ERP is a behavioral therapy. That fact alone is enough for many autistic and PDA individuals to feel immediate alarm.
The concern is often:
For PDAers in particular—whose anxiety is often tightly linked to perceived loss of autonomy—the idea of “exposure” can sound indistinguishable from coercion.
And in some settings, unfortunately, that fear has been justified. ERP can be practiced in ways that are rigid, therapist-led, compliance-focused, and dismissive of neurodivergent needs.
When that happens, it does replicate harmful dynamics.
What often gets lost in these conversations is an important distinction:
ERP itself is not inherently coercive.
The way it is conceptualized and delivered determines whether it is harmful or healing.
ERP does not require:
Those are choices made by providers, not requirements of the model.
In response to historical abuse, some communities have understandably swung toward an absolute stance: that any behavioral intervention is unsafe for autistic or PDA individuals.
While protective in intent, this belief can unintentionally:
For individuals with OCD, this is especially consequential. OCD does not resolve through insight, accommodation, or validation alone. Without some form of exposure to feared experiences—and reduction of compulsive responses—symptoms often expand, restrict life, and entrench suffering.
Rejecting ERP wholesale can mean abandoning people to their anxiety, not protecting them from harm.
ERP does not have to resemble ABA. When practiced ethically and neuroaffirmingly, it often looks fundamentally different from what many people fear.
Key differences include:
For PDAers, this autonomy-preserving stance is often what makes engagement possible at all.
This is another misconception that fuels fear.
ERP, when done well, is not about forcing someone into distress. It is about:
For autistic and PDA individuals, ERP can be reframed as:
“Expanding your range of options—on your terms.”
Not shrinking them.
Skepticism toward behavioral treatment is not ignorance—it is lived experience.
But caution does not have to mean closure.
It is possible to:
ERP does not have to be the enemy of autistic liberation. When reclaimed thoughtfully, it can be a tool that supports autonomy rather than undermines it.
The question may not be:
“Is ERP safe for autistic or PDA individuals?”
But rather:
“Who gets to define what ERP looks like—and whose nervous system is centered?”
When autistic and PDA voices are central, when consent is real, and when autonomy is preserved, ERP does not replicate harm.
It becomes something else entirely.
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