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Got some chickens incubating for the first time! I’m excited to meet these lil babies.

#chicks #eggs #incubation

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Space Bic - official announcement of the selected teams
Space Bic - official announcement of the selected teams 🚀 A milestone moment for the Space BIC by ERATOSTHENES CoE We were thrilled to witness the official announcement of the selected teams of the Space BIC by ERATOSTHENES CoE! The event brought together passionate innovators, industry leaders, and ecosystem partners, fostering inspiring conversations and collaborations. A big thank you to everyone who joined and supported this exciting journey. Here's to shaping the future of space innovation! 📺 Catch the coverage on CyBC. #SpaceInnovation #Startups #Incubation #Ecosystem #ERATOSTHENESCoE

🚀 We were thrilled to witness the official announcement of the selected teams of the Space BIC by ERATOSTHENES CoE!
📺 Catch the coverage on CyBC and here: youtu.be/OZOxAs4f9Kc

#SpaceInnovation #Startups #Incubation #Ecosystem #ERATOSTHENESCoE

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🇬🇧 This is the story of a licence that shifts from strategy to tactics for no apparent reason, and from semi-realistic to 100% Xenomorph/Starship Troopers/Tyranids. But it's good, honest!

www.nostalgic-bumblebee.com/en/flippant-...

#retrogaming #nostalgicbumblebee #bluebyte #incubation #pc

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🇫🇷 C’est l’histoire d’une licence qui passe sans raison du jeu de stratégie à la tactique, et du semi-réaliste au 100% Xénomorphe / Starship Troopers / Tyranides. Mais c’est bien, hein, promis !

www.nostalgic-bumblebee.com/flippant-7-s...

#retrogaming #nostalgicbumblebee #bluebyte #incubation #pc

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Hoy cerramos una etapa 🚀
Finaliza la 5ª edición del programa de preincubación Level Up 2025.
Gracias a todos los equipos que han sido parte de esta familia. Podréis conocer sus proyectos en los próximos Pitch & Match, Testing Day y futuros eventos. ¡Un gran saludo!

#gamedev #incubation

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Parental age, #inbreeding and #incubation method influence extremely low #hatching success in the ex-situ population of the Extinct-in-the-Wild #Sihek / Guam kingfisher - #OpenAccess zslpublications.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/... #captivebreeding #hatchingfailure @wileyecology.bsky.social

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Cover depicting a rock partridge pair.  Photo credit: Jean Guillet.

Cover depicting a rock partridge pair. Photo credit: Jean Guillet.

Fig. 2 from the article: Sex-specific distribution of incubation rhythm components in rock partridges, based on data collected in the French Alps study area from 2011 to 2020.

Fig. 2 from the article: Sex-specific distribution of incubation rhythm components in rock partridges, based on data collected in the French Alps study area from 2011 to 2020.

Fig. 3 from the article: Model predictions of incubation rhythm response variables in rock partridges as a function of minimum temperature (°C), incubation day, and recess rank, using data from the French Alps (2011–2020).

Fig. 3 from the article: Model predictions of incubation rhythm response variables in rock partridges as a function of minimum temperature (°C), incubation day, and recess rank, using data from the French Alps (2011–2020).

NEW PAPER: male and female rock partridges incubating separate clutches display similar incubation rhythms, recess patterns, and temperature responses, suggesting shared strategies despite sex-specific incubation roles.

➡️ vist.ly/4nkay

📷 Jean Guillet

#ornithology #birds #incubation 🪶

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Master Torchlight: infinite SS11 Vorax with Erika grafting, Tank presets, and Core Organ tactics. Read: haplogamingchef.blogspot.com/2026/01/torc...

#TorchlightInfinite #TLI #Vorax #SS11 #ARPG #Loot #Grafting #Incubation #Gaming #Erika

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The 6888 Kitchen Incubator launches final phase of $6M project to scale local culinary startups - Dayton Business Journal A startup space in the historic Dayton Arcade is nearing the final phase of its $6 million expansion plans. #Dayton #startup #entrepreneur

#food #incubation
#foodincubator #daytona www.bizjournals.com/dayton/news/...

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UST–IITM Incubation Cell deep tech MoU 🎊 Incubators this week The partnership between UST and IIT Madras Incubation Cell aims to revolutionize India's healthcare through "Life Sciences 4.0." By connecting academic research with market needs, they empower startups like Nucleo-Vir Therapeutics. This collaboration also fosters deep tech ventures, enhancing opportunities for medical innovation and making advanced diagnostics accessible worldwide.

