ARFID & Feeding Challenges: Injustice, Interoception & the Power of Being Believed—An Advanced Conversation
$79.00 USD
This is part 2 of a 2-part course. Building on the foundation of interoception, body trust, and affirming ARFID care presented in our first course—we are going deeper into the places most trainings never touch. We’ll name the injustices that surround feeding, from being dismissed as experts in one’s own experience (epistemic injustice) to lacking the concepts and language needed to be understood (hermeneutical injustice). Together, we’ll also explore how rejection sensitivity and interoception predictions shape ARFID—and how being believed becomes the foundation for change. Practical strategies will guide you in shifting the feeding narrative toward justice, credibility, and embodied trust. Take Part 2 solo, or purchase and watch the Part 1 recording of our ARFID and Interoception Series ahead of time.
Description
Registration Fee: $79
This on-demand course includes:
- 2-hours video instruction with Naureen & Kelly (approximately 90 minutes of content + 30 minutes of Q&A)
- 6-months unlimited access from time of purchase
- Access to 3 exclusive downloadable resources
- Personalized certificate of completion
Course Description:
This is part 2 of a 2-part series on ARFID and Interoception. Take Part 2 solo, or purchase and watch the Part 1 recording of our ARFID and Interoception Course ahead of time. Learn more about Part 1 here.
ARFID and other feeding challenges can’t be understood through behavior alone. They are deeply tied to interoception, trauma, and the experience of injustice. In Part 1, we built a foundation by exploring affirming approaches to interoception, feeding, and ARFID. In Part 2, we’re going deeper.
This course looks at how people’s lived experiences of ARFID are often silenced, doubted, or framed through deficit-based models that erase the truth of what they feel in their bodies. We’ll explore how interoception predictions about eating are formed and updated, and why supporting signals like fear, disgust, and anxiety is central to body trust.
We’ll also name two injustices that are rarely addressed in feeding spaces:
- Epistemic injustice—when someone’s feeding experiences are dismissed or doubted because they are not seen as credible.
- Hermeneutical injustice—when marginalized groups are denied the capacity to create language for their experiences, leaving people without the words to describe what’s happening in their bodies in ways that others can understand or honor.
At its heart, this course is about shifting the feeding conversation: What would change if safety, belief, and body trust came before everything else?
What you’ll learn:
- How interoception predictions about eating are formed—and how to update them over time
- How to support body signals of fear, disgust, and anxiety around eating
- How rejection sensitivity disrupts body trust and can make food feel tied to judgment, pressure, or conditional acceptance
- How epistemic injustice (being seen as less credible) affects whose feeding experiences are believed
- How hermeneutical injustice (lacking language to describe experience) impacts interoception and eating
- Why safety in feeding can’t be promised with words—and how to earn it by honoring signals and believing someone’s experience
Who this course is for:
- You serve clients of any age experiencing feeding challenges and/or ARFID
- You are an Occupational Therapy Practitioner, Registered Dietician, Speech and Language Pathologist, Mental Health Provider, Educator, or Caregiver who wants to provide affirming, cutting-edge support
- You want to understand the deeper role of injustice, body trust, and interoception in feeding challenges
- You are a person with lived experience of feeding challenges/ARFID seeking affirming language, validation, and strategies that reflect your truth
So, who are we?:

More about Naureen: Naureen Hunani (she/her) is a multiply-neurodivergent registered dietitian with over 18 years of experience. She is the founder of RDs for Neurodiversity, a neurodiversity-informed online continuing education platform and community for dietitians and helping professionals.
She has a private practice in Montreal, Canada, where she supports people struggling with various feeding and eating challenges through a trauma-informed, weight-inclusive and anti-oppressive approach. She is the creator of the Neurodiversity Affirming Model®, a framework developed to disrupt, challenge and dismantle the current oppressive models that exclude the feeding and eating experiences of neurodivergent and disabled people. Naureen has extensive experience working with neurodivergent children, adults and families. She has had the privilege to share her knowledge at national and international conferences. In 2023, she received ASAN’s Nothing About Us Without US Award. She is passionate about supporting pro-justice and weight-inclusive professionals striving to build liberatory practices.
More about Kelly Mahler: I earned a Doctorate in Occupational Therapy from Misericordia University, Dallas, PA and have been an occupational therapist for 20 years, serving school-aged children and adults. I’m winner of multiple awards including the 2020 American Occupational Therapy Association Emerging and Innovative Practice Award & a Mom’s Choice Gold Medal. I am an international speaker and enjoy presenting on topics related to the twelve resources I’ve authored including:
- The Interoception Curriculum: A Step-by-Step Framework for Developing Mindful Self-Regulation-used in over 30 countries world wide
- Interoception Activity Cards

