Podcast Episode
From Masking to Mastery: Autism, Identity, and Leadership with Murphy Monroe
In this powerful episode of Overcome, Travis White sits down with Murphy Monroe, an autistic leader and disability-justice advocate, for a vulnerable conversation titled “From Masking to Mastery: Autism, Identity...
December 1, 2025
From Masking to Mastery: Autism, Identity, and Leadership with Murphy Monroe
In this powerful episode of Overcome, Travis White sits down with Murphy Monroe, an autistic leader and disability-justice advocate, for a vulnerable conversation titled “From Masking to Mastery: Autism, Identity...
Episode Overview
In this powerful episode of Overcome, Travis White sits down with Murphy Monroe, an autistic leader and disability-justice advocate, for a vulnerable conversation titled “From Masking to Mastery: Autism, Identity...
Who This Episode Is For
- Listeners navigating autism or supporting someone who is.
- People looking for honest, practical mental health conversations instead of surface-level advice.
- Anyone who wants real stories about resilience, healing, and rebuilding after hard seasons.
Guest
Murphy Monroe
Visit Murphy MonroeResources & Links
Transcript
Show full transcript Timestamps included
0:01
Hello and welcome to Overcome a Mental Health Podcast.
0:04
I am your host, Travis White.
0:07
This is a place for you to talk about your mental health journey.
0:09
Joining us today is Murphy Monroe, an autistic leader in disability justice and nonprofit
0:09
management.
0:16
Murphy is a commissioner for the city of Evanston, focusing on ADA compliance and access,
0:16
and the executive director of an award-winning circus school and theater company.
0:28
Welcome to the show, Murphy.
0:30
Thanks Travis, I'm really glad to be here.
0:32
Appreciate the open space you've created.
0:36
Well, it's my pleasure to have you on.
0:38
Without wasting any time, I'm just going to hand the microphone over to you and let you
0:38
take us on your journey.
0:45
Sure.
0:45
Well, I mean, I'm married.
0:50
I have a couple of kids, adult kids and a house full of pets.
0:54
And I am a really different person.
0:56
Maybe not different person, but I am embodied differently than I have been.
1:03
And I've been growing into myself over the course of my life.
1:09
I'm autistic and have always known since I was a young as I can remember.
1:17
It was clear to me that there was something really fundamentally different about me than
1:17
everyone else around me.
1:24
It was just super clear to me that I was having an experience that was just fundamentally
1:24
different, that I understood things in a way that were different.
1:35
And also that everything coming at me, I was filtering in a way that I could just aware
1:35
that other people weren't filtering in the same ways.
1:46
I didn't know why I was different or how I was different.
1:49
I just knew I had this big difference about me.
1:52
And in my mind, it was a really big secret.
1:55
I thought that...
1:56
It might mean I had some kind of really bad mental health thing.
2:00
This was in the 80s.
2:01
And not a lot of awareness about things.
2:04
And so in my mind, you know, maybe I'm schizophrenic or something like that.
2:09
And whatever it is, I needed to keep it a secret.
2:12
But it was a hard secret to keep because, you know, the way I often think about it now in
2:12
hindsight is that
2:21
Now maybe at elementary age, I could see one or two feet in front of me, or at least I had
2:21
awareness of what was going on within only one or two feet in front of me.
2:33
And if it wasn't in that space, I probably wasn't able to track it.
2:38
And or wasn't maybe even aware it was happening.
2:41
Everything to me was loud and quick.
2:45
and I had to take it all in at once and just taking in the feeling of being in the room
2:45
was so much that taking in what was happening three, four feet away was just not anything
2:58
to what I'd experienced yet or I'd been able to do yet.
3:02
So as I've grown into my autism and grown into myself and gotten better about managing
3:02
myself and managing my life,
3:12
I've expanded that amount of space that is out in front of me, know, to, you know, when I
3:12
was in high school, it was three or four feet.
3:21
And, you know, when I, you know, left high school and went to college, you know, maybe I
3:21
got it to four feet.
3:27
And, you know, when I entered the workforce and, you know, had big jobs early on for...
3:34
largely because of the kind of brain that I have and the way that I think.
3:40
And so I got to maybe five, six, seven feet out in front of me.
3:46
And now here I am, a good dozen plus years from there.
3:54
And I feel like a pretty wide view out into the world, not all at once.
4:01
but I'm much more able to see out, to have a good sense of what's happening around me, to
4:01
not be so impacted by everything that's coming at me and to be able to filter through it
4:17
in a different kind of way.
4:22
One of the things about this that's most, I think, maybe poignant or for me, most specific
4:22
is light.
4:31
So folks who are autistic have a spectrum of different ways that they're being impacted by
4:31
their autism.
4:40
And for many people, they are perhaps hyper sensitive to...
4:45
uh input coming at them or in case some people are hyposensitive to input coming at them.
4:51
In my case, I'm just extremely sensitive to sound and to light and to fluctuations in
4:51
temperature, all sorts of things, but light in particular.
5:03
And so just to give a sense, throughout my life, I have been overtaken
5:09
by light.
5:10
And so I reach a point where my eyes, my brain are no longer to process the light that's
5:10
coming into me.
5:20
And I can feel this happening and everything starts to slow down for me and it's slowing
5:20
down.
5:27
And as it's slowing down, I'm starting to think a little bit slower and my vision is
5:27
starting to narrow a little bit.
5:36
and I'm starting to have a hard time talking.
5:39
I'm starting to stutter or have a hard time finding words to say.
5:46
And then I'm having a hard time keeping my legs up.
5:50
And I'm having a hard time standing.
5:52
And before you know it, then I'm just on the ground.
5:55
And my eyes have come all the way in closed.
6:00
My voice has just stopped.
6:02
I've stopped being able to speak or think of words.
