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Why Quiet People Have Powerful Stories to Tell

For the longest time, I thought being quiet meant that I had less to offer.

I was never the loudest person in the room. I wasn’t quick to jump into conversations, and I often needed time to process my thoughts before sharing them. While other people seemed naturally confident and outspoken, I often felt like I was standing on the outside of conversation, observing rather than participating.

There have been so many social instances where I’ve felt overlooked because of my quietness. It’s hard to pick just one because, in my mind, I’ve often felt unseen. It could be with friends, family, coworkers—pretty much anyone. But there is one thing that always sticks with me—people I’ve met multiple times introducing themselves to me over and over again.

It happened recently when I went out to a best friend’s birthday lunch. I saw someone who has been a friend of our group for years—not a close personal friend of mine, but someone who has been in my presence many times. Every single time I see him, he says, “Nice to meet you, what’s your name?” and extends a hand.

I had to tell him we’ve met multiple times. In fact, the last get-together where I saw him wasn’t that long ago.

Now, I can understand people having a bad memory, but he never forgot anyone else in the group—just me.

Every time this happens, it makes me feel invisible. Like I’m just someone in the background and never fully noticed. My friends know I’m quiet. My family does too. Most people I come into contact with eventually notice it. But I never thought I was so quiet that I wouldn’t be remembered.

And not being remembered stings more than anything.

But I’ve reached a point in my life where I’ve realized something important: being quiet doesn’t mean I don’t have a voice.

I think many quiet people carry incredibly rich inner worlds filled with observations, experiences, ideas, and stories worth telling.

Quiet Doesn’t Mean Empty

One of the biggest misconceptions about quiet people is that we don’t have much to say. The reality is often the opposite.

Many of us are constantly thinking, analyzing, observing, and reflecting. We notice details others miss. We pay attention to people’s emotions, body language, and unspoken struggles.

Just because those thoughts aren’t always spoken aloud doesn’t mean they aren’t there.

Sometimes quiet people spend so much time listening that they develop a deeper understanding of the world around them.

We Spend a Lot of Time Observing

When you’re quiet, you become an observer.

You notice conversations, patterns, how people treat one another, and what isn’t being said. Those observations often become stories.

Writers, artists, creators, and storytellers frequently draw from the things they’ve quietly witnessed throughout their lives.

The moments that seem ordinary to others can become meaningful reflections when viewed through the eyes of someone who pays attention.

I’ve always been a passionate writer. From an early age, I remember writing in my journal—expressing my thoughts, creative ideas, and daydreams—anything running through my mind. But I always kept it personal and private. I was afraid to show the world my writing, my stories, my experiences because I genuinely thought nobody would want to read them, let alone care.

As a child, I created journals filled with flowers, leaves, and anything I found outside, pressing them onto the pages and writing underneath each one.

To me, each one told a story—one I found through deep observation, reflection, and imagination.

I remember a beautiful sunflower I once found, and I turned it into a story about a girl who felt misplaced in the world. She was wandering in a garden and found a talking sunflower. It was wise and told her not to worry, to notice the beauty around her, and to trust the little things that bring joy.

It told her she was capable, strong, and resilient enough to make it through life—even quietly.

Looking back, I think it told me the same thing.

Some Stories Need Time to Find Their Voice

Not everyone tells their story immediately. For some of us, it takes years.

It took me a long time to feel comfortable enough to share my stories.

Receiving diagnoses later in life gave me the missing piece to the puzzle that is me. I finally understood why I had struggled for so many years. It gave meaning to experiences that once felt confusing. Everything suddenly made sense.

And once it made sense, I felt more capable of sharing it.

Sometimes our stories aren’t silent because they don’t matter—they’re just waiting for the right moment to be understood.

Quiet People Often Speak Through Creativity

Not every story is told through conversation. Some stories are written. Some are painted. Some are shared through recipes, photographs, music, podcasts, blogs, or acts of kindness.

For me, writing became the place where I could say things I struggled to say out loud.

