Coming off the sensory storm of Coachella and Stagecoach, we’re pressing pause—and play—on something more personal.
Music: Our Mood Regulator, Memory-Maker, and Lifeline
Music is a mood regulator, a memory-maker, and for so many in our autism and ADHD community, a lifeline. Whether it’s the grounding repetition of Kendrick Lamar, the dopamine rush of Teena Marie remixes, or the catharsis of Sia’s vocals—you’ll find us lip-syncing, stimming, or just vibing in our own lane.
What Songs Actually Hit for Us?
We asked ourselves and our broader neurodivergent community: What songs actually hit for us? Here’s our all-time, all-vibes playlist.
Our Household Picks: Gen X Classics + Teen Rewinds
- “Lucid Dreams” – Juice WRLD
Lyrical loops, melodic melancholy—perfect for zoning in or zoning out.
- “Somebody That I Used to Know” – Gotye
Glitchy visuals + stimming edits = viral gold in our world.
- “Everything In Its Right Place” – Radiohead
Structured, spatial, sonically weird in the best way.
- “Bittersweet Symphony” – The Verve
Timeless, sweeping, and dramatic (just like us).
- “Karma Police” – Radiohead
Darkly dreamy, slightly spiraling—like an existential lullaby.
- “West Coast” – Lana Del Rey
Slow build, haunting vocals, total sensory seduction. Feels like California and overstimulation in one.
- “Luther,” “All the Stars,” and “TV Off” – Kendrick Lamar + playlists
Moods for every hour and emotional bandwidth.
Sensory-Approved Tracks from Our Neurodivergent Internet Family
These are the viral audio cues that show up in our feeds constantly. If you scroll TikTok or Reels long enough, you’ll recognize them instantly—songs that score stimming videos, “mask-off” edits, identity montages, and dopamine dance breaks.
- “Unstoppable” – Sia
Reclaim your power, post-diagnosis edit style.
- “Elastic Heart” – Sia
Full-body emotional release. Dance it out. Cry it out.
- “Doomed” – Moses Sumney
Existential angst for the deep-feelers.
- “Space Song” – Beach House
Dreamy dissociation meets masking fatigue.
- “Some Nights” – fun.
Overstimulating, cathartic, chaotic—just like an ADHD brain.
- “Welcome to the Internet” – Bo Burnham
The ADHD internet spiral in song form.
- “Lovergirl” (sped up) – Teena Marie
Stim dance heaven.
- “I Am Not a Woman, I’m a God” – Halsey
Gender, identity, power—raw and unfiltered.
- “Running Up That Hill” – Kate Bush
Retro, emotional, sensory-rich.
Kendrick Lamar: King of Echolalia, Therapy Playlists, and First Words
For many of us—and especially for our kids—Kendrick Lamar isn’t just music. He’s language.
His voice is rhythm. His lyrics are affirmations. We’ve seen his songs literally unlock speech in minimally verbal and nonverbal kids. He’s shown up in therapy sessions, long drives, emotional breakthroughs, and casual car dance parties.
- “Alright” – A self-regulation mantra. We chant it. We believe it.
- “HUMBLE.” – That “sit down, be humble” hook? It’s been part of speech therapy.
- “LOVE.” – Melodic, emotional, bonding. Perfect for connection moments.
- “DNA.” – The first rap some kids ever echo out loud. No exaggeration.
- “Mirror” – Simple phrasing with emotional weight. It sticks.
Bonus: His Tiny Desk concert should be classified as therapeutic content.
TL;DR? Here’s What This Playlist Sounds Like:
- Power
- Repetition
- Rhythm
- Identity
- Safe sensory hits
- And a little emotional chaos (because… ADHD)
Whether we’re dancing, dissociating, decompressing—or just trying to get through the day—there’s something on this list for every neurodivergent brain and every emotional setting.
Play it loud. Play it soft. Play it on repeat.
This is our soundtrack.
—The Savants