UST–IITM Incubation Cell deep tech MoU 🎊 Incubators this week

#art #Blogging #DeepTech #UST #incubation

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#oviposition #egg_laying #interspecies #breeding #teratophilia #tentacles #birth #alien_abduction #incubation #pregnancy #gestation #monster #monster_breeder #heavy_breasts #pubic_hair #inflation #slime_monster #tentacle_monster #human_incubator

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#philosophy #incubation #books #ecology #lifepath #pollenpath #ecologicalidentity #incubation #spirituality

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#alien_abduction #sci_fi #incubation #pregnancy #gestation #oviposition #egg_laying #teratophilia #double_penetration #oral #BDSM #alien_experimentation #breeder #interspecies #monsterfucker #monsterlover #monster #tentacles #inflation #alien_breeder #slime

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Shaping Corporate Accelerator Research ‘This book doesn’t just inform - it inspires. A timely agenda-setter for future research on corporate accelerators.’ – Dominik K. Kanbach, HHL Leipzig Graduate School of Management, Germany

📚 NEW
Shaping Corporate Accelerator Research
Raj Krishnan Shankar, Great Lakes Institute of Management, India
ℹ️ tinyurl.com/3rvpa2an
👓 Sample doi.org/10.4337/9781...
📲eBook tinyurl.com/33rbxcy8
#CorporateAccelerator #StartUp #Acceleration #Incubation #Entrepreneurship #CorporateEntrepreneurship

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Baby giant tortoises thrive in Seychelles after first successful artificial incubation Exclusive: Trial that has produced 13 hatchlings could help other threatened species avoid extinction

#Seychelles: The slow-motion pitter-patter of tiny giant #tortoise feet has been worryingly rare in recent years, but that looks set to change thanks to the first successful hatching of the species with artificial #incubation.

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#OET_highlight Femtosecond laser micro/nano-processing via multiple pulses incubation doi.org/10.29026/oet... by Prof. #Lingfei_Ji @BIT1940 #Minghui_Hong @xmuchina #high_repetition_rate #femtosecond #laser
#multiple_pulses #Incubation #micro #nano #processing

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#hardass #hotass #sn2sg #sun8ms #sun8 #cartoon #funny #motherhood #sunnight #donkey #2D #sunnightmusic #animation #hen #sun8pop #sunnightblues #kissesweresmooth #sun8blues #sunnightpop #bluesrock #hotchick #hatch #eggs #brood #nest #QuackQuack #goodvibe #incubation #heat #butt #mission #lovinglife

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Baby giant tortoises thrive in Seychelles after first successful artificial incubation Exclusive: Trial that has produced 13 hatchlings could help other threatened species avoid extinction

17/10/2025

Something to read: 'Baby giant tortoises thrive in Seychelles after first successful artificial incubation' by Jonathan Watts

Link: www.theguardian.com/environment/...

#rewilding #read #Seychelles #sciencesky #conservation #giant #tortoises #forest #naturesky #innovation #incubation

