Autism Parenting Isn’t Linear: The OODA Loop, Orientation, and Reality Podcast Por  arte de portada

Autism Parenting Isn’t Linear: The OODA Loop, Orientation, and Reality

Autism Parenting Isn’t Linear: The OODA Loop, Orientation, and Reality

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Autism parenting often forces a complete reorientation of how life is understood, planned, and experienced. In this conversation, Sarah Kernion and Alex Vohr explore the OODA loop—Observe, Orient, Decide, Act—not as a military concept, but as a framework for navigating the complexity of special needs parenting.

At the center of the discussion is orientation: the lens through which parents interpret reality. When a child’s development diverges from expected paths, preconceived models of parenting no longer hold. What replaces them is a continuous process of adaptation, where feedback, engagement, and lived experience reshape how decisions are made.

The conversation connects complexity theory with motherhood, highlighting how incremental progress—inchstones—becomes the true measure of growth. Radical acceptance emerges not as resignation, but as a strategic shift that allows parents to update their orientation and move forward with clarity.

Drawing from military strategy and real-life caregiving, this episode reframes autism parenting as an adaptive system—one that requires constant engagement, flexibility, and the willingness to evolve.

SPEED KILLS (Amazon)

SPEED KILLS (Digital)

Alex Vohr is a retired United States Marine Corps veteran who served 25 years, including multiple combat campaigns and humanitarian relief operations. Since retiring from the Marine Corps, Alex has worked in commercial industry as the Assistant Vice President of Operations at the Florida East Coast Railway, the Vice President of Logistics at New Fortress Energy, Vice President for Government Affairs at Trailer Bridge and is currently the President of OneLNG. In addition to his primary logistics specialty, Alex is a defense acquisition professional, a military planner, and an educator. He served as the Director for the School of Advanced Warfighting, a graduate-level curriculum focused on planning and decision-making in war.
Alex holds three advanced degrees, his most recent in strategic studies from the Marine Corps War College. He has authored articles on Leadership, Disaster Relief, and decision-making in the Marine Corps Gazette and in Military Review. Alex resides in Florida with his wife, Susan, and they have three children.

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