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Relational Trauma Therapy for Neurodivergent Adults

Chronic Stress, Misattunement & the Weight of a Life Spent Adapting

For many neurodivergent adults, trauma didn't arrive in a single, identifiable moment. It accumulated - slowly, quietly - across years of being misunderstood, unseen, or asked to be someone you weren't.

I work with adults who are beginning to recognize that what they've been carrying has a name - and that healing from it is possible.

You Might Relate to Things Like:

  • Feeling like you've always had to work harder than others just to get by

  • Carrying a chronic low-level sense that something is wrong with you

  • Relationships that leave you feeling drained, unseen, or like you disappear into other people's needs

  • A history of being told you were "too sensitive," "too much," or "overreacting"

  • Struggling to trust yourself - your perceptions, your needs, your reactions

  • A nervous system that feels perpetually braced, even when things are fine

  • Difficulty knowing what you actually need, feel, or want

  • Feeling like you've been performing a version of yourself for so long you're not sure who's underneath

What Is Relational Trauma?

Most of us grew up with a picture of trauma as something dramatic and singular - an accident, a disaster, a violent event. But for many neurodivergent adults, the most lasting wounds didn't come from a single overwhelming moment.

They came from the accumulation of smaller ones.

Chronic misattunement is what happens when the people around you - caregivers, teachers, peers - consistently couldn't meet you where you were. Not necessarily out of cruelty, but because they didn't understand you. Your needs felt like too much. Your reactions were labeled as problems. Your experience was minimized, redirected, or simply missed.

For a neurodivergent child navigating a world not built for their brain, this can happen constantly and invisibly - in classrooms, in family systems, in friendships that never quite fit. Over time, the message absorbed is not just "this environment is hard." It's "I am hard. Something about me is wrong."

 

That internalized message is relational trauma. And it shapes everything - how you relate to yourself, how you move through relationships, how safe it feels to have needs at all.

The Neurodivergent Experience of Trauma

Neurodivergent adults are often disproportionately affected by relational trauma - and it's frequently unrecognized, under treated, or misattributed to something else entirely.

When you process the world differently, experience sensory input more intensely, or struggle to read social cues the way others expect, the ordinary friction of daily life can register as threatening in ways that others don't understand. Environments that are merely uncomfortable for neurotypical people can be genuinely overwhelming for neurodivergent ones.

Add a lifetime of masking - of learning to hide your authentic responses, suppress your needs, and perform a version of yourself that others could accept - and the cumulative toll becomes significant.

Many of my clients have been carrying the effects of relational trauma for years without ever recognizing it as such. They came in wondering why they felt so exhausted, why relationships were so hard, why they couldn't seem to stop people-pleasing or why they always felt braced for something to go wrong.

The answer, often, was that their nervous system had learned - very reasonably, very understandably - that the world wasn't safe to be fully themselves in.

Who This Is For

This may be a good fit if you are:

  • A neurodivergent adult - autistic, ADHD, or highly sensitive - navigating the long aftermath of feeling chronically misunderstood

  • Carrying the weight of people-pleasing, chronic self-doubt, or the sense that your needs are too much

  • Ready to go beneath the surface, not just manage symptoms, but understand what shaped them

  • Drawn to inner parts work, the kind of therapy that bring curiosity and compassion to your pain

You Don't Have to Keep Carrying It Alone

If you've spent years wondering why things feel so heavy, even when nothing is obviously wrong, therapy can be a space to finally make sense of that.

Wherever you are in understanding yourself, that's a fine place to start.

The Self-Care Spot

Rayne Satterfield, LCSW

 

515 East Bell St

Murfreesboro, TN, 37130

615-900-4705

IFS Therapy for Neurodivergent Adults in Murfreesboro, TN + Teletherapy statewide

SPECIALTIES

Autism Therapy

ADHD Therapy

IFS Therapy

Autism Assessments

Autism Support Group

PDA Parent Support Group

Clinical Supervision

ABOUT

A space for high-masking, overwhelmed adults- whether questioning, newly diagnosed, or ready to go deeper. 

About Rayne

© 2021 The Self Care Spot | Rayne Satterfield, LCSW | Murfreesboro, TN

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