6:05
And I really have just been taken out, overcome by this light and sensory coming into me.
6:13
This experience usually ends with me getting sick and then having some opportunity to
6:13
start to come back from it.
6:24
This happened to me regularly as a kid without any knowledge from my parents or anyone
6:24
else what was happening to me.
6:31
We didn't know it was light until I was older, until I became a teenager.
6:36
And I didn't really learn how to manage the light in my life and the input of light onto
6:36
me until I was really a grown adult and well into my career.
6:46
And even now I'm still finding ways to improve.
6:49
how I move about the world and how I interact with the world in order to make me as
6:49
successful as possible and sort of to expand how far out I'm able to see at any one given
7:03
time.
7:05
And so you mentioned early on about kind of your childhood and you you thought you had all
7:05
these different mental health problems.
7:17
What did it look like when you were getting your diagnosis?
7:21
What was that journey like?
7:22
Yeah, so the first time I received any kind of diagnosis was as a teenager and I was told
7:22
I had dysgraphia, which is a very, very common autistic trait.
7:36
It's just that it's a hard time with handwriting and small motor skills in that way or
7:36
even being able to interpret it.
7:44
I also was told at the time that I had what's called echolalia.
7:48
Echolalia is a version of Pallalia, but it's where you are constantly repeating your own
7:48
self after you talk.
7:57
So I would always speak words, and I would just repeat myself after I would say something,
7:57
and without any awareness that I was doing this.
8:06
And I was also told at the time that I had Asperger's.
8:09
And Asperger's wasn't something that was very known at the time.
8:15
ah Asperger's is no longer a term really used, it's just part of the autism spectrum.
8:21
So that diagnosis came when I was a teenager and none of it really meant much to me.
8:26
I think my parents had me start seeing a therapist and got me a tutor and that was more or
8:26
less what I made of that.
8:34
Later...
8:36
When I had gotten out of college, was seeing a psychiatrist for a while and that
8:36
psychiatrist one day just turned to me in the session and said, Hey Murphy, like, do you
8:47
not know you're autistic?
8:48
And I was like, what, what, what are you talking about?
8:52
And I then just went and started doing a bunch of reading and connecting autism to
8:52
Asperger's and getting familiar with Temple Grandin and
9:02
I thought about it a lot and got involved in it.
9:05
This was maybe about at the age of 25, 26, 27.
9:10
And I joined a support group of other folks with autism.
9:18
And I, for whatever reason, just rejected all of it.
9:25
I just, in my mind, just made a decision that that's not me, that can't be me.
9:32
Those aren't my people and I'm not going to be able to be this.
9:36
And also, you know, at the time I was the, I was a really young director of admissions for
9:36
a major private arts college.
9:43
And I just thought there's no way that this can all be and this isn't me, this isn't who I
9:43
am.
9:48
And I just turned my back on it.
9:50
And I immediately just started to do my best to convince the world that I wasn't.
9:56
autistic and just really started doubling down on masking, doubling down on doing
9:56
everything I could to convince everybody else around me that I wasn't autistic, that I was
10:09
just like them.
10:12
And it's a really hard thing to do.
10:16
And it's something that's really common amongst folks who are neurodivergent and amongst
10:16
all sorts of people with disabilities and without.
10:24
um It's just really actively pretending to be something you're not, actively holding your
10:24
muscles in a certain way, actively using certain word choices, actively counting eye
10:37
contact, and doing all sorts of things in order to make myself feel for everybody else
10:37
that I'm fitting in.
10:45
But when one does this over time, it's a covering up of oneself.
10:50
and eventually it's a loss of oneself.
10:53
Because eventually you just, it is who you are.
10:56
If that's the way that you are now always holding yourself, and if that's the way you are
10:56
always now reacting to things, and if those are the filters you've now put in place, and
11:06
if those scripts that you've written for yourself have become so rote that they're now
11:06
just the things that you say, you are just now this thing.
11:16
no longer who you were and not even so sure of Exactly who that was or where that person
11:16
begins and this mask ends And this is a really common thing and something that I spent a
11:30
good 20 years just really suffering in You know You look at the
11:40
homeless population in the US, it's 16 % autistic.
11:45
It's the highest other than addiction.
11:47
It's the highest rate within the homeless population.
11:51
And a really big part of that is this masking.
11:54
Is this like forced into being something you're not and a just complete loss of identity,
11:54
which ultimately leads to depression.
12:03
and all sorts of horrible outcomes.
12:05
So it was about several years ago now that I started seeing all sorts of autistic content
12:05
creators on social media.
12:17
just listening.
12:18
and picking up some couple of those old books that I have had around forever on autism.
12:25
it's just all was just immediately just the most obvious thing and hit me over the head.
12:31
I made an appointment with a well-known psychologist in the Chicago area who does adult
12:31
autism evaluations and diagnosis and is well known for it.
12:41
And I went to see her and went through the long process of diagnosis, which takes several
12:41
meetings and interviews and tests and interviews of your family.
12:51
But really only maybe a third of the way into this process, she just said to me, hey,
12:51
Murphy, before we even get any further, you just need to know you're autistic.
13:00
And just hearing that there and then just sort of changed everything for me.
13:05
Travis, even though I was a grown adult, even though I had spent so much time thinking
13:05
about all of this, all of the sudden, I was autistic.
13:13
And autistic was something to be.
13:16
And that label of being autistic, in fact, was much better than all of the labels I was
13:16
allowing people to put on me or all the labels that I was putting on myself.
13:28
And a big relief, just a huge relief to me.