The page never interrupted me. It never rushed me. It gave me time to find the words.

Many quiet people discover that creativity becomes their voice.

For me, it’s always been writing. And now, my blog has become one of my deepest passions. Creating Embrace the Unseen was my way of sharing my experiences in hopes of connecting with others who might feel that same resonance.

For years, I lost hope in my writing. I felt like it wasn’t good enough or strong enough to be seen by others. I doubted myself like that for a long time.

But with my new perspective on living life as a neurodivergent woman, I see myself more clearly than I ever thought possible.

I’m still getting to know the real me. Some days I feel like a fish out of water.

I spent so much of my life masking, pushing through burnout and exhaustion, while feeling like I didn’t belong anywhere.

But now, I feel like I’m part of something bigger—something meaningful, and something that truly brings me joy.

Your Story Matters Even If It’s Soft

We live in a world that often celebrates the loudest voices. But there is power in quietness. There is power in reflection. There is power in vulnerability.

Some of the stories that change us aren’t shouted from rooftops. They’re shared quietly between people who understand what it feels like to struggle, heal, grow, and become.

If you’re a quiet person, know this: your story matters, and your voice deserves to be heard. Your experience might be exactly what someone else needs to hear.

Conclusion

For years, I believed my quietness was something I needed to overcome, but now I see it differently.

My quietness taught me how to listen. It taught me how to observe. It taught me how to reflect. And most importantly, it taught me how to tell stories.

Have there been moments in your life when being quiet allowed you to notice, understand, or experience something others may have missed? What story might be waiting for you to tell?

“The world may notice the loudest voices first, but some of the most powerful stories are told in a whisper.”

#MentalHealth #Neurodiversity #ADHD #Autism #selfcare #MightyTogether

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I’ve Stopped Trying to Optimize Every Part of My Life

I’ve spent most of my life believing I need to improve. Like I needed to change to be a better version of myself. I felt there was always another habit to build, another system to fix, another goal to reach. And honestly, it was exhausting living that way.

There was a time when I was constantly looking for ways to improve my daily routine. I would always start out with great ideas, curating the perfect plan and executing it on paper. I wanted to make my life more productive, steady, and something to be proud of. But when it came to follow through, I ignored it completely. Every single time.

I’d always get so excited to buy a new planner and fill up the pages with daily tasks to keep me in check throughout the day. To give me structure. To provide a sense of security.

I remember actually going to Office Depot and browsing the office supply section. I’d grab highlighters, pens, Post-it tabs, everything to make it “perfect.” And of course, I’d find a beautiful planner. I’d go home so giddy to start putting it all together and making the best routine for myself.

Morning

• Wake up and have my cup of coffee

• Take a shower, brush my teeth, get dressed

• Make a healthy breakfast

Afternoon

• Go to work/school/errands/appointments

• Grab or make lunch

• Rest for an hour (write, watch TV, be still)

Evening

• Go on an evening walk to get my steps in

• Cook a healthy dinner

• Do my nightly skincare routine

• Read until bedtime

Sounds like a good schedule for my particular needs.

But I’d usually stick with it for one or two days, and then completely neglect it. Either from lack of motivation, finding it exhausting, or just losing interest altogether. And every time it happened, it felt less like a small slip and more like confirmation that I couldn’t keep anything together the way I wanted to.

When Self-Improvement Starts Feeling Like Self-Criticism

I don’t think there’s anything wrong with wanting to grow because growth can be beautiful. But somewhere along the way, I started treating every part of my life like a problem that needed solving.

If I was tired, I needed a better routine like the one above. If I was overwhelmed, I needed better time management. And if I was struggling emotionally, I needed to work harder on myself. I was always looking for an answer. Always trying to optimize and fix.

But sometimes life isn’t asking us to improve. Sometimes it’s asking us for rest.

And I don’t think I understood that for a long time. I thought rest was something I had to earn after I got everything right.

The Pressure to Be Better All the Time

We live in a world that constantly tells us we should be improving—work harder, stay fit, build better habits, become your best self. And while none of those things are bad, it can start to feel like we’re never allowed to simply exist. Like who we are right now is never enough.

