined day one of BSides Bristol as she explored the future of work – spotting red flags, recognising reasonable requests, and reframing adjustments as smart strategies for building high-performing, future-ready cyber teams.
Click on the button below to access Lucy's top ten tips for inclusive recruitment.

From January to March 2025, our sister community interest company, Inclusive Change at Work CIC, hosted transformative workshops to promote understanding and inclusion for neurodivergent individuals and their families.
We gathered at Emersons Green Village Hall for expert-led sessions that offered practical strategies and a welcoming space for learning and growth.
Visit our recap page for more information about the sessions plus useful links and articles.

Throughout 2024 and early 2025, we hosted a series of live webinars and in-person workshops focused on supporting neurodiverse and disabled young people in the workplace. These sessions helped businesses understand the value of neurodivergent talent, while also offering guidance to parents and carers on career opportunities and support for their young adults.
You can catch up on everything via our recap pages - watch the recordings, explore helpful articles, and grab some free resources too.

One of the strongest conversations emerging from our Supporting Parents Lunch and Learn was around something many attendees had never heard named before: the sandwich carer.
The term describes people who are simultaneously caring for children - often neurodivergent young adults - and ageing or unwell relatives, while also trying to sustain a career. It is not a niche experience. And once you start looking for it, you see it everywhere.
People managing school meetings during their lunch break. Hospital calls between back-to-back meetings. Safeguarding concerns that land before 9am. Care coordination that runs late into the evening. Emotional labour that never fully pauses.
Many are exhausted before the working day even begins. And then they show up -reliably, professionally, often without saying a word about what they carried to get there, because the alternative is to lose the income, the structure, or the sense of self that work provides.
Workplaces, meanwhile, still largely operate around assumptions built for a different era, one where caring responsibilities were distributed differently, community support structures were stronger, and awareness of neurodiversity was significantly lower. Modern life looks very different. But many workplace systems have not caught up.
Systems thinking asks us to look below the surface event, the resignation and the absence, and ask: what patterns have been building underneath? For sandwich carers, those patterns are often hiding in plain sight. Consistent turnover among employees in their thirties and forties. Reduced participation in people who used to lead conversations. Repeated short-term absences that HR labels 'unrelated' because nobody has connected the dots.
These are not individual failures. They are systemic signals. And organisations that are not actively looking for them will not find them - not because the data is not there, but because the mental model ('this is a personal matter') stops people asking the right questions.
Burnout in sandwich carers can present as disengagement, reduced confidence, or withdrawal. Organisations misread these as performance issues because the mental model ('caring is private') prevents them from seeing the real pattern underneath.
Burnout in sandwich carers can present in ways that organisations routinely misinterpret. Reduced confidence. Emotional fatigue. Withdrawal from conversations they used to lead. Lower participation. Forgetfulness in people who are usually sharp.
Underneath that may simply be sustained overload. Not lack of ambition. Not disengagement. Not a performance issue. Just human limits, reached quietly over time. The risk of misreading this is significant. Organisations that respond with performance management processes, or that frame the issue as a personal resilience problem, often accelerate exit. They lose highly skilled, deeply experienced people - not because those people could not do the job, but because the system around them was not designed for the life they were actually living.
The future of work conversation in most boardrooms focuses on AI, digital transformation, automation, and productivity. These are genuinely important. But one of the most significant strategic questions organisations face is quieter and more human:
"Can human beings sustainably continue operating inside the systems we are building?"
The UK's working carer population is substantial and growing. The combination of rising neurodivergence identification, an ageing population, reduced public sector capacity, and stagnant wage growth is creating a convergence that employers are only beginning to reckon with. Organisations that recognise this now and build structures that reflect it, will be better placed to retain the people they need.
This is not simply compassionate leadership, though compassionate leadership matters. Supporting sandwich carers is a workforce sustainability issue. The people navigating these pressures are often the most resilient, most adaptable, most experienced members of a team. They have had to become excellent at problem-solving, at managing complexity, at holding multiple things at once. Those are not small skills.
The question is whether workplaces are designed to retain them, or whether they quietly push them out and then wonder where all their institutional knowledge went.
P.S.
If your organisation is starting to have these conversations — or needs help knowing where to begin — Inclusive Change offers consultancy, training, and mentoring specifically designed for organisations navigating neurodiversity, caring responsibilities, and sustainable workforce design. Get in touch at [email protected].

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