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Autistic Inertia and Safety > Inertia isn’t just about initiation. It’s about transitions - between doing and not doing, between attention and rest, between safety and vulnerability. > That’s why advice like “just start” doesn’t work. Starting isn’t neutral. For an autistic bodymind, every action carries sensory, emotional, and relational implications. What feels like a simple task to someone else can involve dozens of micro-transitions for us. Each one requires regulation. Each one carries risk. When we don’t feel safe enough to make those transitions, we don’t move. Not because we don’t want to, but because the cost is too high. > Another strategy is body doubling. Being with someone else - even quietly on video - can help regulate your nervous system enough to start. It’s not about accountability. It’s about co-regulation. Many of us can’t move alone, but we can move beside another safe person. This is also why community matters so deeply for autistic humans. Regulation is relational. When we are isolated, inertia grows. When we are witnessed, safety returns. > Momentum needs care too. If you know that once you start you won’t be able to stop, build your stopping point in advance. Create a ritual for ending - a reminder, a cue, a soft boundary that helps your body trust that it can move again later. Movement without boundaries leads to exhaustion. Stopping without ritual leads to collapse. Both are parts of inertia. > Managing inertia also means understanding your rhythms. Autistic energy isn’t linear. It doesn’t refill on a schedule. It ebbs and flows according to sensory input, emotional regulation, and relational safety. You can’t force it into a productivity framework without harming yourself. Listen to your tides. Notice what times of day, environments, and emotional states allow movement, and which don’t. You aren’t lazy for needing more time. You’re honoring a bodymind that runs on a different current. > When I work with clients, I talk about compassionate timing. It’s the practice of honoring when your system is ready, without shaming when it isn’t. Sometimes what looks like procrastination is actually incubation. Your nervous system is gathering enough safety to begin. Other times, readiness never comes, and that’s information too. It may mean that the task is misaligned with your needs or values. Compassionate timing is not waiting for ideal conditions. It’s acting from regulation, not from panic or guilt. > The world we live in punishes stillness and glorifies speed. Capitalism measures worth through output. When you live inside that system, being slow or paused feels dangerous. That’s why so many autistic humans internalize shame around inertia. We’ve been taught that our natural pace is wrong. But our pace isn’t the problem - the system is. Autistic time isn’t measured by efficiency. It’s measured by authenticity, safety, and sustainability. > Managing inertia isn’t about becoming more productive. It’s about restoring choice. When you can move or not move without fear, that’s regulation. When you can stop without collapsing, and start without panic, that’s recovery. That’s what we mean when we talk about living a sustainable autistic life.
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Autistic Inertia and Safety > Inertia isn’t just about initiation. It’s about transitions - between doing and not doing, between attention and rest, between safety and vulnerability. > That’s why advice like “just start” doesn’t work. Starting isn’t neutral. For an autistic bodymind, every action carries sensory, emotional, and relational implications. What feels like a simple task to someone else can involve dozens of micro-transitions for us. Each one requires regulation. Each one carries risk. When we don’t feel safe enough to make those transitions, we don’t move. Not because we don’t want to, but because the cost is too high. > Another strategy is body doubling. Being with someone else - even quietly on video - can help regulate your nervous system enough to start. It’s not about accountability. It’s about co-regulation. Many of us can’t move alone, but we can move beside another safe person. This is also why community matters so deeply for autistic humans. Regulation is relational. When we are isolated, inertia grows. When we are witnessed, safety returns. > Momentum needs care too. If you know that once you start you won’t be able to stop, build your stopping point in advance. Create a ritual for ending - a reminder, a cue, a soft boundary that helps your body trust that it can move again later. Movement without boundaries leads to exhaustion. Stopping without ritual leads to collapse. Both are parts of inertia. > Managing inertia also means understanding your rhythms. Autistic energy isn’t linear. It doesn’t refill on a schedule. It ebbs and flows according to sensory input, emotional regulation, and relational safety. You can’t force it into a productivity framework without harming yourself. Listen to your tides. Notice what times of day, environments, and emotional states allow movement, and which don’t. You aren’t lazy for needing more time. You’re honoring a bodymind that runs on a different current. > When I work with clients, I talk about compassionate timing. It’s the practice of honoring when your system is ready, without shaming when it isn’t. Sometimes what looks like procrastination is actually incubation. Your nervous system is gathering enough safety to begin. Other times, readiness never comes, and that’s information too. It may mean that the task is misaligned with your needs or values. Compassionate timing is not waiting for ideal conditions. It’s acting from regulation, not from panic or guilt. > The world we live in punishes stillness and glorifies speed. Capitalism measures worth through output. When you live inside that system, being slow or paused feels dangerous. That’s why so many autistic humans internalize shame around inertia. We’ve been taught that our natural pace is wrong. But our pace isn’t the problem - the system is. Autistic time isn’t measured by efficiency. It’s measured by authenticity, safety, and sustainability. > Managing inertia isn’t about becoming more productive. It’s about restoring choice. When you can move or not move without fear, that’s regulation. When you can stop without collapsing, and start without panic, that’s recovery. That’s what we mean when we talk about living a sustainable autistic life.
