THERAPY FOR NEURODIVERSE ADULTS IN INDIANA
A space for those who think, feel, and experience the world differently — and are ready to stop apologizing for it.
Your Mind Was Never Broken
You've spent a lifetime learning to move through a world that wasn't quite built for you. Maybe you've been told you're "too much," or "too sensitive," or that you just need to try harder. Maybe you've built elaborate systems to keep up, to mask, to manage — and you're exhausted. Here, you don't have to perform neurotypicality. This is a space where the way your mind works is not a problem to be solved, but a landscape worth understanding.
Neuro-Queer
At the Intersection of Neurodivergent & Queer Identities
Some of us live at the edges of more than one category. Neurodivergent and queer identities don't just coexist — they often intertwine, shaping how you experience yourself and how you've learned (or unlearned) who you're supposed to be.
The experience of masking can become even more layered when you're also navigating queerness. You may have found yourself in queer spaces that didn't understand your sensory needs, or in neurodivergent communities that didn't hold space for your gender or sexuality.
This is a space where both parts of you are welcome — without hierarchy, without having to explain yourself.
Neurodivergent Parent
Where Parenthood Meets ADHD & Neurodivergence
Parenthood is a lot for any nervous system. When you're navigating it with an ADHD or neurodivergent brain, the mental load, the routine, the emotional demands — all of it lands differently.
You might be watching your child and recognizing pieces of yourself. You might be doing fine on the outside while quietly struggling beneath the surface. You might love your kids deeply and still feel like this role is asking more than you have to give.
You are not failing. You are carrying more than most people see — and you deserve support that actually understands that.
Trauma & Neurodiversity
When Your Nervous System Has Carried Both
Trauma and neurodivergence share a complicated relationship. They can look alike, mask each other, and compound one another in ways that are hard to untangle.
Many neurodivergent individuals carry trauma not just from life events, but from years of being misunderstood — disciplined for symptoms, labeled difficult, or missed entirely until adulthood. That history lives in the body long after the circumstances have changed.
Healing looks different when neurodivergence is part of the picture. You deserve a therapist who won't pathologize the way your brain works — and who understands that you were never broken to begin with.
Ready to get started?