Neurodivergent nervous systems — what's different, and why it matters.
A look at the particular nervous-system signature of neurodivergent bodies, and what regulation can mean for them.
Essay · 11 min read · 25 March 2026
A look at the particular nervous-system signature of neurodivergent bodies, and what regulation can mean for them.
Essay · 11 min read · 25 March 2026
If you’re neurodivergent, there’s a good chance you’ve spent parts of your life feeling like the world expects you to function in ways that don’t feel natural for your system.
Maybe you’ve been told you’re:
too sensitive
too emotional
too intense
too distracted
too much
not trying hard enough
overreacting
lazy
difficult
Or maybe you became very good at appearing “fine” while internally feeling completely overloaded.
For many neurodivergent people, the issue is not capability.
It’s nervous system overload.
Your nervous system is usually processing more than neurotypical minds – more deeply, more often.
And when that isn’t understood, life can start to feel exhausting in ways that are difficult to explain to other people.
Neurodivergence is not just about thinking differently.
It often involves experiencing the world differently at a nervous system level.
Your system may register:
sound more intensely
light more sharply
emotional atmospheres more deeply
unpredictability more stressfully
interruptions more disruptively
social interactions more cognitively
transitions more heavily
Things other people barely notice may genuinely affect your nervous system.
Many neurodivergent people spend years overriding what their body is telling them because they’ve learned their reactions are “too much.”
But your nervous system responses are still real, even when other people don’t understand them.
A lot of neurodivergent people become highly skilled at coping externally.
You learn how to:
mask
compensate
perform
people please
overprepare
overthink
stay hyper-aware
suppress overwhelm
keep functioning long after your body needs rest
From the outside, this can look incredibly capable. Internally though, it often requires enormous effort, and eventually, the nervous system starts showing the cost.
That might look like:
burnout
shutdown
anxiety
emotional overwhelm
exhaustion
brain fog
irritability
difficulty recovering
feeling unable to cope with things you once managed
Many people reach this point believing they are failing somehow.
The reality is, your nervous system has been working overtime for a very long time without a break.
Masking is something many neurodivergent people do automatically.
You may have learned to:
rehearse conversations
force eye contact
monitor your facial expressions
hide stimming
suppress sensory discomfort
copy social behaviour
hide confusion
push through overload
appear calmer than you actually feel
Over time, this can create a strange kind of disconnection.
You become very focused on managing how you appear externally while losing touch with what is happening internally.
This is a nervous system adaptation.
One of the biggest misunderstandings neurodivergent people face is the idea that needing recovery means you are incapable.
That is simply not true. Systems that process more deeply require more recovery time. More quiet. More decompression. More predictability. More space between demands. More sensory safety. More time to transition.
It is often the case, that many people have spent years being taught to override those needs.
They keep going, keep pushing through, stop appearing sensitive, keep trying harder.
Eventually, the body starts communicating that the load is too high.
A lot of nervous system advice online assumes all systems respond the same way.
They don’t.
What feels regulating for one person may feel overwhelming for another.
Some people regulate through stillness. Others regulate through movement. Some need silence. Others need sound. Some need structure. Others need flexibility.
For many neurodivergent people, regulation is less about “calming down” and more about reducing the amount of overwhelm the nervous system is carrying.
That may mean creating sensory safety, reducing masking, honouring recovery needs, stimming, building predictable routines, allowing movement, understanding shutdown and overwhelm, spending time with safe people, learning your nervous system patterns, and working with your system instead of constantly against it
Real regulation is not forcing yourself to tolerate everything.
It is helping your nervous system feel safe enough that it no longer has to stay in protection all the time.
One of the most powerful shifts for many neurodivergent people is realising they do not need to force themselves into environments, expectations or approaches that continually overwhelm their nervous system.
Support should not feel like more pressure.
Real support helps you understand your nervous system rather than fight against it.
It helps you recognise what overload feels like in your body, what safety feels like, what recovery actually looks like for you, what your system has been carrying, and what helps you feel more like yourself again.
The goal is not becoming someone different. It is finally creating enough safety that your nervous system no longer has to work so hard just to get through the day.