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Autistic Inertia and Safety > Inertia isn’t just about initiation. It’s about transitions - between doing and not doing, between attention and rest, between safety and vulnerability. > That’s why advice like “just start” doesn’t work. Starting isn’t neutral. For an autistic bodymind, every action carries sensory, emotional, and relational implications. What feels like a simple task to someone else can involve dozens of micro-transitions for us. Each one requires regulation. Each one carries risk. When we don’t feel safe enough to make those transitions, we don’t move. Not because we don’t want to, but because the cost is too high. > Another strategy is body doubling. Being with someone else - even quietly on video - can help regulate your nervous system enough to start. It’s not about accountability. It’s about co-regulation. Many of us can’t move alone, but we can move beside another safe person. This is also why community matters so deeply for autistic humans. Regulation is relational. When we are isolated, inertia grows. When we are witnessed, safety returns. > Momentum needs care too. If you know that once you start you won’t be able to stop, build your stopping point in advance. Create a ritual for ending - a reminder, a cue, a soft boundary that helps your body trust that it can move again later. Movement without boundaries leads to exhaustion. Stopping without ritual leads to collapse. Both are parts of inertia. > Managing inertia also means understanding your rhythms. Autistic energy isn’t linear. It doesn’t refill on a schedule. It ebbs and flows according to sensory input, emotional regulation, and relational safety. You can’t force it into a productivity framework without harming yourself. Listen to your tides. Notice what times of day, environments, and emotional states allow movement, and which don’t. You aren’t lazy for needing more time. You’re honoring a bodymind that runs on a different current. > When I work with clients, I talk about compassionate timing. It’s the practice of honoring when your system is ready, without shaming when it isn’t. Sometimes what looks like procrastination is actually incubation. Your nervous system is gathering enough safety to begin. Other times, readiness never comes, and that’s information too. It may mean that the task is misaligned with your needs or values. Compassionate timing is not waiting for ideal conditions. It’s acting from regulation, not from panic or guilt. > The world we live in punishes stillness and glorifies speed. Capitalism measures worth through output. When you live inside that system, being slow or paused feels dangerous. That’s why so many autistic humans internalize shame around inertia. We’ve been taught that our natural pace is wrong. But our pace isn’t the problem - the system is. Autistic time isn’t measured by efficiency. It’s measured by authenticity, safety, and sustainability. > Managing inertia isn’t about becoming more productive. It’s about restoring choice. When you can move or not move without fear, that’s regulation. When you can stop without collapsing, and start without panic, that’s recovery. That’s what we mean when we talk about living a sustainable autistic life.
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Autistic Inertia and Safety > Inertia isn’t just about initiation. It’s about transitions - between doing and not doing, between attention and rest, between safety and vulnerability. > That’s why advice like “just start” doesn’t work. Starting isn’t neutral. For an autistic bodymind, every action carries sensory, emotional, and relational implications. What feels like a simple task to someone else can involve dozens of micro-transitions for us. Each one requires regulation. Each one carries risk. When we don’t feel safe enough to make those transitions, we don’t move. Not because we don’t want to, but because the cost is too high. > Another strategy is body doubling. Being with someone else - even quietly on video - can help regulate your nervous system enough to start. It’s not about accountability. It’s about co-regulation. Many of us can’t move alone, but we can move beside another safe person. This is also why community matters so deeply for autistic humans. Regulation is relational. When we are isolated, inertia grows. When we are witnessed, safety returns. > Momentum needs care too. If you know that once you start you won’t be able to stop, build your stopping point in advance. Create a ritual for ending - a reminder, a cue, a soft boundary that helps your body trust that it can move again later. Movement without boundaries leads to exhaustion. Stopping without ritual leads to collapse. Both are parts of inertia. > Managing inertia also means understanding your rhythms. Autistic energy isn’t linear. It doesn’t refill on a schedule. It ebbs and flows according to sensory input, emotional regulation, and relational safety. You can’t force it into a productivity framework without harming yourself. Listen to your tides. Notice what times of day, environments, and emotional states allow movement, and which don’t. You aren’t lazy for needing more time. You’re honoring a bodymind that runs on a different current. > When I work with clients, I talk about compassionate timing. It’s the practice of honoring when your system is ready, without shaming when it isn’t. Sometimes what looks like procrastination is