13:31
that this is who I am and this is why I I'm you know, I I it's a kid Travis my mom was a
13:31
teacher and my dad was the superintendent of schools and I couldn't read I couldn't pay
13:47
attention in class I couldn't Follow what the teacher was saying I just couldn't but I
13:47
made it through elementary school and then into and through junior high largely
14:00
because my dad was the superintendent and I had a professor-like way of talking and the
14:00
teachers just all, you know, pushed me through and it, you know, really wasn't until high
14:10
school that I started to have to really find ways to trick the teachers into being
14:10
convinced that I was doing the work.
14:20
Yeah, and it's like, I always think of like getting diagnosed with something is kind of
14:20
twofold.
14:25
It's like, there's that side of you that wants to know, and there's a side of you that
14:25
does not want to know, because it can always, you know, just in case worst case.
14:34
But it sounds like for you is just kind of a moment of clarity and kind of like a, you
14:34
know, the relief was like, oh, everything makes sense now of why things were the way they
14:45
were.
14:46
Yeah, I think that the thing about the diagnosis is that it's definitive, right?
14:51
And so you get it and then like, boom, that's it.
14:54
It feels definitive.
14:56
But yes, for me, it just felt like a tremendous relief.
15:03
There are so, I have so many things about me that are incredible that I think are just
15:03
wonderful about me in ways my brain works and ways I think.
15:15
and ways I am just led by my heart that I'm just like enormously proud of and have always
15:15
known about myself but have been shy or hidden about because I never, just, I don't know
15:30
how to quite explain it, but then there's all these other things about me that I haven't
15:30
liked about myself, right?
15:36
That my inability to pay attention, my inability to...
15:41
stand still, my inability to not, I'm very torrentic and so I do a lot of shouting out of
15:41
odd phrases or moving of my hands and I just, all of these things were things I just did
15:54
not like about myself and wanted to have excuses for, blame myself for.
16:00
And same thing with like the photophobia.
16:03
All of the sudden, all of it has a route that makes sense.
16:09
and has nothing to do with my fault or something I've done wrong.
16:13
And then it makes those things I like about myself, the gifts, the things that I know are
16:13
special about me that we all have, but I just know and feel.
16:22
Those things started to feel like things I could fine tune.
16:25
And that were, started feeling like gifts and things that I could hone and take control
16:25
over and...
16:32
used to my advantage.
16:33
And so, yeah, with the diagnosis came a great sense of relief.
16:38
And one of the first things I did, this is, yeah, I was a 40 something year old man, I
16:38
went on Etsy and I found a creator who made these really beautiful pins that look like
16:48
badges.
16:49
And it just says autistic.
16:51
And I just put it on me, on my bag or on my shirt, and I just started wearing it every
16:51
day.
16:56
Forcing...
16:57
people in my life who either don't know me or who have known me for years to just all of a
16:57
sudden get confronted with this and either ask me about it or go off on their own and read
17:09
about it or whatever it is.
17:10
But it just forced me to sort of publicly tell everyone this is who I am.
17:17
And I still feel that way today.
17:18
If I'm asked to introduce myself to a crowd of people,
17:21
I want them to know I'm autistic.
17:23
It makes me, I feel like it gives me a bit of a permission structure to be more myself.
17:28
And it gives them a permission structure to like, you know, understand a bit, like to not
17:28
judge and not have to draw assumptions or conclusions or whatever it is.
17:40
And it, for me has been, yeah, a big relief and a help propel me in a whole new direction.
17:48
Yeah, and I love that you kind of just, you you got this diagnosis and you're proud of who
17:48
you are.
17:55
Like, because sometimes I even think people tend to sometimes hide behind their diagnosis
17:55
because they don't want the world to know something about them.
18:03
Yeah, absolutely.
18:05
It was such mental health stigma in our country and in our world, in fact, with these very
18:05
few societies that don't have some stigma about it.
18:16
But in America, it's particularly a stigma and it's a difficult thing for people to want
18:16
to confront about themselves or want to be labeled about them.
18:28
And yeah, it's changing, or hopefully it's changing.
18:32
yeah, and it's really important, because all these young kids now, many of whom have been
18:32
diagnosed as autistic, but have parents that don't want to share that diagnosis with the
18:45
kid.
18:45
ah Because they have a worry and I feel for these parents.
18:49
I don't I'm not in standing in judgment of these parents, but they have a Concern that if
18:49
they do give the kid that label then it'll just put them in that box forever It might
18:59
limit the kid in some way it might limit their the way other people interact with them and
18:59
no doubt that all of those things are potential and true, but ah
19:12
The lack of knowing creates so many other complications and creates so many other
19:12
narratives and theories and labels that are traumatizing.
19:27
And ultimately, autistic kids grow into autistic adults.
19:31
There is no evidence otherwise.
19:33
so allowing them to be autistic
19:36
and allowing them to grow into it makes a lot of sense and is something you see more and
19:36
more families doing.
19:43
Mm-hmm.
19:45
A couple of minutes ago, you mentioned masking.
19:48
And after years of, I guess, masking, what was the hardest part about unmasking and kind
19:48
of stepping into this new you?
19:59
One of the hardest parts is my face.
20:04
I move my, you know, I'm not, how do I explain this?
20:07
Well, I do, when I am trying to sit with someone and if you and I are in a meeting, let's
20:07
say, you know, I was in a meeting with someone, my goal would be in that meeting, I would
20:18
have several goals and I would be running these scripts in my head.
20:22
So first thing would be Murphy sit down right away.
20:26
fast as you can find a seat and sit down so you're not like standing and know bobbing and
20:26
weaving and as soon as I sit down the next thing in my script is put a knee across my legs
20:38
so that I can have one leg on top of my other leg and I can hold it down to stop myself
20:38
from rocking or moving.
20:46
So script one sit down script two don't rock sit down don't rock sit down don't rock sit
20:46
down don't rock.
20:53
Script three is I want to appear
20:55
I'm to the person I'm with in the way that they want me to appear.
