Neurodivergence, Identity & Psychological Wellbeing
Neurodivergence
Neurodivergence refers to natural variations in the way individuals think, process information, experience emotion, regulate attention, interact socially, and engage with the world around them.
Many neurodivergent individuals spend years feeling misunderstood, chronically overwhelmed, “different,” or exhausted from attempting to adapt to environments and expectations that do not align with the way their nervous system naturally functions.
For some, neurodivergence is recognised early in life. Others may reach adulthood before identifying longstanding patterns involving attention, sensory processing, social communication, emotional regulation, executive functioning, masking, or burnout.
Therapy provides a space to explore neurodivergence with psychological depth, compassion, and respect — not as pathology to be “fixed,” but as a meaningful aspect of identity and lived experience requiring understanding, support, and appropriate adaptation.
Many neurodivergent individuals also experience anxiety, depression, trauma-related symptoms, burnout, chronic stress, sleep disturbance, identity difficulties, or relational strain secondary to years of misunderstanding, invalidation, masking, or unmet support needs.
Autism Spectrum Disorder
Including difficulties involving:
- Sensory sensitivity
- Social communication differences
- Masking and camouflaging
- Autistic burnout
- Rigidity or difficulty with change
- Emotional overwhelm
- Shutdowns or meltdowns
- Social exhaustion
- Difficulties feeling understood or connected
Attention-Deficit / Hyperactivity Disorder
Difficulties may involve:
- Executive dysfunction
- Chronic overwhelm
- Emotional dysregulation
- Impulsivity
- Difficulties sustaining attention
- Procrastination and task paralysis
- Disorganisation
- Time blindness
- Burnout and shame associated with perceived underperformance
Learning & Processing Differences
Including:
- Dyslexia
- Dyscalculia
- Dysgraphia
- Auditory processing difficulties
-
Sensory processing differences
Other Neurodivergent Experiences
Including:
- Tourette syndrome and tic disorders
-
Misaphonia
- Giftedness and twice-exceptionality
- Highly sensitive nervous system presentations
Neurodivergence May Present As
- chronic overwhelm or burnout
- emotional dysregulation
- sensory sensitivity
- executive functioning difficulties
- social exhaustion
- masking or camouflaging behaviours
- difficulties with focus or organisation
- impulsivity
- rigid thinking or routines
- perfectionism and chronic self-criticism
- feelings of being “different”
- identity confusion
- relationship difficulties
- anxiety and depressive symptoms
- difficulty regulating energy, motivation, or attention
For many individuals, longstanding shame develops not because of neurodivergence itself, but through repeated experiences of misunderstanding, criticism, invalidation, or pressure to function in neurotypical ways.

Understanding Neurodivergence Beyond Pathology
Therapy approaches neurodivergence from a neuroaffirming and trauma-informed perspective.
Rather than viewing neurodivergent traits purely as deficits, treatment focuses on understanding:
- nervous system functioning
- sensory and emotional processing
- masking and adaptation strategies
- identity formation
- attachment and relational experiences
- chronic stress and burnout
- self-worth and internalised shame
- environmental mismatch and overstimulation
Many neurodivergent individuals have spent years attempting to suppress or compensate for natural differences in order to feel accepted, safe, or successful. Over time, this can contribute to exhaustion, identity confusion, anxiety, depression, and disconnection from self.
Therapy supports greater self-understanding, self-compassion, emotional regulation, and development of environments and coping strategies that better align with the individual’s nervous system and needs.
Therapeutic Approaches
Therapy focuses not on forcing neurotypical functioning, but on supporting sustainable wellbeing, emotional integration, self-understanding, identity development, relational health, and improved quality of life within the context of neurodivergent experience.
Treatment may incorporate:
- Neuroaffirming psychotherapy
- Trauma-informed therapy
- Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT)
- Cognitive Behavioural Therapy (CBT)
- Compassion Focused Therapy
- Mindfulness-based approaches
- nervous system regulation strategies
- Executive functioning support
- Attachment-informed psychotherapy