actually incubation. Your nervous system is gathering enough safety to begin. Other times, readiness never comes, and that’s information too. It may mean that the task is misaligned with your needs or values. Compassionate timing is not waiting for ideal conditions. It’s acting from regulation, not from panic or guilt. > The world we live in punishes stillness and glorifies speed. Capitalism measures worth through output. When you live inside that system, being slow or paused feels dangerous. That’s why so many autistic humans internalize shame around inertia. We’ve been taught that our natural pace is wrong. But our pace isn’t the problem - the system is. Autistic time isn’t measured by efficiency. It’s measured by authenticity, safety, and sustainability. > Managing inertia isn’t about becoming more productive. It’s about restoring choice. When you can move or not move without fear, that’s regulation. When you can stop without collapsing, and start without panic, that’s recovery. That’s what we mean when we talk about living a sustainable autistic life.
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Autistic Inertia and Safety > Inertia isn’t just about initiation. It’s about transitions - between doing and not doing, between attention and rest, between safety and vulnerability. > That’s why advice like “just start” doesn’t work. Starting isn’t neutral. For an autistic bodymind, every action carries sensory, emotional, and relational implications. What feels like a simple task to someone else can involve dozens of micro-transitions for us. Each one requires regulation. Each one carries risk. When we don’t feel safe enough to make those transitions, we don’t move. Not because we don’t want to, but because the cost is too high. > Another strategy is body doubling. Being with someone else - even quietly on video - can help regulate your nervous system enough to start. It’s not about accountability. It’s about co-regulation. Many of us can’t move alone, but we can move beside another safe person. This is also why community matters so deeply for autistic humans. Regulation is relational. When we are isolated, inertia grows. When we are witnessed, safety returns. > Momentum needs care too. If you know that once you start you won’t be able to stop, build your stopping point in advance. Create a ritual for ending - a reminder, a cue, a soft boundary that helps your body trust that it can move again later. Movement without boundaries leads to exhaustion. Stopping without ritual leads to collapse. Both are parts of inertia. > Managing inertia also means understanding your rhythms. Autistic energy isn’t linear. It doesn’t refill on a schedule. It ebbs and flows according to sensory input, emotional regulation, and relational safety. You can’t force it into a productivity framework without harming yourself. Listen to your tides. Notice what times of day, environments, and emotional states allow movement, and which don’t. You aren’t lazy for needing more time. You’re honoring a bodymind that runs on a different current. > When I work with clients, I talk about compassionate timing. It’s the practice of honoring when your system is ready, without shaming when it isn’t. Sometimes what looks like procrastination is actually incubation. Your nervous system is gathering enough safety to begin. Other times, readiness never comes, and that’s information too. It may mean that the task is misaligned with your needs or values. Compassionate timing is not waiting for ideal conditions. It’s acting from regulation, not from panic or guilt. > The world we live in punishes stillness and glorifies speed. Capitalism measures worth through output. When you live inside that system, being slow or paused feels dangerous. That’s why so many autistic humans internalize shame around inertia. We’ve been taught that our natural pace is wrong. But our pace isn’t the problem - the system is. Autistic time isn’t measured by efficiency. It’s measured by authenticity, safety, and sustainability. > Managing inertia isn’t about becoming more productive. It’s about restoring choice. When you can move or not move without fear, that’s regulation. When you can stop without collapsing, and start without panic, that’s recovery. That’s what we mean when we talk about living a sustainable autistic life.
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Autistic Inertia and Safety > Inertia isn’t just about initiation. It’s about transitions - between doing and not doing, between attention and rest, between safety and vulnerability. > That’s why advice like “just start” doesn’t work. Starting isn’t neutral. For an autistic bodymind, every action carries sensory, emotional, and relational implications. What feels like a simple task to someone else can involve dozens of micro-transitions for us. Each one requires regulation. Each one carries risk. When we don’t feel safe enough to make those transitions, we don’t move. Not because we don’t want to, but because the cost is too high. > Another strategy is body doubling. Being with someone else - even quietly on video - can help regulate your nervous system enough to start. It’s not about accountability. It’s about co-regulation. Many of us can’t move alone, but we can move beside another safe person. This is also why community matters so deeply for autistic humans. Regulation is relational. When we are isolated, inertia grows. When we are witnessed, safety returns. > Momentum needs care too. If you know that once you start you won’t be able to stop, build your stopping point in advance. Create a ritual for ending - a reminder, a cue, a soft boundary that helps your body trust that it can move again later. Movement without boundaries leads to exhaustion. Stopping without ritual leads to collapse. Both are parts of inertia. > Managing inertia also means understanding your rhythms. Autistic energy isn’t linear. It doesn’t refill on a schedule. It ebbs and flows according to sensory