21:00
And by that I mean my facial, my face and how I'm looking to them.
21:04
So I'm looking at you and I'm figuring out your face and I'm giving it right back to you
21:04
to the best of my ability.
21:12
It doesn't even mean I'm good at it.
21:13
It just means that like this is what I'm doing in order to try to convince you that I'm
21:13
not autistic, right?
21:20
So now I'm sitting still, I'm not rocking.
21:24
I'm mirroring your face and the next thing I have to do is eye contact.
21:29
Because if I just mirror your face, I'm just gonna stare at you.
21:32
But I need to give you eye contact, but I don't need to give you intense eye contact, so I
21:32
need to count it out.
21:40
So now don't sit, excuse me, sit, don't rock, mimic the face, look in the eyes.
21:46
One, two, three, look away.
21:49
Don't rock, don't rock.
21:51
And then oftentimes I have a problem where I am erratic.
21:55
I say things out loud quite often.
21:58
So I need a script for that.
22:00
Don't say anything.
22:01
Don't say anything, Murph.
22:03
Don't rock.
22:04
Don't say anything.
22:05
Mimic the face.
22:06
Mimic the face.
22:07
Eye contact.
22:08
One, two, three.
22:10
No, no, keep my head.
22:11
Keep my leg down.
22:13
Hold your leg down, Murphy.
22:14
Okay, back to the eye contact.
22:15
One, two, three.
22:17
Don't say anything.
22:18
Don't say anything.
22:19
And throughout all of this, I also have to meet with you.
22:23
I also have to hear what you have to say and then convince you of whatever it is I'm here
22:23
to convince you of.
22:30
Or get convinced by you of whatever it is you're here to convince me of.
22:34
And I have to do all of that, but the main thing that 80 % of my energy is focused on is
22:34
how I think I appear to you.
22:43
And...
22:44
You're not thinking I'm doing any of those things, likely.
22:47
You might think I look kind of odd or something, or why is he keep, like, you know,
22:47
looking at me or whatever, but you wouldn't be thinking in your brain that the vast
22:56
majority of his attention is spent on trying to not look autistic right now.
23:03
All of those scripts over time just build on top of each other, and that's just some of
23:03
them, right?
23:09
And they build on top of each other, and they're just like a
23:12
constant cacophony of rules and sounds.
23:15
And so one of the things that's happened is I've unmasked more and more is I still don't
23:15
know how to hold my face.
23:24
I don't just, it's, I don't know.
23:27
I don't really know how to hold my face.
23:30
And so I, it's, I don't want to mimic someone else's face.
23:36
I want to smile because I want you to know that like I'm a friendly person and I'm happy
23:36
to be here.
23:43
But I have to remember.
23:45
I have to like remember to do that.
23:47
And if I don't remember, oftentimes I'll start doing something like this.
23:55
moving my mouth and face around and just I'm not even conscious that I'm doing it and I
23:55
just start doing it and I have to then either let myself keep doing that or you know ask
24:06
myself you know can you not do that and what should I do and so really the hardest part of
24:06
unmasking is all of those scripts and giving myself permission to let go of
24:21
And so, know, I go to church every week.
24:28
I go to a Quaker service, a Quaker friend meeting every week that I really love.
24:33
And the Tourette thing is hard there because they meet in silence.
24:37
It's supposed to be silent.
24:39
And every once in a while, I'm like, you know, shouting out something like, you know,
24:39
literally, it might be like, I love my wife.
24:47
and like literally just do this in like the middle of it that was so scary to me and so I
24:47
would have to run lots of scripts during, you know, silent during, you know, the church
24:57
because I had to run scripts to not do that.
24:59
But then I just let go of that script and just, you know, had my autistic pin on and, you
24:59
know, allowed myself to say whatever I said during that time.
25:12
And several times,
25:14
I have and like it's just not been a thing.
25:17
Nobody's cared.
25:18
In fact, maybe some people are even endeared and it's fine.
25:23
But I had to do a lot of work to let go of that script to get to the point where I was
25:23
just calm and relaxed enough there that that would just happen and that would be fine when
25:36
it happened.
25:36
And so letting go of those things.
25:39
And just allowing myself to just what happens happens and what you know what we get we get
25:39
um
25:48
you can finish your thought if you...
25:51
Yeah, I was just gonna say it's actually hard to...
25:56
Like, I can understand where you're coming from because at times, like, it's hard to be
25:56
yourself.
26:00
It's hard to be comfortable around a group of people and to actually show the true you.
26:07
Mm-hmm.
26:08
We all want to fit in so bad.
26:11
Yeah, and we all have, or we shouldn't say all because we don't all, but there's an
26:11
internal dialogue for a lot of people that does a lot of self-questioning.
26:21
That I think in those moments as well makes it hard to just relax and be yourself if
26:21
there's this, you know, constant sort of questioning of, you know,
26:32
how we're fitting in or how we're doing or what they're thinking and all those other, it's
26:32
hard, it's complicated, it's all layered.
26:39
And these are all things that all of us, no doubt, everything in the mental health
26:39
spectrum ultimately I think exists for people in different kinds of ways.
26:49
It's just on this spectrum of intensity.
26:52
I mean, I don't mean that to downplay anything.
26:55
Depression is an incredibly serious and super difficult thing.
27:00
and depression is not sadness.
27:02
But there are concepts within depression that people, think, can understand a little bit
27:02
and can wrap their minds around from their own experiences.
27:10
And we all have, because of the shared human experience, so many of these things we all
27:10
have in common in different ways.
27:20
Yeah, it's so true.
27:23
it's, I'm trying to think of like how to word this next question.
27:29
So you've, you've learned, you kind of adjusted yourself to learn how to speak more
27:29
openly.
