The last time I was this moved by a poetess I was reading Maya Angelou, I LOVE poetry, and have been reading and writing it since I was a child. Moved by the rhythms and beauty of the allegories that poetry brings, became a huge fan of Slyvia Plath, Emily Dickinson, Maya Angelou, and countless others. I tend to be a bit picky about what I consider good and truthfully the last one I liked was Amanda Gorman's "The Hill We Climb". Until I read Alora Young's "Walking Gentry Home". Alora has created a beautiful tapestry of pictures of her foremothers in powerful and vibrant colors, weaving the luxurious strength of Black history. I learned a lot in this thought-provoking collection, I cried more than a few tears too. This is beautiful and I am so happy and honored to have read and highly recommend this. This talented poet has a lovely voice that we need to hear.

Thank you to Random House Publishing, NetGalley and to Alora Young for the chance to read this book in exchange for an honest and non-paid review. 

Cass (aka Bookhugger)

Speaker Topics!

The mind is a fractal: What Neurodivergent Thinkers Can Teach Us About Innovation”

Author, poet, and neurodivergent Southern genius Alora Young doesn’t think in straight lines. She thinks in spirals, tangents, metaphors, and memories. In this electrifying talk, Alora maps the wild, brilliant geometry of the neurodivergent mind and shows how difference is not a flaw, but a force. From ADHD hyperfocus to autistic pattern recognition, from OCD’s precision to the poetic logic of psychosis, she unpacks how nonlinear minds hold the blueprints for creative revolutions. With a voice that moves between sermon and stand-up, research and realness, Alora tells the story of what it means to innovate not in spite of your brain, but because of it. She shares tools for educators, companies, and creators who want to unlock radical imagination, as well as personal stories that will make you laugh, cry, and rethink everything you thought you knew about “normal.”

Perfect for audiences seeking insight, inclusion, and inspiration, this talk is a rallying cry for those who have ever been called too much, too weird, or too different.

 Because fractals grow and flip and transform 

But most importantly,

They make beauty out of chaos.

 

Brilliant Beaming Spectrum: Rethinking Creativity, Innovation, and Intelligence from the perspective of neurodivergent genius ”

 

What if the next Einstein is a girl who doodles in class and forgets her backpack? What if the best idea in the room belongs to the person who hasn’t spoken yet? 

What if genius isn’t neat or quiet or linear,but loud, bright, chaotic, and covered in glitter glue?

In this luminous, laugh-out-loud, occasionally tearjerking talk, poet and author Alora Young takes you on a journey through the world of neurodivergent brilliance. Drawing from her lived experience with autism, ADHD, OCD, and psychosis, Alora challenges everything we’ve been taught about intelligence. She doesn’t believe in a spectrum that runs from broken to brilliant. She believes in a spectrum that beams. That blinds. That bends around corners and opens portals to ways of thinking the world desperately needs.With poetry, pop culture, storytelling, and research braided together like friendship bracelets, Alora invites audiences to reconsider how we define value, creativity, and success. Whether she’s breaking down the science of pattern recognition or telling the story of the time she turned an OCD spiral into a poem that went viral, she’ll leave you laughing, learning, and looking at your own mind differently.

This talk is a manifesto for teachers, innovators, misfits, and the misunderstood. 

It’s for the ones who never quite fit, 

but always lit up the room.

 Because brilliance doesn’t follow

 a rubric.

 It beams.

 

The Future is Nonlinear: Harnessing Neurodivergent Minds at Work

Neurodivergent people don’t think outside the box, because we were never in the box to begin with. We think in spirals and storms, in patterns no one else can see, in rhythms that disrupt the status quo and rewrite what’s possible.In this witty, grounded, and galvanizing keynote, poet and neurodivergent innovator Alora Young invites companies, teams, and leaders to rethink the way they see minds that work differently. From ADHD brainstorming brilliance to autistic systems-level thinking, Alora breaks down the science and soul of divergent cognition,and how it can drive innovation, collaboration, and long-term success.

You’ll walk away with a new lens on inclusion that goes far beyond accommodation.

This is about letting neurodivergent people reimagine the systems that confine them entirely. Through stories, research, and just the right amount of poetry, Alora makes the case for a future that isn’t linear, hierarchical, or rigid,but luminous, adaptable, and deeply human.

Perfect for DEI events, leadership retreats, HR professionals, tech companies, creative agencies, and any workplace ready to embrace the brilliance it’s been overlooking.

Because the future isn’t a straight line

. And the minds that will build it won’t be either.

 

Neurodivergent & Brilliant: The Untold Story of Creative Minds”

 

How ADHD, autism, and OCD fuel innovation, artistic brilliance, and world-changing ideas. A call to reframe the narrative from deficit to genius.

We’ve heard the myths. That we’re too sensitive. Too scattered. Too intense. That we’re unmotivated, unfocused, hard to manage. But what if the real story is that we’re brilliant, and the world just hasn’t caught up yet?

In this vibrant, vulnerable, and truth-telling talk, author and poet Alora Young shares the untold story of neurodivergent creativity. Through her lived experiences with autism, ADHD, OCD, and psychosis, she invites audiences into the electric inner world of minds that think differently. This is not a story of overcoming. This is a story of becoming. Of turning spirals into structure, chaos into craft, and “too much” into power.

Part memoir, part manifesto, part love letter to misunderstood minds, this keynote is perfect for classrooms, conferences, and creative spaces that are ready to move past pity and into possibility. You will laugh, cry, and leave with a toolkit for recognizing and nurturing the brilliance that doesn’t always look the way you expect.

Because neurodivergent minds don’t need to be fixed. 

They need to be heard. 