input, emotional regulation, and relational safety. You can’t force it into a productivity framework without harming yourself. Listen to your tides. Notice what times of day, environments, and emotional states allow movement, and which don’t. You aren’t lazy for needing more time. You’re honoring a bodymind that runs on a different current. > When I work with clients, I talk about compassionate timing. It’s the practice of honoring when your system is ready, without shaming when it isn’t. Sometimes what looks like procrastination is actually incubation. Your nervous system is gathering enough safety to begin. Other times, readiness never comes, and that’s information too. It may mean that the task is misaligned with your needs or values. Compassionate timing is not waiting for ideal conditions. It’s acting from regulation, not from panic or guilt. > The world we live in punishes stillness and glorifies speed. Capitalism measures worth through output. When you live inside that system, being slow or paused feels dangerous. That’s why so many autistic humans internalize shame around inertia. We’ve been taught that our natural pace is wrong. But our pace isn’t the problem - the system is. Autistic time isn’t measured by efficiency. It’s measured by authenticity, safety, and sustainability. > Managing inertia isn’t about becoming more productive. It’s about restoring choice. When you can move or not move without fear, that’s regulation. When you can stop without collapsing, and start without panic, that’s recovery. That’s what we mean when we talk about living a sustainable autistic life.
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Autistic Inertia and Safety > Inertia isn’t just about initiation. It’s about transitions - between doing and not doing, between attention and rest, between safety and vulnerability. > That’s why advice like “just start” doesn’t work. Starting isn’t neutral. For an autistic bodymind, every action carries sensory, emotional, and relational implications. What feels like a simple task to someone else can involve dozens of micro-transitions for us. Each one requires regulation. Each one carries risk. When we don’t feel safe enough to make those transitions, we don’t move. Not because we don’t want to, but because the cost is too high. > Another strategy is body doubling. Being with someone else - even quietly on video - can help regulate your nervous system enough to start. It’s not about accountability. It’s about co-regulation. Many of us can’t move alone, but we can move beside another safe person. This is also why community matters so deeply for autistic humans. Regulation is relational. When we are isolated, inertia grows. When we are witnessed, safety returns. > Momentum needs care too. If you know that once you start you won’t be able to stop, build your stopping point in advance. Create a ritual for ending - a reminder, a cue, a soft boundary that helps your body trust that it can move again later. Movement without boundaries leads to exhaustion. Stopping without ritual leads to collapse. Both are parts of inertia. > Managing inertia also means understanding your rhythms. Autistic energy isn’t linear. It doesn’t refill on a schedule. It ebbs and flows according to sensory input, emotional regulation, and relational safety. You can’t force it into a productivity framework without harming yourself. Listen to your tides. Notice what times of day, environments, and emotional states allow movement, and which don’t. You aren’t lazy for needing more time. You’re honoring a bodymind that runs on a different current. > When I work with clients, I talk about compassionate timing. It’s the practice of honoring when your system is ready, without shaming when it isn’t. Sometimes what looks like procrastination is actually incubation. Your nervous system is gathering enough safety to begin. Other times, readiness never comes, and that’s information too. It may mean that the task is misaligned with your needs or values. Compassionate timing is not waiting for ideal conditions. It’s acting from regulation, not from panic or guilt. > The world we live in punishes stillness and glorifies speed. Capitalism measures worth through output. When you live inside that system, being slow or paused feels dangerous. That’s why so many autistic humans internalize shame around inertia. We’ve been taught that our natural pace is wrong. But our pace isn’t the problem - the system is. Autistic time isn’t measured by efficiency. It’s measured by authenticity, safety, and sustainability. > Managing inertia isn’t about becoming more productive. It’s about restoring choice. When you can move or not move without fear, that’s regulation. When you can stop without collapsing, and start without panic, that’s recovery. That’s what we mean when we talk about living a sustainable autistic life.
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Autistic Inertia and Safety > Inertia isn’t just about initiation. It’s about transitions - between doing and not doing, between attention and rest, between safety and vulnerability. > That’s why advice like “just start” doesn’t work. Starting isn’t neutral. For an autistic bodymind, every action carries sensory, emotional, and relational implications. What feels like a simple task to someone else can involve dozens of micro-transitions for us. Each one requires regulation. Each one carries risk. When we don’t feel safe enough to make those transitions, we don’t move. Not because we don’t want to, but because the cost is too high. > Another strategy is body doubling. Being with someone else - even quietly on video - can help regulate your nervous system enough to start. It’s not about accountability. It’s about co-regulation. Many of us can’t move alone, but we can move beside another safe person. This is also why community matters so deeply for autistic humans. Regulation is relational. When we are isolated, inertia grows. When we are witnessed, safety