Why Things Start Coming Back Up This Time of Year (What Is Trauma, Really?)
- anxiety patterns
- emotional patterns
- nervous system regulation

Originally published 2024. Updated 2026.
There is a strong and often overlooked connection between neurodiversity and complex trauma. Many neurodivergent adults come to therapy thinking something is wrong with them. They’ve spent years feeling different, misunderstood, overwhelmed, or like they’re constantly trying to keep up with everyone else. Over time, those experiences don’t just create stress. They can create trauma.
Complex trauma is not usually caused by one single event. It often develops from repeated experiences over time, such as bullying, emotional neglect, chronic criticism, social rejection, medical trauma, or growing up in environments where you didn’t feel understood or supported.
For many neurodivergent people, trauma isn’t a single event.
It’s an environment.
Before we talk about how neurodiversity and complex trauma connect, let’s define neurodiversity.
Neurodiversity means that brains work in different ways. People with ADHD, autism, sensory processing differences, and other neurodivergent experiences process information, emotions, and the world differently. These differences are not character flaws or deficits. They are differences in how the brain is wired.
However, living in a world that expects everyone to think, communicate, behave, and function the same way can be exhausting and, over time, traumatic.
So how do neurodiversity and complex trauma connect?
Many neurodivergent individuals experience higher rates of bullying, social exclusion, abuse, and medical trauma.
Many neurodivergent children and teens are bullied or excluded because they communicate differently, have different interests, struggle with social cues, or react differently to sensory environments. Being repeatedly rejected, laughed at, corrected, or left out can create deep emotional wounds over time.
It’s not just one bad experience.
It’s years of feeling like you don’t belong.
Neurodivergent individuals are at higher risk for emotional, physical, and sexual abuse. Some are taught to comply and not question authority. Some are used to being told that their perceptions are wrong. Some struggle to communicate what is happening to them or to be believed when they do.
Repeated experiences of not feeling safe, believed, or protected can lead to complex trauma.
Many neurodivergent individuals have frequent medical appointments, testing, therapies, or procedures, especially in childhood. Sensory overload, lack of control, unfamiliar environments, and procedures that feel overwhelming can contribute to trauma, especially when a child feels powerless or misunderstood.
Social interactions can be confusing or exhausting for many neurodivergent people. Misunderstandings happen. Intentions get misread. People may assume rudeness, attitude, or disinterest when that isn’t what’s happening at all.
Repeated social conflict and rejection often lead to anxiety, hypervigilance, and a constant feeling of being “wrong.”
Many neurodivergent individuals learn to mask, meaning they hide their natural behaviors, communication styles, or needs in order to fit in. They study other people, rehearse conversations, force eye contact, suppress stimming, or pretend to understand things they don’t.
Masking can help someone survive socially, but it comes at a cost.
It is exhausting.
It can lead to burnout, identity confusion, anxiety, and depression.
Over time, constantly feeling like you have to hide who you are can be traumatic in itself.
Many neurodivergent individuals experience heightened sensitivity to sound, light, textures, smells, or crowded environments. Living in environments that constantly feel too loud, too bright, too chaotic, or too overwhelming puts the nervous system under constant stress.
If your nervous system rarely gets a break, your body can start to live in survival mode. Over time, this chronic stress can contribute to complex trauma symptoms like anxiety, shutdown, irritability, and emotional exhaustion.
Many neurodivergent individuals experience emotions very intensely and may struggle with emotional regulation, especially if they were never taught healthy ways to understand and manage their emotions.
If a child is punished for big emotions instead of supported through them, they often grow up feeling ashamed of their feelings, afraid of their reactions, or disconnected from their emotions entirely.
This combination of intense emotions, lack of support, and repeated stressful experiences significantly increases the risk of complex trauma.
One of the biggest contributors to complex trauma for neurodivergent individuals is not being understood.
Many neurodivergent adults grew up hearing things like:
Hearing these messages over and over again changes how a person sees themselves. Over time, many neurodivergent individuals develop deep shame, self-doubt, anxiety, and people-pleasing patterns just to survive in environments where they feel misunderstood.
Trauma is often not just what happened to you.
It’s what happened and what support you didn’t receive.
Many neurodivergent adults come to therapy after years of being treated for anxiety, depression, or even personality disorders, without anyone recognizing that they are neurodivergent.
When neurodiversity goes unrecognized and misdiagnosed, people often blame themselves for struggles with organization, sensory overload, emotional regulation, social situations, or burnout. Over time, constantly feeling like you’re failing at things that seem easy for everyone else can lead to shame, anxiety, depression, and eventually complex trauma.
The problem was never that you were lazy, dramatic, or not trying hard enough.
The problem was that you were trying to live in a world that wasn’t designed for how your brain works, without the support you needed.
Many people think trauma only counts if something extreme happened. But complex trauma often comes from repeated experiences over time, like bullying, chronic criticism, emotional neglect, social rejection, or constantly feeling misunderstood.
Many neurodivergent adults say things like:
These experiences may not look like trauma from the outside, but living for years feeling unsafe, misunderstood, or like you are constantly failing can absolutely create complex trauma.
Some common signs include:
Therapy for neurodivergent adults with complex trauma often looks different from traditional therapy. It may involve learning about your nervous system, understanding masking and burnout, building self-compassion, processing past experiences, and learning how to create a life that works with your brain instead of against it.
A trauma-informed, neurodivergent-affirming therapist understands that many of your current struggles are not character flaws. They are adaptations. They are survival strategies that made sense at the time. Therapy helps you keep what works and gently change what no longer serves you.
Many neurodivergent adults with complex trauma grew up believing they were the problem.
Too sensitive.
Too emotional.
Too disorganized.
Too intense.
Too quiet.
Too loud.
Too much.
Not enough.
But many of the things you were criticized for were actually differences, not defects. And many of the coping strategies you developed were ways to survive environments that didn’t understand you.
A lot of neurodivergent adults didn’t grow up learning how their brain worked. They grew up learning how to hide, how to mask, how to apologize, how to try harder, how to not be a problem, how to make everyone else comfortable, and how to blame themselves when things were hard.
That does something to a person over time.
You are not broken.
You adapted.
You survived environments that didn’t understand you.
Now the work isn’t becoming someone else.
The work is understanding yourself, being kinder to yourself, and building a life that actually works for your brain and your nervous system.
And that changes everything.
Healing often starts the moment you realize you were never the problem.
You’re not “too complicated.”
You’ve just been trying to solve something layered… with approaches that weren’t built for it.
The way this article connected things?
That’s not random.
We specialize in complex trauma… especially for neurodivergent and LGBTQ+ clients navigating anxiety, burnout, and patterns that don’t fit neatly into one box.
Using EMDR and trauma-focused therapy, we help you shift what’s underneath… not just manage what keeps showing up.
If you’re ready to understand what’s actually going on…
this is where you start.
Empower Counseling specializes in EMDR therapy for complex trauma, offering affirming care for neurodivergent and LGBTQ+ clients. Our therapists help smart, sensitive overachievers who feel stuck, burned out, or like something always seems to get in the way through trauma therapy, EMDR therapy, and anxiety counseling.
Areas we serve: Therapy is available in person in Suwanee, serving Gwinnett County and the North Atlanta area, and online across Georgia, Florida, Virginia, and Illinois.
Empower Counseling Center, LLC
4411 Suwanee Dam Rd, #450 | Suwanee, GA 30024
Call or Text: (877) 693-8386 | Fax: 770-727-8786 | Email: hello@empowercounseling.net
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