And their stories might be the ones

 that change everything.

 

Every Brain is a Poem: Spoken Word Pedagogy and Neurodivergent Creativity in the Classroom”

Some kids learn like thunder, loud, fast, unforgettable. Some like rivers, curving their way through the lesson until it finally makes sense. Some learn through rhythm, repetition, and rhyme. Some through silence. But every brain, when you listen closely, is a poem.

In this passionate, poetic, and practice-based talk, Alora Young, award-winning poet, educator, and neurodivergent thinker, makes a powerful case for spoken word poetry as one of the most effective tools we have for reaching all students, especially those who have been labeled “distracted,” “disruptive,” or “disengaged.” Drawing from her lived experience with autism, ADHD, and OCD, Alora offers educators a radical reframe: what if neurodivergent students are not failing school? What if school is failing to speak their language?Blending research, classroom-tested strategies, and live performance, this talk offers a roadmap for teachers, administrators, and youth leaders ready to infuse their classrooms with creativity, inclusion, and authentic student voice. You will learn how spoken word supports literacy, critical thinking, and social-emotional development, and how it allows students to write themselves into the world before the world writes over them.

Because teaching is about giving students the tools 

to find their voice and trust that it matters.

 

From Daydreamers to Trailblazers: Neurodivergent Youth and the Power of Imagination

 

They said you were too much. Too dreamy, too loud, too quiet, too off-task. You were coloring outside the lines when they hadn’t even passed out the paper. But what if all that “too much” was actually the start of something revolutionary?

In this vibrant and empowering talk, author, poet, and lifelong daydreamer Alora Young speaks directly to and about neurodivergent youth,the thinkers, feelers, and visionaries who see the world a little sideways and imagine what no one else dares to. Alora shares her own journey from misunderstood kid to nationally recognized author, weaving personal stories, poetry, and research to highlight the deep creative and emotional power of neurodivergent minds.

Educators, parents, and young people will walk away with a reimagined understanding of intelligence, creativity, and what it truly means to thrive. This talk is a celebration of kids who learn through rhythm and chaos, who find patterns in clouds and stories in silence. It’s about turning daydreaming into direction, and imagination into impact.

Because the ones you think aren’t paying attention

 might just be imagining a better world. 

And when you believe in them,

 they will build it.

 

Be Weird and Win: On Creativity, Disability, and Liberation

 

This one’s for the weird kids. The loud ones, the quiet ones, the ones who stim in class and write poems in the margins. The ones who couldn’t sit still, who asked too many questions, who got called crazy, or lazy, or difficult when really, they were brilliant.

In this fierce, funny, and freeing keynote, author and poet Alora Young invites audiences to reimagine disability not as limitation, but as liberation. Blending lived experience with autism, ADHD, OCD, and psychosis, Alora tells the truth about what it means to be disabled and creative in a world that tries to make you pick one. Through stories, scholarship, and spoken word, she shows how “weird” is often another word for visionary,and how the very things that set us apart can be our greatest tools for making change.

This talk is a rally cry and a roadmap. Perfect for youth, educators, disability advocates, artists, and anyone tired of shrinking to fit. Alora offers a new kind of success story, one where being different is not just accepted, but essential.

Because being weird 

is not a flaw.

 It’s a strategy.

 And it’s how we win.

 

 How to Write a Book Before You Can Rent a Car: A real-world guide to turning Neurodivergent  teenage chaos into published pages.

You don’t need to be thirty, settled, or even organized to write a book. You just need a story, a stubborn kind of hope, and maybe a few spiral notebooks covered in doodles and snack crumbs.

In this funny, honest, and wildly encouraging talk, Alora Young,author, poet, and proud neurodivergent weirdo,shows young creatives how she wrote and published her first book before legally renting a car. Spoiler: it wasn’t about waking up at 5 a.m. or color-coding her outline. It was about writing through the mess, embracing her ADHD-fueled brain, and trusting that her voice mattered long before the world said it was ready.

Part motivational pep talk, part practical guide, and part behind-the-scenes truth bomb, this keynote gives teens the real tools they need to start and finish their books. From managing executive dysfunction to building writing routines that actually work for chaotic minds, Alora shares strategies that feel human, possible, and full of joy.

Perfect for student writers, teen workshops, youth festivals, and classrooms, this talk doesn’t just tell you it’s possible. It shows you how.

Because you don’t have to wait until you’re older 

to write something unforgettable. 

You just have to start 

while you’re still becoming yourself.

 

High definition: a guide to writing iconic books for neurodivergent creatives

Your brain isn’t broken. It’s in high definition.

I’ve written 10 books with a brain that forgets what I said five seconds ago. Here’s how.In this electric, empowering, and slightly chaotic session, poet and published author Alora Young gives neurodivergent creatives the ultimate guide to writing books that hit hard, heal deeply, and live forever. Whether you forget where you put your outline or you hyperfocus for twelve hours straight without blinking, this talk is for you. Alora doesn’t teach you how to “overcome” your brain,she teaches you how to write with it, through it, because of it.

She shares the tricks, tools, and rituals that helped her write and publish multiple books before turning 21,all while navigating autism, ADHD, OCD, and mental illness. You’ll learn how to build a book out of spirals instead of steps, how to turn sensory overwhelm into worldbuilding, and how to stop trying to write like neurotypical authors when your genius doesn’t work that way.

It’s craft. It’s coaching. 

It’s permission to be messy 

and magnificent.

Perfect for writers, educators, workshop leaders, and anyone ready to make something iconic with a mind that moves a little differently. 

Because neurodivergence isn’t the thing you write despite.

 It’s the thing that makes your work 

unforgettable