You Weren’t “Too Sensitive”, You Were Unaccommodated: How Neurodivergent Needs Get Misnamed and Why it Matters for Healing

For so many neurodivergent and late-diagnosed autistic adults, the story starts the same way:

  • “You’re overreacting.”

  • “You’re too sensitive.”

  • “Stop making a big deal out of it.”

  • “Everyone else is fine.”

You hear that enough times and eventually you make yourself smaller. You learn to live through environments that overwhelm you, relationships that misunderstand you, and expectations that were never designed with you in mind.

Ultimately the truth is, most people are under-informed. You weren’t and aren’t “too sensitive.” You were just unaccommodated. Your needs weren’t excessive. The environment was just not meant for you.

Sensitivity Isn’t Fragility, It’s Data and Information

Autistic and other neurodivergent nervous systems pick up on sensory, emotional, and relational data that neurotypical nervous systems bypass. You might have been the kid (or adult) who noticed: 

  • The buzzing fluorescent light

  • The subtle shift in someone’s tone

  • The fabric that rubbed your skin weirdly

  • The chaos of a crowded room.

You were responding to real input that others filtered out. Instead of asking, “What do you need?” people defaulted to, “Why are you like this?” or “just ignore it”.

When Environments Don’t Adjust, People Get Labeled Instead

Most spaces are built around neurotypical comfort. When you struggle in those environments, you get labeled the problem. Instead of adjusting the environment, the system, or the communication, people tell you messages like: 

  • Toughen up

  • Stop overthinking

  • Be more flexible

  • You’re too much.

It’s cheaper and easier for the world to blame the person rather than the system.

What That Misattunement Does Over Time

Being mislabeled for years can lead to:

  • Chronic masking

  • People-pleasing

  • Sensory burnout

  • Shutdowns and/or meltdowns

  • Trouble trusting your own instincts

  • Internalized shame about needs that were always valid

You learn to survive and call that “being fine” because you don’t know another way yet.

My Perspective as a Therapist and as Someone Married to a Late-Diagnosed Autistic Spouse

My clinical work is rooted in supporting neurodivergent adults, but a big part of what deepened that lens came from my personal life. My spouse is late-diagnosed autistic, and living alongside their nervous system has taught me so much. Learning about their rhythms, their sensory boundaries, and their communication patterns reshaped how I understand autistic experiences on a day-to-day level.

Clinically, I have a clearer respect for pacing. Some things can’t be forced, rushed, or “motivated” into existence. They unfold when the nervous system feels safe. I have a more nuanced view of communication differences. Directness isn’t cold, it’s to the point. Consistency isn’t rigidity, it’s safety. A neutral tone isn't a lack of care, it’s just a baseline. I have a deeper sensitivity to sensory load and what that can look like. Seeing the cumulative toll of small, sensory stressors made me more attuned to how clients might minimize their own struggles. I have a grounded understanding of what masking can cost. I have an enduring commitment to honoring needs without pathologizing them. Your needs aren’t symptoms, they are information.

Walking through life with someone who was misnamed for decades made me much more attuned and much softer in the therapy room. In a way that refuses to treat ND traits as problems to be corrected. It’s helped me hold clients with more precision, more care, and more respect for their lived truth.

Reclaiming the Narrative: You Weren’t the Issue

Hear me loud and clear when I say:

  • Your needs weren’t dramatic.

  • Your reactions weren’t failures.

  • Your overwhelm wasn’t a character flaw.

  • Your sensitivity was a signal.

  • You were adapting to environments that didn’t adapt to you.

Once you shift that lens, everything else becomes possible like self-trust, nervous system safety, boundaries, sustainable relationships, and an identity that isn’t built on apologizing.

What Accommodation Can Look Like Now

Let’s talk about the part that moves things forward. Accommodations in adulthood might mean:

  • Choosing quieter environments instead of pushing through

  • Using tools (headphones, sensory aids, planners, stim toys) without shame

  • Setting boundaries around overstimulation

  • Communicating needs directly

  • Allowing yourself to leave early, rest more, or opt out

  • Building relationships with people who respect difference rather than erase it

Accommodation isn’t a luxury. It’s what lets your nervous system function at its actual capacity.

You Deserved Accommodation From the Start

If you’re just now learning how mismatched environments can lead to unhelpful pathologizing, whether it be because of your own late diagnosis, a partner’s, or a lifetime of being misunderstood, this is your invitation to stop shrinking and start listening to yourself. I’d be honored to walk with you and help you on that journey. You can set up a complimentary consultation with me here. 

  • Sam Villarreal, MS, LPC, LCDC

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