returns. > Momentum needs care too. If you know that once you start you won’t be able to stop, build your stopping point in advance. Create a ritual for ending - a reminder, a cue, a soft boundary that helps your body trust that it can move again later. Movement without boundaries leads to exhaustion. Stopping without ritual leads to collapse. Both are parts of inertia. > Managing inertia also means understanding your rhythms. Autistic energy isn’t linear. It doesn’t refill on a schedule. It ebbs and flows according to sensory input, emotional regulation, and relational safety. You can’t force it into a productivity framework without harming yourself. Listen to your tides. Notice what times of day, environments, and emotional states allow movement, and which don’t. You aren’t lazy for needing more time. You’re honoring a bodymind that runs on a different current. > When I work with clients, I talk about compassionate timing. It’s the practice of honoring when your system is ready, without shaming when it isn’t. Sometimes what looks like procrastination is actually incubation. Your nervous system is gathering enough safety to begin. Other times, readiness never comes, and that’s information too. It may mean that the task is misaligned with your needs or values. Compassionate timing is not waiting for ideal conditions. It’s acting from regulation, not from panic or guilt. > The world we live in punishes stillness and glorifies speed. Capitalism measures worth through output. When you live inside that system, being slow or paused feels dangerous. That’s why so many autistic humans internalize shame around inertia. We’ve been taught that our natural pace is wrong. But our pace isn’t the problem - the system is. Autistic time isn’t measured by efficiency. It’s measured by authenticity, safety, and sustainability. > Managing inertia isn’t about becoming more productive. It’s about restoring choice. When you can move or not move without fear, that’s regulation. When you can stop without collapsing, and start without panic, that’s recovery. That’s what we mean when we talk about living a sustainable autistic life.
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Autistic Inertia and Safety > Inertia isn’t just about initiation. It’s about transitions - between doing and not doing, between attention and rest, between safety and vulnerability. > That’s why advice like “just start” doesn’t work. Starting isn’t neutral. For an autistic bodymind, every action carries sensory, emotional, and relational implications. What feels like a simple task to someone else can involve dozens of micro-transitions for us. Each one requires regulation. Each one carries risk. When we don’t feel safe enough to make those transitions, we don’t move. Not because we don’t want to, but because the cost is too high. > Another strategy is body doubling. Being with someone else - even quietly on video - can help regulate your nervous system enough to start. It’s not about accountability. It’s about co-regulation. Many of us can’t move alone, but we can move beside another safe person. This is also why community matters so deeply for autistic humans. Regulation is relational. When we are isolated, inertia grows. When we are witnessed, safety returns. > Momentum needs care too. If you know that once you start you won’t be able to stop, build your stopping point in advance. Create a ritual for ending - a reminder, a cue, a soft boundary that helps your body trust that it can move again later. Movement without boundaries leads to exhaustion. Stopping without ritual leads to collapse. Both are parts of inertia. > Managing inertia also means understanding your rhythms. Autistic energy isn’t linear. It doesn’t refill on a schedule. It ebbs and flows according to sensory input, emotional regulation, and relational safety. You can’t force it into a productivity framework without harming yourself. Listen to your tides. Notice what times of day, environments, and emotional states allow movement, and which don’t. You aren’t lazy for needing more time. You’re honoring a bodymind that runs on a different current. > When I work with clients, I talk about compassionate timing. It’s the practice of honoring when your system is ready, without shaming when it isn’t. Sometimes what looks like procrastination is actually incubation. Your nervous system is gathering enough safety to begin. Other times, readiness never comes, and that’s information too. It may mean that the task is misaligned with your needs or values. Compassionate timing is not waiting for ideal conditions. It’s acting from regulation, not from panic or guilt. > The world we live in punishes stillness and glorifies speed. Capitalism measures worth through output. When you live inside that system, being slow or paused feels dangerous. That’s why so many autistic humans internalize shame around inertia. We’ve been taught that our natural pace is wrong. But our pace isn’t the problem - the system is. Autistic time isn’t measured by efficiency. It’s measured by authenticity, safety, and sustainability. > Managing inertia isn’t about becoming more productive. It’s about restoring choice. When you can move or not move without fear, that’s regulation. When you can stop without collapsing, and start without panic, that’s recovery. That’s what we mean when we talk about living a sustainable autistic life.
