There’s something magical about rediscovering a childhood favorite and realizing it still fits—not just like a cozy sweater, but like armor. That’s what happened when Revna, my wife, stumbled upon The Snoopy Show after years of distance from the Peanuts universe. She lit up with joy… and then hesitated. “Is it weird that I still love this? It’s a kids’ show.”
But here’s the thing: Snoopy isn’t just for kids. He’s for anyone who’s ever been told to sit when they wanted to dance. For anyone who’s been asked to “act normal” when normal never felt like home.
Snoopy as Neurodivergent Icon
In the very first episode, Charlie Brown tries to train Snoopy like a “normal dog.” Sit? Snoopy reclines. Shake? He makes a milkshake. Stay? He builds a pizza from scratch. Later, he’s told dancing dogs aren’t allowed on school grounds. So he dances harder.
Snoopy doesn’t just resist conformity—he redefines it. He’s blunt, intentional, and radically authentic. He doesn’t explain himself. He doesn’t apologize. He just is. And for someone like Revna, who spent decades being boxed in, masked, and misunderstood, Snoopy isn’t just a cartoon. He’s a mirror. A mentor. A memory of who she was before the world told her to be someone else.
The Power of Comfort Characters
Comfort shows aren’t just nostalgic. They’re sacred. They’re the places we go to remember who we were before the world got loud. For neurodivergent folks, especially those who grew up undiagnosed or unsupported, these characters become lifelines. They model freedom, silliness, rebellion, and safety. They give us permission to be weird, to be whimsical, to be whole.
Snoopy is more than a dog. He’s a pilot, a chef, a dancer, a poet. He’s a shapeshifter who refuses to be pinned down. And maybe that’s why so many autistic people cling to him—not because he’s simple, but because he’s limitless.
Letting Ourselves Love What We Love
So no, it’s not weird to love Snoopy. It’s revolutionary. It’s healing. It’s a reclamation of joy.
If you’ve ever felt like you had to hide your love for something “childish,” I hope you’ll reconsider. Maybe that thing isn’t childish at all. Maybe it’s a part of you that survived. Maybe it’s the part that knew who you were before you had words for it.
And maybe, just maybe, Snoopy knew too.