27:35
And I almost say lead and, how, what did that look like?
27:40
How did you, how did that journey start off?
27:45
Well, so it certainly had me become a different kind of leader, no doubt about it.
27:50
My career has been in positions where I've managed a lot of people, either in higher ed or
27:50
in the corporate world or in the nonprofit world.
28:03
And I've always been a caring leader and I've always been a, you know, like a, try to be a
28:03
motivating leader.
28:10
But in the last phase of my growth here, I've just started to more than ever see every
28:10
single person as just an individual set of skills.
28:28
and needs and desires and wants that need to be individually tuned and catered for.
28:36
And that in order to really be like an effective leader or an effective manager, one has
28:36
to be in tune with people and in tune with what makes them click, with what motivates
28:48
them.
28:49
with what kind of environment they're going to be most successful working in, with what
28:49
kind of work is going to be most interesting to them, is going to be most motivating to
28:59
them, where they best fit into the organization based on who they are and what makes them
28:59
tick and the experiences they've had.
29:07
And this includes abilities and disabilities, and this includes all sorts of different
29:07
kinds of skills and needs that exist within the workplace.
29:17
And as I've gotten more willing to talk about my own discomforts, my own foibles, my own
29:17
things about me that are hard to talk about, I've just become more more obvious to me and
29:30
more more aware to me of how all of us have these things.
29:33
All of us have stuff holding us back.
29:36
All of us have things that make stuff more difficult than maybe it really needs to be.
29:41
if something could just be adjusted or said in a different way or held during a different
29:41
time of the day or in a different place or in a different volume or whatever it may be.
29:53
And so I've just become much more empathetic and much more willing to sort of craft
29:53
people's jobs and roles to
30:02
ultimately, you know, what we learned together along the way.
30:06
Very cool.
30:07
And you, you were involved in the corporate world, but now you're, you're the director of
30:07
a award.
30:13
Are you still doing the circus school stuff?
30:16
Yes.
30:16
So I'm the uh executive director of an amazing organization in Chicago called the Actors
30:16
Gymnasium.
30:22
It's a circus school and a producing theater company.
30:27
So we teach circus at all levels, both like kids and adults for fun, but also we train
30:27
serious professionals in all the circus arts.
30:36
We teach about a thousand students a year.
30:38
And then we also help, we produce our own theater and we help other theater companies
30:43
produce shows that have all sorts of circus or circusy type elements in them, flying and
30:43
fighting and all sorts of stuff like that.
30:52
As a kid, I had hard time imagining what I could grow up and do.
30:57
It was really a fear of mine.
30:58
Everybody else had all of these skills already that I didn't have, both athletic and in
30:58
terms of school and reading and just all sorts of stuff that I...
31:07
quite confident I didn't have skills in and I was really worried about what kind of job I
31:07
could possibly have.
31:12
truck driver was one that I like I had on my list and I thought was a solid like good idea
31:12
and you know that even on the side of the trucks they tell you how much you earn a mile
31:22
and like as a little kid I would just do the math of you know how much per mile and could
31:22
I drive enough miles in a year and you know truck driver was one but the other one that I
31:31
thought of
31:33
that I could do was being a clown.
31:36
I thought that there really are people who are clowns.
31:39
They must be getting paid.
31:40
And I thought that that's something that I could also probably do.
31:44
I think I would have that skill set.
31:46
And so as a kid, I dreamed of being a clown.
31:50
I went to college for theater.
31:52
There was a clown who taught there named Davis Robinson who I studied under.
31:57
Being a clown just always was a thing to me.
32:00
And so after I've had this career in higher ed and corporate world, this position became
32:00
available at this circus school in Chicago.
32:10
And I just really wanted to try my hat at it.
32:14
And boy, am I glad I did.
32:15
I've been doing this for eight years now.
32:17
And it's like a joyful enterprise and all of these strong, amazing, brave people.
32:24
and tons of neurodivergence within that world, of course.
32:28
And also a fun world to try to figure out how to make more inclusive when it comes to
32:28
neurodivergence or mental health or disability.
32:38
Because it's a world that's so based on being physical and repetition and um all of those
32:38
things.
32:46
so...
32:46
Yeah, it's like super fun for me.
32:48
I'm not a clown, but you know, I run the payroll for all the clowns.
32:53
So that's pretty good.
32:56
Awesome.
32:56
I love it.
32:57
I love that you found something and it sounds like it's a place you can be really
32:57
authentic.
33:03
Yes, that's right.
33:04
In fact, when I, as part of the story really is when I interviewed for this job, I
33:04
interviewed it for it with that autistic pin on.
33:12
And there were several layers to the interview, you know, with the board and the faculty
33:12
and the staff.
33:17
And in each one of these interviews, it's one of the very first things I talked about was
33:17
that I'm autistic.
33:23
I'm still learning things about myself.
33:25
There's some things I'm not as good at as others.
33:28
I don't like working in a bright workplace.
33:30
And if you hire me, this is the way I'm going to be and I'm going to tell you all about it
33:30
and I'm going to find ways to accommodate myself and I'm going to find ways for everybody
33:39
to be accommodated in the organization.
33:41
And I just thought if I get the job, then amazing.
33:45
And if I don't, then it's okay.
33:47
And I did get the job.
33:48
And so I've had this luxury.
33:50
It's a privilege really.
33:52
of being able to show up at work every day and be my authentic self.
33:57
that's really cool and I love it and so to keep yourself like grounded and you know keep
33:57
healing from you know past things and just life in general are there any techniques
34:14
methods or like types of therapy that you use to keep going
34:18
Yes, yeah, a lot of things, but for me the primary tool is stillness, darkness,
34:18
meditation.
34:30
I am super interested in float therapy or sensory deprivation tanks.
34:37
I don't know if you're familiar, but this is a common practice.