I’ve always viewed productivity as the key to “making it” in the world. I thought the more success you had, the better life you’d lead.

I’d constantly compare myself and measure myself against other people’s success, and I always felt so behind. Instead of pushing forward, I slowly started pulling back—not because I didn’t care, but because it felt like I was already failing no matter how hard I tried.

I felt like I could never be like those people because I processed everything slower than others. I didn’t have that energy, that gusto, to succeed the way others were so passionate about it. I put myself into a category of shame and guilt for being so “lazy.”

I sat back and watched others perform well, while I rested instead, but even rest didn’t feel like rest. It felt like guilt sitting quietly in the background the entire time.

It was just too much pressure, too much mental exhaustion, too much self-doubt and fear of criticism. I just couldn’t bring myself to get out there and succeed at life.

What I Was Really Looking For

When I look back, I don’t think I was searching for a better routine. I think I was searching for peace. I thought the perfect system would make me feel calm. I thought the perfect planner would make me feel organized. But peace didn’t come from optimizing everything. It came from just letting things be.

And that realization almost felt simple, but it took me a long time to actually believe it.

What Slow Living Has Taught Me

Slow living has taught me that not everything needs improvement. Some things just need acceptance, patience, and time.

I’ve stopped trying to turn every hobby into a goal. I’ve stopped trying to make every day productive. And I’ve stopped treating rest like something I have to earn. And my life is better because of it.

Not perfect. Just softer. More livable.

What My Life Looks Like Now

Now I’m more interested in comfort than optimization. I care more about how my life feels than how it looks.

• I enjoy slow mornings

• Comfort food

• Walks without a destination

• Reading without turning it into a challenge

• Resting without justifying it

I still have a lot of goals. I still want to grow. But I’m no longer trying to squeeze every drop of productivity out of every moment.

For years, I thought peace was something I had to earn through discipline or the right routine. Something waiting for me once I finally got my life together.

Now I think peace was here all along.

I just couldn’t feel it because I was so busy trying to improve everything.

And maybe that’s what I’m learning now.

I don’t need to become someone else to have a meaningful life. I just need to stop treating my life like something that’s constantly falling short.

What part of your life are you still trying to “fix,” and what would it feel like to let it simply be for a while?

“The curious paradox is that when I accept myself just as I am, then I can change.”— Carl Rogers

#MentalHealth #selfcare #Neurodiversity #MightyTogether

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Sunday Check-In

This week reminded me that there's a difference between being alone and feeling lonely.

I spend a lot of time by myself and usually enjoy it. But this week felt heavier than usual. I've been in my head a lot, reflecting on life, the future, and some of the insecurities that tend to creep in when things get quiet.

I'm trying to be gentler with myself about it.

That's easier said than done sometimes.

Anyone else feeling a little reflective today?

#MentalHealth #Anxiety #Depression #Neurodiversity #ADHD #Autism #MightyTogether

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Why Silence Feels Peaceful and Painful at the Same Time

Most of the time, silence feels peaceful to me. It’s a place of comfort, reflection, and a chance for me to be still for a while.

I don’t know what it is. I assume most neurodivergent people are uncomfortable in silence because our minds rarely shut off. But for me, I’ve always had a connection to silence that feels almost invigorating. It gives me a chance to unmask, be myself, and just let whatever emotions stir, stir, because I’m alone, in a safe space, where there is no outside noise.

But even with that connection, silence is still complicated for me. If I’m alone in it for too long, my mind becomes so loud that stillness is no longer an option. I get restless, irritated, and emotionally overwhelmed in a way that feels suffocating.

Lately, I’ve had very little connection with the outside world. It’s not by choice. I only have a few friends here, and I rarely see them. And I don’t usually like going places alone, so I’ve found myself staying home more than I probably should.

And sometimes, that comfort starts to turn into something else.

