We’ve Been Nominated: And This One Matters
Vote For Us In The National Diversity Awards!
There are moments when something lands quietly, and you realise it carries more weight than noise ever could.
This is one of those moments.
NeuroHub Community Ltd has been nominated for the National Diversity Awards 2026.
Not as a brand.
Not as a product.
But as a community organisation.
And that distinction matters.
Because the National Diversity Awards don’t just celebrate visibility or polished narratives. They recognise the work happening in the margins; the grassroots efforts, the peer-led spaces, the communities that exist because systems have failed people for too long.
What This Nomination Really Means
NeuroHub was never meant to be impressive.
It was meant to be necessary.
It was built out of the gaps:
When Autistic people couldn’t access support that understood them
When “services” felt more like systems of correction than spaces of care
When community had to be created, because it didn’t exist
This nomination isn’t about success in the traditional sense.
It’s about recognition that something different is being built; something grounded in lived experience, mutual support, and the belief that neurodivergent people are not problems to be solved, but ecosystems to be understood.
Why Your Vote Matters
Awards like this are decided not just by panels, but by people. By community, by those who have seen, felt, or been part of the work.
Voting is simple. It takes less than a minute, but what it does is much bigger.
It says:
This matters.
This work should be seen.
This kind of community deserves to exist.
In a world that often sidelines neurodivergent voices, that kind of collective signal carries weight.
Cast Your Vote
If NeuroHub has ever:
Helped you feel less alone
Given you language for your experience
Challenged how you think about neurodivergence
Or simply existed in a way that felt different
Then I’d really appreciate your support.
Whether we win or not, this is already a milestone, because NeuroHub was never built to win awards.
It was built to hold people.
To create space where there wasn’t one.
To challenge systems that were never designed for us.
If that quiet, persistent work is now being recognised on a national stage, then something is shifting. That shift belongs to all of us.
If you do vote, thank you. Genuinely.
If you don’t, but you’ve ever been part of this space in any way, you’re already part of what made this possible.
David



I was able to vote! That was easy 🤓