34:43
You'll find float centers all over the place and what it is is
34:47
10 inches of 10 inches of water, incredibly clean, pure water that's heated exactly to
34:47
skin temperature.
34:57
Skin temperature is 95 degrees.
34:59
And then in that water, that 10 inches of water, is put magnesium sulfate or Epsom salt at
34:59
a 40 % concentration.
35:10
So 1000 plus pounds of magnesium sulfate into this 10 inches of water.
35:16
everything heated to skin temperature, approximately 95 degrees, right?
35:22
When a human being lies on top of that water, it's completely buoyant, just like the Dead
35:22
Sea.
35:29
And so you are just lying without any gravity whatsoever, just completely buoyant right on
35:29
top of that water.
35:37
And that water is heated to your skin temperature.
35:41
So then the next thing we do is we heat the air above the water.
35:46
also to your skin temperature.
35:48
So now the air, the body, and the water are one single temperature.
35:53
Then we turn off the lights and eliminate all of the sound.
36:00
And so at this point you can't see anything, you can't hear anything, and since the air,
36:00
water, and body are all of the same temperature and everything is humid, you truly can't
36:14
feel anything.
36:16
And since you can't see the water, your body loses awareness of the water.
36:22
The water disappears from your consciousness and you are simply just floating in total
36:22
darkness with absolutely no sensations on your body or no sensory input in any way
36:36
whatsoever.
36:37
And that's floating.
36:38
And it's something I discovered.
36:40
I did the first time many years ago, but rediscovered about 10 years ago.
36:47
And there's float centers all over the place.
36:50
And I has now become a super regular practice of mine.
36:56
Something I do every day if I can for an hour plus.
37:03
And just a place where I get to be in total
37:08
reserved and total stillness.
37:10
It's like anonymity and it's just like freedom for my mind.
37:14
And so a really big part of my calmness, of my ability to center myself, of my ability to
37:14
go longer in a day before I'm so burnt out that I can't operate anymore.
37:29
big part of that recharge comes from that stillness and that safe, sensory-free space.
37:36
So if I had any personal trick that's helped me above anything else, it would certainly be
37:36
that.
37:42
That's really cool.
37:43
I've always been curious about float therapy.
37:45
I honestly only heard about it like six months ago.
37:48
I saw like an advertisement.
37:50
I think it was like on Instagram or something.
37:53
I don't even know.
37:53
And so I looked into a place around here, but now you're you're making it so I actually
37:53
want to try it.
37:59
Like I think that's super cool.
38:02
Yeah, it's worth trying once for sure.
38:05
Even just for the, you know, the buoyancy is pretty incredible.
38:08
I mean, no gravity and just, you know, no pressure on your joints, on your muscles, on
38:08
your bones, just whatsoever.
38:16
It's just like pressure free.
38:18
It's just a rare feeling for anybody.
38:21
And I have bad anxiety and depression, so I think that kind of stillness and that kind of
38:21
that low light type of place seems just very relaxing and.
38:34
Yes, yes, yes, absolutely, absolutely.
38:37
Anxiety is a common thing.
38:39
You see people floating.
38:41
One of the common reasons you see people floating is anxiety and trauma processing.
38:46
Absolutely, yeah.
38:49
Super cool.
38:49
I'm going to look into more local area ones to see what I can find out.
38:56
So we talked a little bit about the workplace.
39:00
What do you think that like employers can do to better accommodate for those with
39:00
suffering or I don't want to say suffering, like with.
39:12
Sorry, I used the wrong word there.
39:15
With.
39:17
high functioning autism, like what can they do to better accommodate?
39:20
yeah, yeah.
39:22
You know, I think I said suffering earlier, Travis, and it's one of those words that none
39:22
of us want to use, but there's also like, there is truth to it, and it is a word that
39:32
explains something.
39:33
But anyways, I feel that a lot myself.
39:35
Okay, so yeah, so for those who are autistic ADHD on the neurodivergent spectrum,
39:41
There's a lot of things that employers can do.
39:45
There isn't one sort of, you know, perfect test, but there's all sorts of things that can
39:45
happen.
39:50
And one of the first is just simply workspace.
39:52
And so there's all sorts of practices, you know, that can work against the success of
39:52
someone autistic in a workspace.
40:01
So whether it's the lighting of the space can often be really important.
40:06
the sound of the space if it's in a loud space or a less loud space or a distracting
40:06
space, the difference between working at home or working in the office, the difference
40:16
between having your own dedicated workspace or just having like the ability to work
40:16
wherever in an open space, all sorts of differences like that if they're really managed
40:28
well and provided to set up in a way that's going to work best for the employee.
40:33
can make a huge difference.
40:36
Another common thing that you see is meetings.
40:41
So for a lot of neurodivergent folks, they are not going to do their best if they are just
40:41
invited to a meeting without knowing what the meeting is about, what's going to be
40:51
discussed at the meeting, or what the agenda is of the meeting.
40:55
And so a really common accommodation is simply
40:59
knowing about meetings in advance and having an idea in advance of what the meeting is
40:59
about so one can be prepared.
41:05
So agendas before meetings is something that doesn't happen in a lot of workplaces, but
41:05
could all of a sudden add a whole lot of comfort for folks, which then allows them to like
41:19
be their best.
41:20
Now they can show up to the meeting and contribute.
41:22
Otherwise you might have just have someone showing up at the meeting and they're not
41:22
contributing.
41:28
But now you have employees showing up and contributing and it makes a huge difference.
41:34
Other things are notes.
41:36
So oftentimes, maybe after a meeting, can be really useful if there's a shared
41:36
understanding of the meeting or shared understanding of what the to-dos or takeaways or
41:45
things that are now going to happen following the meeting.
41:48
And a lot of work environments.