My last real social interaction was about a month ago. At first, I welcomed the quiet. I liked being left alone. But for me, when I’m alone for too long, time starts to blur. Each day begins to feel the same. I wake up, work, blog, read, sleep—repeat.

I rarely go outside, not because I don’t want to, but because I feel sluggish in a way that’s hard to explain. It’s like my energy slowly disappears into the routine.

I guess you could say depression has quietly started to settle in again.

And now, that quiet has become something else entirely.

My thoughts feel overwhelming. It’s like my mind is constantly screaming while I sit there trying to find a way to turn it down. When everything around me is too still, there’s nowhere for my feelings to go.

I think what I’m starting to realize, though, is that silence isn’t the problem. It’s what comes up inside of it that I haven’t always been ready to face.

When everything around me gets quiet, there’s nothing left to drown out what I’ve been holding onto during the day. All of the exhaustion that I push through. The emotions that I postpone. The thoughts I don’t fully process because I’m trying to keep moving.

Silence doesn’t create those things. It just stops hiding them.

And even though it can be isolating, frustrating, and mundane, I still choose silence over noise.

I have everyday moments where I don’t feel as heavy. Like earlier this week, I made a delicious spinach omelet with a simple side of arugula dressed in olive oil and lemon. As I sat there eating, I felt a moment of joy and relief. I felt at ease. I had my cup of freshly brewed coffee with hazelnut creamer beside me, and a nutritious meal in front of me. It shifted my mood from sadness to encouragement—an outlook on having a good day. And truthfully, I did.

In that moment at breakfast, I simply existed. There was no mental noise. No restlessness. Just the simple pleasure of something small.

Silence to me feels less like something I have to escape and more like something that reflects me back to myself.

Some days that reflection is uncomfortable. Other days, it’s grounding. Either way, I’ve learned that there’s a specific beauty to silence. It might be small and hard to find for some, but in my mind, it’s truly healing.

When silence gets too loud for you, what emotions or thoughts tend to surface first?

“Silence is not empty; it is full of answers.” — Unknown

#MentalHealth #Neurodiversity #Anxiety #Depression #ADHD #Autism #MightyTogether

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What It’s Like Living With Constant Fear and Self-Doubt

Something that I’ve always struggled with is fear and self-doubt. It feels like a natural part of my thought process at this point. Anytime I’m confronted with trying something new, those emotions rush in full force. I immediately convince myself that I’m not good at anything, that I’ll fail miserably, or somehow embarrass myself in the process. More often than not, I end up psyching myself out before I even begin.

For as long as I can remember, I’ve let fear and self-doubt lead the way.

Sometimes, I feel like I walk around with a visible sign on me that tells everyone I have low self-esteem, anxiety, and a complete lack of confidence. It feels written all over my face. Anytime I meet someone new or find myself in an unfamiliar situation, my body language, tone, and gestures immediately reveal just how uncomfortable I am.

Why?

Because I’ve already overthought every possible outcome before the moment has even fully happened.

What if I say the wrong thing?

What if I embarrass myself?

What if they think I’m awkward?

Should I speak up or stay quiet?

The truth is, I’ve spent years doubting my social capabilities. After enough experiences of putting myself down — and moments where I genuinely did feel embarrassed by my own awkwardness or anxiety — I slowly learned to hide myself instead. Staying in the background began to feel safer than risking being seen at all.

The Quiet Weight of Self-Doubt

Over time, self-doubt stops feeling like something that comes and goes. It just becomes… part of you. At least that’s how it felt for me. After years of overthinking my interactions, picking myself apart, and feeling different from everyone around me, it just became automatic. I didn’t even notice how deep it had gone until way later.

I think when you spend enough time feeling misunderstood, rejected, or emotionally “too much,” you start to believe it. You stop questioning it. You just assume something must be wrong with you.

Growing up, I remember playing sports as an extracurricular activity. I really loved soccer. But even though I liked it, every game, every practice felt like a struggle for me.

One problem for me was how physical it was. Too much contact. Too much pressure. Too many eyes on you to play well. Too many chances to mess up in front of everyone. And I felt all of it.

