Neurodivergent Experiences
Neurodivergence describes the wide range of ways that brains and nervous systems can function differently from the societal "norm." Some forms of neurodivergence are innate while others may be shaped by life experiences. Both deserve care, understanding, and support.
I work with clients who identify as neurodivergent or who have been diagnosed with:
– Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD)
– Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD)
– Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder (OCD)
– Giftedness
– Twice-Exceptional (2e)
– Trauma-related nervous system dysregulation
Therapy here affirms your lived experience, whether you have always felt different or only started to after the world demanded too much of your body or mind.

Under the Umbrella of Neurodivergence
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You have always seen the world a little differently. Maybe you notice patterns other people miss, or feel disoriented by things they never seem to notice at all.
Maybe you need structure and predictability, and the world feels loud, fast, and full of unspoken rules you never agreed to.
You might feel at home in your thoughts, in your special interests, in deep conversation but not always in social settings or sensory environments.You have probably spent years adapting, blending, masking.
You are perceptive, principled, and deeply feeling, even if you have been told otherwise. You have learned to move through discomfort for the sake of fitting in, even when it meant losing touch with yourself.
And somewhere along the way, maybe you started to wonder if being too much or too rigid was the problem.
But it is not. You are not a problem to solve.
You are a person with a specific way of moving through the world and that deserves care, not correction.
Therapy with me is not about erasing your edges. It is about honoring your rhythms.
It is a space to unmask gently, reconnect with your needs, and learn how to live from a place of self trust rather than self sacrifice.
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Your brain is constantly buzzing with ideas, questions, memories, possibilities. You jump between thoughts like stepping stones, brilliant but sometimes scattered.
You can feel everything all at once or nothing at all. Motivated and frozen. Inspired and exhausted.
Maybe you have been called lazy, disorganized, inconsistent. You might have internalized shame around being “bad at adulting”, struggling with routines, time, or focus, even as you pour energy into everyone else's needs.
You are sensitive, intuitive, creative, and passionate. And yes, sometimes impulsive, avoidant, forgetful.
You are not a contradiction. You are a system of complexity that was never meant to function under rigid expectations.
Here, we will slow things down. We will make space for the parts of you that are tired of pushing through. Together we will build scaffolding. We will explore how to live with your brain, not against it.
Because you do not need to be more consistent. You need to be more supported.
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You crave meaning. You question everything. You feel everything, sometimes all at once.
Maybe you have always been sensitive to sound, light, emotion, injustice, beauty, and everything in between.
Your mind moves quickly and dives deeply. Your heart breaks open easily. Your soul longs for understanding and connection.
You are curious and multitalented. Intuitive and analytical. Empathic, perceptive, creative, and socially conscious.
But you may also feel overwhelmed, self doubting, and like you are carrying a weight no one else quite sees.
You might feel like you are always waiting, for others to catch up, for the world to slow down, for space to exist exactly as you are.
Even with all your insight, imposter syndrome can whisper that you are not enough or somehow too much.
Many people with rainforest minds feel a quiet, persistent drive to make the world better. It is not about proving yourself or reaching some idealized potential. It is about caring deeply, seeing clearly, and wanting your life to mean something.
Maybe you have been told you are intense. Maybe you have felt invisible.
Maybe both.In this space, you do not have to be simplified or explained away. Together, we can explore your complexity with care and curiosity, your insight and exhaustion, your brilliance and your burnout.
Being wired this way is not something to fix. It is something to understand, to honor, and to support. So you can feel more grounded, more seen, and more at home in your own mind.
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You have always been hard to categorize.
You might be the brilliant student who struggled to turn in homework. The insightful thinker who loses track of time. The creative problem solver who shuts down under pressure. The deep feeler who masks exhaustion with perfectionism.
You are gifted and you have struggled.
You might have heard that your challenges could not be real because of how capable you seem. Or that your gifts do not count because of how much support you need.Maybe you have lived between extremes: hyper focused and burned out. Independent and overwhelmed. Inspired and immobilized. Smart enough to compensate, but always at a cost.
Being twice exceptional means carrying layers of contradiction that are often invisible to others. It means being misunderstood in schools, in relationships, and in systems not designed for complexity.
Therapy with me makes room for the both and. Your intelligence and your struggle. Your sensitivity and your executive functioning differences. Your capacity and your very real limits.
We will work at your pace, honoring the strengths that have helped you survive while building new ways to support yourself with more ease and less shame.
You do not need to split yourself in half to be understood here. You get to bring your full self and be met there.
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Your mind wants certainty. Safety. Relief.
It latches onto the what ifs, the worst case scenarios, the things no one else seems to be worrying about. It tells you if you could just figure it out, fix it, confess it, check one more time, you might finally feel okay.Maybe you have intrusive thoughts that feel terrifying or shameful. Maybe you find yourself stuck in rituals, mental reviews, reassurance seeking, or avoidance you cannot quite explain to anyone else.
And maybe you have started to wonder what is you and what is OCD.
You are not broken.
You are not dangerous.
You are not your thoughts.OCD is not a personality quirk or a preference for cleanliness. It is a disorder rooted in fear, responsibility, and a deep desire to prevent harm.
Here, you do not have to hide what your brain is doing. This is a space where you will be met with understanding, not judgment. Together, we will slow the spin. We will map the patterns. We will practice doing the opposite of what OCD demands, not to dismiss your fear, but to build trust in your ability to face it.
There is room for structure and softness here. There is a way forward that is not about control, but about choice. And you do not have to do it alone.
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Your body remembers what your mind has tried to make sense of. You might find yourself hyperaware, constantly scanning for danger, even when everything seems fine. Or you shut down, go numb, disconnect from yourself or the world around you.
Sometimes your reactions feel too big. Other times, you feel nothing at all.
You might struggle with sleep, boundaries, trust, or feeling safe in relationships. Even the good moments can feel hard to fully let in.This isn’t because you’re too sensitive.
This is your nervous system doing exactly what it had to do to protect you. It learned how to survive chaos, betrayal, neglect, or fear. And now it’s trying to keep you safe, even when you’re no longer in danger.But survival mode isn’t meant to last forever.
Therapy can be a space where your system learns that it’s safe enough to soften. We’ll move slowly, with care.
We’ll build the capacity to stay present, to feel, to rest, to trust. You don’t have to relive everything.You just have to stop going through it alone.