41:50
It just sort of happens fast-paced and there's a lot of assumptions that are made and some
41:50
things get done and some don't and then it all gets worked out on Slack or an email or
41:59
whatever.
42:01
But could be a whole lot of efficiency and a whole lot of comfort and clarity if there was
42:01
just a series of to-dos or a series of tasks at the end of the meeting of understanding
42:12
who's responsible for what creates clarity and understanding.
42:19
social expectations in the workplace.
42:21
It's a simple one, but it really happens a lot.
42:24
And so there can be a price to pay for not being socially involved in the workplace, not
42:24
being there when everybody is singing Happy Birthday to Nancy, or not being there at the
42:37
picnic when it's at the company picnic held in the sun, or whatever it is.
42:43
There's all sorts of ways that those types of events can be held in a way that meets
42:43
everybody's needs.
42:49
And I'm not suggesting like only hold your events in calm indoor places.
42:54
I'm suggesting know your employees.
42:56
Like know who the people are that work for you are and know what they're like and know
42:56
what they need so that you can figure out the best solution that works best for everybody.
43:06
And that's really...
43:09
The advice is like know your employees, whether they're disabled or not.
43:14
They all have things that they would be doing better for you if you were to accommodate
43:14
them in different ways.
43:21
And everyone wants to get their best out of their employees.
43:24
Everybody wants to retain employees.
43:26
Everyone wants to have the kind of workplace that employees want to work at.
43:30
And so knowing your employees.
43:32
and accommodating them in reasonable ways that'll help them ultimately be their best at
43:32
work, understand their role best, understand their expectations best.
43:43
They're just gonna perform better, everybody is.
43:45
And those are the places, those are the places that I always start.
43:49
Yeah, and that's all really good stuff and I totally agree with you.
43:54
What?
43:56
And I actually think now that you've said some of those things, think I believe I actually
43:56
work with somebody that may be on the spectrum.
44:08
And you made a couple of light bulbs go off on my head.
44:12
was like, oh, that makes sense of why he acts a certain way.
44:17
Yeah, right, yeah, absolutely.
44:21
Yes, that's right, right.
44:22
And it's not the same for every autistic person, right?
44:26
Like, you know, just like anything else, if you've met one autistic person, you've met one
44:26
autistic person.
44:32
But there is a different sensory wiring happening.
44:36
There is a different neurological wiring going on, which means that they are reacting to
44:36
stimuli differently, and it's predictable.
44:44
um And it's figureoutable.
44:45
And yeah, we just all have to talk to each other.
44:48
And make it so that people are comfortable asking for accommodations.
44:52
And then just making it just absolutely second nature to just accept all of the reasonable
44:52
ones.
44:59
Any accommodation that comes to you that's at all reasonable, just take it.
45:04
and let your employees have that so that they can get their best disabled or not.
45:10
And so I was going through your website and I saw that you were featured in the New York
45:10
Times.
45:16
What was it like sharing your personal journey on such a global stage?
45:22
such a nice question.
45:23
Well, it was fun.
45:24
They reached out to me and I was excited.
45:26
didn't really was shocked when I got the call.
45:29
There's a lot of people who do what I do.
45:33
so I was really thrilled to talk to them, had a couple of long conversations.
45:38
And the piece is ultimately about, it's similar to what we're talking about, it is about
45:38
workplace accommodations and ultimately what workplaces are successful.
45:48
so getting that out there, getting that message out there in such a prominent place, it
45:48
was just super exciting.
45:55
And have heard from all sorts of folks that got them thinking, that put ideas in their
45:55
brains.
46:02
HR folks and others who, you know, start to think about it differently.
46:06
And so, yeah, it was fun and I was glad to be part of it.
46:13
Super nervous though when a photographer, she shows up from the New York Times.
46:18
know I would be and I'm like one of the least photogenic people like I can't stand like to
46:18
this day I've been You're like my almost my 50th interview and to this day I still can't
46:31
stand to be in front of a camera It's still like very I don't know the word like
46:39
Yeah.
46:41
It's just not comfortable.
46:43
Yeah, yeah, right, right.
46:44
It's like another presence that you have to account for.
46:47
Yeah.
46:48
these things.
46:48
I'm like, okay, you just have to bear with it.
46:51
Get through it.
46:51
I'm good.
46:52
I'm good.
46:53
Yep.
46:55
Just a few more questions here.
46:57
Why is it important to you to speak up about autism and mental health?
47:03
Well, because of who I was as a little kid, and because of how scared I was, and how alone
47:03
I felt, and how worried I was, and how desperate I became at times, and knowing that all
47:17
of those, and I was a kid growing up in a privileged way, right?
47:21
I had parents with some means, and I had parents who
47:26
wanted to help.
47:27
And even in all of that world, it was hard.
47:30
It was traumatizing.
47:32
And I just don't want that.
47:34
I want kids to not have a secret.
47:37
I want them to feel like what's going on with them is who they are.
47:41
And that who they are is who they are and that who they are is needed.
47:45
And that every one of us
47:47
has strengths in us that are here for a purpose, every single one of us.
47:51
And until we really get to know ourselves, until we figure out like who we are, what makes
47:51
us tick, what doesn't make us tick, we're not gonna get to the core of our greatest
48:02
skills.
48:04
And we need everyone, we need everyone everywhere to figure out like what they're best at
48:04
and bring it to the table because that's what...
48:13
That's what the world needs.
48:14
That's what society needs like for real.
48:16
That's how things get solved.
48:18
That's how we start talking to each other.
48:21
And so it's both like a really big goal and a little goal.
48:24
I wanna talk about it because I wanna reach kids and I wanna reach parents who can realize
48:24
that autism is something to be proud of.
48:33
It's something to be excited about.