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Autistic Inertia and Safety > Inertia isn’t just about initiation. It’s about transitions - between doing and not doing, between attention and rest, between safety and vulnerability. > That’s why advice like “just start” doesn’t work. Starting isn’t neutral. For an autistic bodymind, every action carries sensory, emotional, and relational implications. What feels like a simple task to someone else can involve dozens of micro-transitions for us. Each one requires regulation. Each one carries risk. When we don’t feel safe enough to make those transitions, we don’t move. Not because we don’t want to, but because the cost is too high. > Another strategy is body doubling. Being with someone else - even quietly on video - can help regulate your nervous system enough to start. It’s not about accountability. It’s about co-regulation. Many of us can’t move alone, but we can move beside another safe person. This is also why community matters so deeply for autistic humans. Regulation is relational. When we are isolated, inertia grows. When we are witnessed, safety returns. > Momentum needs care too. If you know that once you start you won’t be able to stop, build your stopping point in advance. Create a ritual for ending - a reminder, a cue, a soft boundary that helps your body trust that it can move again later. Movement without boundaries leads to exhaustion. Stopping without ritual leads to collapse. Both are parts of inertia. > Managing inertia also means understanding your rhythms. Autistic energy isn’t linear. It doesn’t refill on a schedule. It ebbs and flows according to sensory input, emotional regulation, and relational safety. You can’t force it into a productivity framework without harming yourself. Listen to your tides. Notice what times of day, environments, and emotional states allow movement, and which don’t. You aren’t lazy for needing more time. You’re honoring a bodymind that runs on a different current. > When I work with clients, I talk about compassionate timing. It’s the practice of honoring when your system is ready, without shaming when it isn’t. Sometimes what looks like procrastination is actually incubation. Your nervous system is gathering enough safety to begin. Other times, readiness never comes, and that’s information too. It may mean that the task is misaligned with your needs or values. Compassionate timing is not waiting for ideal conditions. It’s acting from regulation, not from panic or guilt. > The world we live in punishes stillness and glorifies speed. Capitalism measures worth through output. When you live inside that system, being slow or paused feels dangerous. That’s why so many autistic humans internalize shame around inertia. We’ve been taught that our natural pace is wrong. But our pace isn’t the problem - the system is. Autistic time isn’t measured by efficiency. It’s measured by authenticity, safety, and sustainability. > Managing inertia isn’t about becoming more productive. It’s about restoring choice. When you can move or not move without fear, that’s regulation. When you can stop without collapsing, and start without panic, that’s recovery. That’s what we mean when we talk about living a sustainable autistic life.
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Autistic Inertia and Safety > Inertia isn’t just about initiation. It’s about transitions - between doing and not doing, between attention and rest, between safety and vulnerability. > That’s why advice like “just start” doesn’t work. Starting isn’t neutral. For an autistic bodymind, every action carries sensory, emotional, and relational implications. What feels like a simple task to someone else can involve dozens of micro-transitions for us. Each one requires regulation. Each one carries risk. When we don’t feel safe enough to make those transitions, we don’t move. Not because we don’t want to, but because the cost is too high. > Another strategy is body doubling. Being with someone else - even quietly on video - can help regulate your nervous system enough to start. It’s not about accountability. It’s about co-regulation. Many of us can’t move alone, but we can move beside another safe person. This is also why community matters so deeply for autistic humans. Regulation is relational. When we are isolated, inertia grows. When we are witnessed, safety returns. > Momentum needs care too. If you know that once you start you won’t be able to stop, build your stopping point in advance. Create a ritual for ending - a reminder, a cue, a soft boundary that helps your body trust that it can move again later. Movement without boundaries leads to exhaustion. Stopping without ritual leads to collapse. Both are parts of inertia. > Managing inertia also means understanding your rhythms. Autistic energy isn’t linear. It doesn’t refill on a schedule. It ebbs and flows according to sensory input, emotional regulation, and relational safety. You can’t force it into a productivity framework without harming yourself. Listen to your tides. Notice what times of day, environments, and emotional states allow movement, and which don’t. You aren’t lazy for needing more time. You’re honoring a bodymind that runs on a different current. > When I work with clients, I talk about compassionate timing. It’s the practice of honoring when your system is ready, without shaming when it isn’t. Sometimes what looks like procrastination is actually incubation. Your nervous system is gathering enough safety to begin. Other times, readiness never comes, and that’s information too. It may mean that the task is misaligned with your needs or values. Compassionate timing is not waiting for ideal conditions. It’s acting from regulation, not from panic or guilt. > The world we live in punishes stillness and glorifies speed. Capitalism measures worth through output. When you live inside that system, being slow or paused feels dangerous. That’s why so many autistic humans internalize shame around inertia. We’ve been taught that our natural pace is wrong. But our pace isn’t the problem - the system is. Autistic time isn’t measured by efficiency. It’s measured by authenticity, safety, and sustainability. > Managing inertia isn’t about becoming more productive. It’s about restoring choice. When you can move or not move without fear, that’s regulation. When you can stop without collapsing, and start without panic, that’s recovery. That’s what we mean when we talk about living a sustainable autistic life.
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