There was one soccer game where the girls on my team were basically coming at me for playing half-back. They told the coaches, while I was standing right there, that I was too slow for the position. It made me feel so small. Not just embarrassed — it kind of confirmed what I already thought about myself.

I knew I wasn’t the fastest. I knew I was heavier than the other girls. And in my head, I already believed my lack of confidence was going to mess everything up anyway. Hearing your insecurities said out loud by other people hits different. It’s like… a jab straight to the chest.

The thing is, I was a shy kid. I had trouble fitting in and making friends. The friends I did have were my safe place, and when I didn’t have them around, I kind of just… didn’t know how to exist socially on my own.

I basically became background noise.

No one really knew my name. Or if they did, it didn’t feel like it mattered. And that made everything worse.

It made me realize something that stuck with me for a long time — I could be standing right in front of people, literally in the room, and still feel completely invisible. I wanted so badly to be accepted. To be seen. But after enough rejection and feeling left out, I started believing I wasn’t really someone people wanted around. Like there was just something about me that didn’t fit.

I didn’t realize at the time how much of that was connected to being neurodivergent. I just thought I was bad at being a person.

The Hard Part Is That It Follows You

The hardest part about chronic self-doubt is that it doesn’t stay in one place. It follows you everywhere. Conversations don’t end when they end, because your brain keeps running them back later. Over and over.

I would leave social situations completely drained, not because anything actually happened, but because my mind turned everything into something to analyze and pick apart afterward.

After that soccer game, I went home and replayed everything. I could still hear their voices in my head saying I wasn’t good enough. I could feel the embarrassment all over again. I even pictured the laughing, the little giggles in my direction. And honestly… it stuck. It still does.

I think this is something a lot of neurodivergent people quietly carry. After years of masking, adapting, trying to avoid rejection — you start to become hyper-aware of yourself all the time. And eventually that turns into self-surveillance. You stop just being and start constantly monitoring yourself.

Perfectionism fed into it for me too. I felt like if I could just say the right thing, act the right way, be better somehow, then maybe I wouldn’t be judged anymore. But the thing about perfectionism is it never really ends. There’s always something else to fix.

And when you already struggle with self-esteem, even small criticism can hit way harder than it probably should. It just reinforces everything you already believe about yourself.

What It Actually Feels Like

The truth is, living with constant self-doubt is heavy. It’s exhausting. To move through life always questioning yourself. Always feeling like you’re either “too much” or “not enough,” sometimes at the exact same time.

And the worst part is, from the outside, no one always sees it. They just see quiet. Or awkwardness. Or someone who doesn’t speak much. They don’t see the war happening internally before a sentence even comes out of your mouth.

I’m Still Learning

The truth is, I can’t tell you how I handle it, because I’m still trying to figure it out.

I’m slowly learning that being sensitive and feeling things deeply doesn’t make me weak. And struggling socially doesn’t make me unworthy of connection.

Some days I still shrink myself into that small box of fear and self-doubt without meaning to. And honestly… the fear still wins.

But then there are days where I speak, I show up, and I try anyway. And that, I think, is what I’m starting to call progress.

Sometimes it just means I spent too long trusting fear more than I trusted myself. And I don’t want that to be what leads anymore.

What parts of yourself are you still shrinking because fear told you it wasn’t safe to be seen?

“Courage doesn’t always roar. Sometimes courage is the quiet voice at the end of the day saying, ‘I will try again tomorrow.’” — Mary Anne Radmacher

#MentalHealth #Neurodiversity #ADHD #Autism #SocialAnxiety #MightyTogether

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Happy Memorial Day everyone 🤍

I’ve been moving through today a little slower than usual, just kind of noticing everything in a quieter way.

I think some days my mind naturally goes inward like that—more reflective, more sensitive to memory and time.

I just wanted to check in with you all and say I’m thinking of this space and everyone here.

If you feel like sharing… what does today feel like for you?

