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    The Guardian

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      How neurodivergent households design ‘a home that knows your brain’

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian • 10 December 2025

    From dark, sound-proofed rooms to clever storage solutions, families with autism and ADHD are finding inspired ways to adjust their environments

    In the middle of Cherie Clonan’s bright Melbourne home sits a room in total darkness, “for our son to retreat to”, she says. “It’s all black in there. You wouldn’t believe it’s the same home!”

    The space, lined with sound-blocking panels, is a sanctuary for her autistic son: a quiet cocoon for decompressing after school. “He loves to go in there to game online with his mates,” Clonan says.

    Diagnosed autistic at 37, Clonan lives in a weatherboard cottage with her husband, Chris, and her two neurodivergent teenagers. Since buying the house five years ago, she has been reshaping it around their needs. “Our family’s split half-half – 50% sensory-seek versus sensory-avoidant,” she says. “I chase light. I love light-filled everything. But my son really is the opposite.”

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    • taghomes taghomes taghomes tagaustralian lifestyle tagaustralian lifestyle tagaustralian lifestyle taglife and style taglife and style taglife and style tagautism tagautism tagautism tagattention deficit hyperactivity disorder tagattention deficit hyperactivity disorder tagattention deficit hyperactivity disorder taginterior design taginterior design taginterior design tagneurodiversity tagneurodiversity tagneurodiversity taglife and style taglife and style taglife and style tagautism tagautism tagautism tagattention deficit hyperactivity disorder tagattention deficit hyperactivity disorder tagattention deficit hyperactivity disorder taginterior design taginterior design taginterior design tagneurodiversity tagneurodiversity tagneurodiversity taghomes taghomes taghomes tagaustralian lifestyle tagaustralian lifestyle tagaustralian lifestyle taglife and style taglife and style taglife and style tagautism tagautism tagautism tagattention deficit hyperactivity disorder tagattention deficit hyperactivity disorder tagattention deficit hyperactivity disorder taginterior design taginterior design taginterior design tagneurodiversity tagneurodiversity tagneurodiversity taghomes taghomes taghomes tagaustralian lifestyle tagaustralian lifestyle tagaustralian lifestyle

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      How neurodivergent households design ‘a home that knows your brain’

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian • 10 December 2025

    From dark, sound-proofed rooms to clever storage solutions, families with autism and ADHD are finding inspired ways to adjust their environments

    In the middle of Cherie Clonan’s bright Melbourne home sits a room in total darkness, “for our son to retreat to”, she says. “It’s all black in there. You wouldn’t believe it’s the same home!”

    The space, lined with sound-blocking panels, is a sanctuary for her autistic son: a quiet cocoon for decompressing after school. “He loves to go in there to game online with his mates,” Clonan says.

    Diagnosed autistic at 37, Clonan lives in a weatherboard cottage with her husband, Chris, and her two neurodivergent teenagers. Since buying the house five years ago, she has been reshaping it around their needs. “Our family’s split half-half – 50% sensory-seek versus sensory-avoidant,” she says. “I chase light. I love light-filled everything. But my son really is the opposite.”

    Continue reading...
    • taghomes taghomes taghomes tagaustralian lifestyle tagaustralian lifestyle tagaustralian lifestyle taglife and style taglife and style taglife and style tagautism tagautism tagautism tagattention deficit hyperactivity disorder tagattention deficit hyperactivity disorder tagattention deficit hyperactivity disorder taginterior design taginterior design taginterior design tagneurodiversity tagneurodiversity tagneurodiversity taghomes taghomes taghomes tagaustralian lifestyle tagaustralian lifestyle tagaustralian lifestyle taglife and style taglife and style taglife and style tagautism tagautism tagautism tagattention deficit hyperactivity disorder tagattention deficit hyperactivity disorder tagattention deficit hyperactivity disorder taginterior design taginterior design taginterior design tagneurodiversity tagneurodiversity tagneurodiversity taglife and style taglife and style taglife and style tagautism tagautism tagautism tagattention deficit hyperactivity disorder tagattention deficit hyperactivity disorder tagattention deficit hyperactivity disorder taginterior design taginterior design taginterior design tagneurodiversity tagneurodiversity tagneurodiversity taghomes taghomes taghomes tagaustralian lifestyle tagaustralian lifestyle tagaustralian lifestyle

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    • chevron_right

      How neurodivergent households design ‘a home that knows your brain’

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian • 10 December 2025

    From dark, sound-proofed rooms to clever storage solutions, families with autism and ADHD are finding inspired ways to adjust their environments

    In the middle of Cherie Clonan’s bright Melbourne home sits a room in total darkness, “for our son to retreat to”, she says. “It’s all black in there. You wouldn’t believe it’s the same home!”

    The space, lined with sound-blocking panels, is a sanctuary for her autistic son: a quiet cocoon for decompressing after school. “He loves to go in there to game online with his mates,” Clonan says.

    Diagnosed autistic at 37, Clonan lives in a weatherboard cottage with her husband, Chris, and her two neurodivergent teenagers. Since buying the house five years ago, she has been reshaping it around their needs. “Our family’s split half-half – 50% sensory-seek versus sensory-avoidant,” she says. “I chase light. I love light-filled everything. But my son really is the opposite.”

    Continue reading...
    • taghomes taghomes taghomes tagaustralian lifestyle tagaustralian lifestyle tagaustralian lifestyle taglife and style taglife and style taglife and style tagautism tagautism tagautism tagattention deficit hyperactivity disorder tagattention deficit hyperactivity disorder tagattention deficit hyperactivity disorder taginterior design taginterior design taginterior design tagneurodiversity tagneurodiversity tagneurodiversity taglife and style taglife and style taglife and style tagautism tagautism tagautism tagattention deficit hyperactivity disorder tagattention deficit hyperactivity disorder tagattention deficit hyperactivity disorder taginterior design taginterior design taginterior design tagneurodiversity tagneurodiversity tagneurodiversity taghomes taghomes taghomes tagaustralian lifestyle tagaustralian lifestyle tagaustralian lifestyle taglife and style taglife and style taglife and style tagautism tagautism tagautism tagattention deficit hyperactivity disorder tagattention deficit hyperactivity disorder tagattention deficit hyperactivity disorder taginterior design taginterior design taginterior design tagneurodiversity tagneurodiversity tagneurodiversity taghomes taghomes taghomes tagaustralian lifestyle tagaustralian lifestyle tagaustralian lifestyle

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