Neurodivergent individuals, including those with Autism Spectrum Condition (ASC), ADHD, sensory processing differences, and other neurological differences, often experience the world in ways that can make them more vulnerable to trauma. While neurodiversity itself is not a disorder or deficit, the social and environmental mismatch between neurodivergent traits and mainstream expectations can result in repeated invalidation, overwhelm, and exclusion. Over time, this can lead to trauma neurodivergence, a trauma response as profound as that arising from more widely recognised traumatic events.
When an adult assessment or diagnosis for autism or ADHD is required, I work in partnership with trusted consultant psychiatrists in London, ensuring the process is handled smoothly, sensitively, and with complete discretion.
As an Accredited Addiction Therapist, Qualified Sex Addiction Therapist, and HCPC-registered Art Psychotherapist, I have significant experience providing trauma treatment for neurodiverse individuals. My work offers a safe, validating space to explore these experiences, not as isolated pathologies, but as the cumulative impact of being chronically misunderstood in a society not designed for the neurodivergent brain.

Trauma and neurodiversity intersect in ways often overlooked by conventional mental health models. While some clients arrive with a clear history of abuse, neglect, or acute traumatic incidents, many carry what’s sometimes referred to as hidden trauma, a slow accumulation of distress from ongoing microaggressions, unmet needs, and emotional invalidation.
Common experiences include:
These lived experiences are often trivialised by others but deeply traumatic for the individual. Many adults seeking trauma recovery recognise that much of their pain stems from a lifetime of being unseen, not for who they pretended to be, but for who they truly are.
For many, the roots of distress lie in childhood. The school years can be particularly traumatic for neurodivergent learners: a time when differences were often punished instead of supported.
A child with undiagnosed ADHD may have been labelled “difficult,” “disruptive,” or “lazy,” internalising shame about their ability to focus or conform. A child on the autism spectrum might have faced bullying, sensory overload, or constant correction for behaviours that were simply part of their neurodivergent condition.
Over time, these experiences may lead to:
This is the reality of childhood trauma and neurodiversity, a developmental journey marked by external challenges and the internalisation of chronic invalidation. Therapy can help unpick these layers, allowing the adult to separate trauma-based adaptations from their authentic, unmasked self.
Many clients arrive unsure whether they are neurodivergent or only discover this during therapy. Often, it begins with questions like:
These are not diagnostic questions but personal reflections that emerge when exploring trauma and neurodiversity together. Therapy offers a safe space to explore them without judgement or pressure.

Many clients tell me they spent years believing something was wrong with them only to learn that their pain made sense in the context of chronic misattunement. The shift happens when behaviours are seen not as flaws, but as survival strategies shaped by traumatic experiences. Shame gives way to clarity, and self-doubt is replaced by deep self-understanding.
While PTSD symptoms in neurotypical individuals are well-documented, their presentation in neurodiverse clients can be more nuanced:
These are not resistance or non-compliance, they are adaptations to environments that didn’t meet a neurodiverse person’s sensory, emotional, or relational needs.
In my practice, therapeutic interventions are adapted to honour both your lived trauma and your neurotype. This may include:
This approach creates a therapeutic context that doesn’t pathologize you, it recognises the full context of your survival strategies.
Therapy isn’t just about resolving past pain. For neurodivergent adults, it’s also about reclaiming parts of yourself that were hidden or shamed. It’s about creating an internal world where sensitivities become sources of insight and resilience.
This may involve:
Clients often say this is the first time they’ve felt understood not just as someone with trauma, but as a neurodivergent individual living in a world that wasn’t built for them.
I bring over a decade of specialist experience in complex trauma and neurodiverse mental health, alongside advanced training in autism, ADHD, and sensory integration. Whether you are beginning your trauma recovery or seeking to deepen it, you deserve support that honours the whole of you, your neurodivergence, your survival, your strengths, and your story. Contact either myself or practise secretary to book an initial complimentary 15-minute telephone consultation. My practise is based in London’s Harley Street Medical Quarter, St Pauls in the City of London and online.
Book a complimentary consultation or a private therapy session.