Neurodivergent Support

Support for the Neurodivergent MindBuilt by brains like yours

Your brain works differently. So do ours. Both of your practitioners are neurodivergent, and it changes everything about how we hold space for you.

We understand masking, burnout, sensory overwhelm, executive dysfunction, and rejection sensitivity from the inside. This isn't theory. This is how we live. You don't have to explain your neurodivergence or apologize for how your brain works. We already understand.

Why somatic healing matters for neurodivergent brains

Neurodivergent nervous systems often carry years of masking, burnout, and unresolved patterns in the body. Talk-based modalities alone can't always reach those places. Somatic work goes deeper: into the body's own intelligence, the nervous system's memory, and the wisdom that lives beneath words.

These aren't things a therapist can talk you out of. They're things your body needs to release, reorganize, and integrate. That's what somatic work does.

Sessions designed for neurodivergent needs

QHHT & hypnosis

Your rich inner world and vivid imagination are assets here. Access past-life memories, connect with your Higher Self, and explore the questions your conscious mind can't answer alone. Learn more →

Somatic bodywork

Fascia release, assisted stretching, and rope arts designed for bodies that stim, fidget, and move differently. Learn more →

Energy & sound healing

Reiki and sound baths regulate the nervous system with no verbal demand and no exertion. Made for sensory-sensitive and low-energy days. Learn more →

Magick Potions & apothecary

Visually enchanting regulation tools for transitions and overwhelm, plus tinctures formulated with ADHD, autism, and sensory needs in mind. Visit the shop →

What you can expect in session

Pacing & processing time

Sessions are never rushed. Time to think, process, and respond without pressure, and no artificial limits that cut you off mid-thought.

Sensory environment

No fluorescent lighting, no strong scents, temperature control, quiet or low ambient sound, and full permission for sunglasses, headphones, and fidget tools.

Communication flexibility

Verbal, written, or a mix. If you go nonverbal mid-session, we adjust. If you process slowly, we wait. If you stim or move, do it freely.

Scheduling kindness

Reminders by text and email, understanding of time blindness, buffer time so late arrivals don't cost you, and no penalties for bad body days.

During the session

Breaks, bathroom, snacks, position changes, pausing: all yours, no permission needed. Consent is ongoing and revocable at any moment.

After the session

Integration keeps happening for days: vivid dreams, emotional waves, new insights. Normal and expected. QHHT clients get the full recording to revisit.

We know these experiences

ADHD

Autism & autistic burnout

AuDHD

And the rest of the spectrum of different

Our intake form was built for you

Most intake forms ask about conditions. Ours asks what you actually need: a whole section on sensory sensitivities, another on communication preferences, another on what helps your nervous system settle. We ask about stimming, fidgeting, time blindness, and whether forms themselves are hard for your brain. If the full form feels overwhelming, fill out what you can and tell us the rest out loud. You deserve to be known before you arrive.

Neurodivergent voices

I didn't have to explain my ADHD or autism before I could receive care. Willow and Levee already understood. The accommodations weren't things I had to ask for. They were already built in. For the first time in my adult life, I left a wellness appointment feeling less like I had to perform and more like I could just be myself.

Jax, 25, ADHD, they/them

The second the ropes settled around my chest I started crying. The kind of crying that happens when your body has been screaming to be held for thirty years and someone finally does it right. My nervous system went quiet for the first time in as long as I can remember. Quiet. Like actually quiet. I didn't know that was possible for me.

Ren, 28, autistic, they/them

I'm going to try to explain this without sounding ridiculous, but I cried when I opened the box. A forty-three-year-old AuDHD adult with a full-time job and a mortgage, and I held this shimmering bottle and I cried like I was five years old. Because my whole life, the things that soothe my nervous system have been treated as childish. And here was this beautiful object that basically said: you're allowed to want this.

Nina F., 43, AuDHD, late-diagnosed

You are not making it up. Your neurodivergence is real, your struggles are real, your needs are real, and you deserve practitioners who understand all of that before you have to explain it.

Schedule a visit →

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