#MentalHealth #Neurodiversity #Anxiety #Depression #ADHD #Autism #MightyTogether

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Lately, I’ve been noticing a pattern in myself, and I still don’t fully know how to feel about it.

I’ll have a stretch of a few good days. I wake up and my brain feels a little clearer. I have a little more energy to get things done—like clean a part of my room or go outside and walk around with my dog, just to get some much-needed Vitamin D. I’m often so reclusive and stuck inside that I rarely get out and get sunlight. So on those days when I do, it feels like a reminder of how good it can actually feel.

In those moments, I start to believe that I’m okay again. I usually don’t say it out loud because I don’t want to jinx it, but I feel it—like I’ve finally climbed out of whatever heavy fog I was in.

And then I start trusting it too much

This is usually when things begin to shift.

I’ll do something small like say yes to one more thing than I should. Or I’ll try to “catch up” on everything I didn’t do while I was struggling.

Sometimes it looks like:

staying up a little later because I feel okay

answering more messages than I actually have energy for

convincing myself I can handle a full day because yesterday felt easier

It doesn’t feel like a mistake in the moment. It feels like progress… until it isn’t.

The crash never feels sudden

It always creeps in quietly.

I start noticing I’m more sensitive to my surroundings again. Or I’ll sit down to do something simple—like writing a blog post—and suddenly I can’t form the words anymore.

I’ll stare at the screen for what feels like a long time, trying to find even a small spark of inspiration, but feel completely disconnected from my ability to do it.

Even small things shift:

I don’t want to cook anything, even something easy

I get irritated more quickly, then feel guilty about it

I start mentally canceling plans before I’ve even agreed to them

And then it becomes clear—I’m not okay again.

I remember one specific moment

I remember a day not too long ago when I really thought I was “back.”

I got up earlier than usual and felt productive right away. I took my dog for a walk, showered, made breakfast, and even scheduled necessary appointments for later in the week. I remember thinking, this is it—I’m getting better again.

Because I felt good, I decided to lean into it. I got my nails done, bought a few things I’d been wanting, and spent time with a friend. It felt like I was finally catching up with life again.

But when I got home, everything caught up with me.

The noise, the movement, the social energy—it had all been more than my nervous system was used to. I didn’t realize how overstimulated I was until I was finally alone in silence.

And instead of feeling proud of the day, I just felt completely drained in a way I couldn’t shake.

The next day, I could barely function. It felt like I had borrowed energy I didn’t actually have.

I used to take it personally

For a long time, I thought this pattern meant I was inconsistent, lazy, or not trying hard enough to “stay better.”

I would compare how I felt on good days to how I felt after and wonder what I had done wrong.

But nothing really changed in a single moment. My capacity was just shifting again.

I didn’t understand that back then.

Now I see the cycle differently

I still don’t love it, but I understand it more now.

My energy doesn’t move in a straight line. It comes in waves I don’t always get to control.

Some days I can handle more of life. Other days I can barely handle myself. And neither version cancels out the other.

The “good” days aren’t proof I’m fixed.

The “bad” days aren’t proof I’m broken.

They’re just different points in the same rhythm.

What I’m learning

I’m trying to notice the early signs now—the subtle ones I used to overlook.

Like when I start feeling “too okay” and immediately want to fill my schedule again. Or when I push through small tired signals because I think I should take advantage of my energy while I have it.

Now I try to slow down a little more in those moments.

Sometimes that looks like:

leaving space in my day even when I feel good

reminding myself I don’t have to catch up all at once

letting myself rest before I hit empty

I still fall into the same pattern

Even with awareness, I still cycle through it.

I still have days where I think I’m better. I still have days where I crash again and feel frustrated that it happened.

But I’m starting to soften the way I respond to it.

Instead of:

“Why am I like this again?”

It becomes:

“Oh… I recognize this. I need to slow down.

If you relate to this

If you also keep thinking you’re better, only to feel yourself slip back into exhaustion—you’re not alone in that pattern.

It doesn’t mean you’re going backwards. It might just mean your energy moves in cycles you’re still learning how to live with.