48:34
Whether one is experiencing it
48:37
in many of the profound ways that folks do that might have them ultimately end up
48:37
nonverbal or end up with like apraxia and out of touch with their body.
48:47
Still, all with unbelievable gifts and skills that are not going to be brought out, are
48:47
not going to be understood until we're all talking about it.
48:59
And so I wanna help kids feel good about it.
49:01
I wanna help their parents help kids feel good about it.
49:06
Very well said.
49:08
I absolutely love that response because it's like, a lot of kids need to know like,
49:08
they're feeling is real and it's okay to be yourself.
49:16
Like you're not alone in this world.
49:18
That's right.
49:19
That's right.
49:21
Absolutely right.
49:23
So what would you say is the most surprising thing you've learned about yourself on this
49:23
journey?
49:31
that's a great question.
49:31
Yeah, well, it's definitely the most surprising thing I've learned about myself on this
49:31
journey is that I'm calm.
49:38
Is that I'm not...
49:41
I don't...
49:41
I have a natural state where I'm not shaking.
49:45
I have a natural state where my brain isn't racing.
49:50
I have a natural state and I'm not saying I can just achieve this natural state anytime I
49:50
want but I have the ability to be calm, to center myself.
50:00
I now have breathing techniques and other things that I can do that can put me into this
50:00
kind of space I need to when I need to.
50:09
And so what's most surprising to me is just that I'm in control of me.
50:14
I'm able to calm myself when I need and also that I'm not necessarily not a calm person.
50:21
And that's a revelation.
50:24
It's really cool though, like when you figure out those techniques that help calm
50:24
yourself, it's actually really cool how much they do work if you take the time to make
50:36
them a habit.
50:38
Mm-hmm.
50:39
Yes.
50:40
Absolutely right.
50:42
It has to be a habit, has to get ingrained in you, has to be something that...
50:46
And you have to believe it.
50:48
You know, I think a lot of people think about, you know, like breath work that like, they
50:48
don't really believe that that connection exists the way it does.
50:56
But it's very real.
50:58
And the things that we can do with our breath, with our bodies, with our minds are way
50:58
more than...
51:07
most people even can scratch the surface of understanding.
51:12
Yeah, for sure.
51:14
If you could go back and tell your younger self, why think about life and healing?
51:20
What would it be?
51:24
Um, yeah, so hard.
51:25
if I could go back and tell my younger self, yeah, I would tell them that,
51:35
Yeah, that your experience is real.
51:38
That there's integrity to you and to what you're experiencing.
51:44
And that you are different.
51:46
Like, you are different.
51:48
But that difference is the best thing about you.
51:51
And there's another side to it.
51:53
And...
51:54
It's hard for me, it's still hard for me to think about.
51:57
Yeah, that little boy is still traumatized in many ways.
52:00
Yeah, awesome.
52:03
And this is kind of just a generalized question I ask all my guests.
52:10
What, and you touch base on a little bit.
52:12
What is the biggest stigma when it comes to mental health?
52:17
Oh, yeah, the biggest stigma or, well, don't know if quite this is what you mean, but I
52:17
would say the biggest stigma or misunderstanding is that there isn't competence behind
52:33
nonverbal individuals.
52:36
And so there's a lot of people who are partially nonverbal or totally nonverbal or
52:36
voluntarily nonverbal and
52:45
A lot of them for different reasons, autism the most common.
52:48
And for a long time, and continuing to today, there has just been a lack of, we didn't
52:48
assume competence, and that there wasn't somebody there, there wasn't something there.
53:00
And the truth is, as we learn more and more, and as so many people have always known,
53:00
there is competence, and every person.
53:08
behind every soul is a gift.
53:12
sometimes the greatest gifts given are given to people who don't appear to have the
53:12
greatest gifts.
53:20
And so when we meet people, however they are, however they present, assuming competence
53:20
and being open to their gifts to me is
53:31
just a massive misunderstanding and stigma that needs to go away.
53:36
And that's exactly the type of response I'm looking for, because to me, with that
53:36
question, there's no right or wrong answer.
53:42
I love all of them.
53:43
It's pretty cool, the responses that I get.
53:46
Yeah, awesome.
53:48
Well, this was fun, Travis.
53:49
Yeah, so just I'd have like just two more easy follow up questions.
53:53
ah Where can people find you?
53:57
Great, yeah.
53:58
So people who want to learn more about me, it's best to find me on my website, which is
53:58
murphymonroe.com.
54:05
M-U-R-P-H-Y M-O-N-R-O-E.
54:09
There they can learn about me, learn about the work that I do, both the circus work, but
54:09
also I do a lot of consulting and keynote speaking, people want to learn more about that.
54:19
would welcome them too, and they can contact me from there.
54:22
And I'm always happy to hear from anybody about anything.
54:26
And so folks are welcome to reach out to me and I'm happy to connect.
54:30
Perfect.
54:31
Last thing here, as we covered a lot of ground on tonight, this episode, is there anything
54:31
that we did not discuss that you would like to bring up?
54:48
I don't think so.
54:50
think we've...
54:54
Yeah, sorry, Travis.
54:54
I don't have anything right now for that.
54:56
Yep.
54:58
Appreciate it.
55:01
yeah.
55:03
Awesome.
55:03
Well, Murphy, I admire your authenticity and how you've been able to overcome all these
55:03
challenges in your life and be the real you.
55:15
Thank you so much, Travis.
55:17
Thanks for creating this space and em holding it for people.
55:21
Thank you for coming on the show.
55:22
I've enjoyed our conversation.
55:26
And thank you to all those that are listening.
55:28
If this story resonates with you, please give it a thumbs up and share it.
55:32
Follow us on Instagram and YouTube and take a minute to review our stuff.
55:38
And thanks again for listening.
55:40
Until next time.
