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Coming Up

What’s Coming Next (And Why This Site Exists)

This site wasn’t built for business. It was built because I hit a wall — one too many times.

I’ve spent the last few months trying to engage with organisations that were supposed to help. Instead, I was ignored, shut down, and in one case, actively excluded. I raised concerns — and the response was silence, deflection, or outright blocking.

This is what happens when you’re disabled, neurodivergent, or have a conviction. Systems offer support when you’re quiet, compliant, and grateful. But when you push back — even politely, even lawfully — they treat you like a problem to delete.


1. Abrupt Withdrawal, No Safeguarding

One charity, which claims to support people with convictions into work, cut me off completely — within twenty minutes of me asserting my right to use my own CV. I disclosed my disabilities. I tried to engage constructively. Instead of compassion or adjustments, I got locked out of support with no warning, no appeal, and no concern for impact.

Since then, they’ve blocked multiple email addresses and ignored my Subject Access Request. Their conduct didn’t just fail safeguarding principles — it shredded them.

And yet this is what too many people face every day: services that pretend to care until you show signs of autonomy.


2. Mishandling of Private Data

I also recently experienced a serious mishandling of personal data involving confidential information being sent to the wrong person — including mine. When I raised the issue, the response was evasive and dismissive.

That kind of breach isn’t just sloppy. It’s unlawful under UK GDPR. I haven’t escalated it to the Information Commissioner’s Office yet — but if I don’t receive meaningful cooperation, I will. And I’ll document that process too, so others can do the same.

This isn’t about revenge. It’s about transparency, protection, and accountability — three things disabled people are too often denied when systems mess up.


What to Expect Over the Coming Weeks

  • New blog posts covering your rights (SARs, complaints, data, discrimination)
  • Templates you can use to demand answers and push back
  • Commentary and case studies that show what actually happens when systems fail
  • Opportunities to share your own story if you’ve been ignored, denied, or mistreated

This site is not neutral. It’s not polished. It’s not professional. It’s real, it’s angry, and it’s necessary.

If you’ve ever been told your experience doesn’t count, your diagnosis is too complex, or your complaint is too inconvenient — you’re not alone.

This is your space too.

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