Maybe the goal isn’t to stop the cycle completely.

Maybe it’s learning how to stay with yourself each time it changes.

Closing thought

I don’t think I’m trying to become someone who never crashes anymore.

I think I’m trying to become someone who notices the crash earlier… and meets it with less judgment each time.

What patterns do I notice in my energy that I usually ignore until I burn out?

“Rest is not idle, it is not wasteful. Sometimes rest is the most productive thing you can do for your body and mind.” — Unknown

#MentalHealth #ADHD #Neurodiversity #Depression #Anxiety #MightyTogether

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Navigating Life With AuDHD: The Role of Familiarity

I’ve always found a deep sense of comfort in returning to the same places over and over again. I enjoy going to the same beach, the same grocery store, the same streets where I grew up.

For a long time, I never really understood why I was so attached to familiarity—why certain places made me feel at ease while unfamiliar environments left me tense, overstimulated, and emotionally drained. Now, understanding my AuDHD, it makes a lot more sense.

My mind constantly processes everything around me—the noise, lighting, people’s energy, movement, conversations, unpredictability. Even when I seem calm on the outside, my nervous system feels like it’s working overtime in the background.

That’s why familiar places feel so emotional to me.

They remove some of the uncertainty. I already know the layout, the atmosphere, the vibe of the space. My brain doesn’t have to work as hard to prepare itself. There’s comfort in knowing what to expect.

I’ve lived and grown up in the same place my whole life. I’m familiar with every part of the Valley in Los Angeles—where to eat, the best bars and restaurants, and where the best nature trails are. I feel like the area I grew up in is a deep part of who I am. I find tremendous comfort in knowing my surroundings.

And this shows up in my everyday life too.

One thing I always do is take the same streets—the same routes I’ve always taken to move about the Valley. I avoid freeways because I have intense driving anxiety, so I stick to side streets. I’ve selected my favorite routes over time, and there’s something about them that brings up so many memories along the way.

I’m constantly surrounded by places where I spent most of my life—schools I attended, parks I played sports at, the mall I used to go to with friends during middle school. It’s all still there, and mostly unchanged.

Emotionally, those places become tied to safety.

This sense of safety is especially strong in certain places for me.

For me, the beach has always been a place that quiets my mind in a way very few things can. The cooler air, the sound of waves hitting the shore, the endless horizon—it slows down the noise in my head enough for me to actually feel present, to feel alive.

I remember going to Zuma Beach growing up. It’s one of the closest beaches to where I live. Otherwise, I’d find myself in Laguna all the time because that’s my all-time favorite place to visit. It’s about a two-hour drive from where I live, so whenever I have the energy to drive there (and I’m actually able to get on the freeway), it feels incredibly nostalgic. Zuma Beach, though, is only a twenty-minute drive—traffic, of course, makes it closer to an hour.

I remember going often with my mom and a friend and their mom—the cooler packed with sandwiches, watermelon, grapes, lemonade. Perfect for a beach picnic. Hours spent body surfing, slowly drifting away from our spot. My mom panicking because she couldn’t see me anymore. Walking to look for seashells. Lounging under an umbrella, listening to music or reading Archie comics.

Those truly were the days I’ll cherish forever. And that beach, in particular, is one I always return to. I know where to park, the best less-crowded spots, and the drive is familiar.

This need for familiarity doesn’t just show up in memories—it shows up in my present-day life too.

If I’m not at the beach daydreaming, pondering life’s little mysteries, or walking my favorite nature trail, you’ll most likely find me at home. And when I’m out running mundane errands, my mind is often at a high level of anxiety and overwhelm.

So I generally try to get things done in the morning when stores are less crowded. I love being able to go to the grocery store and browse the aisles in peace instead of feeling rushed or pressured to grab my items and leave. Trader Joe’s, in particular, has become one of my small pleasures—a quiet morning, wandering the aisles, gathering ideas and inspiration for something comforting to cook.

I think many people with AuDHD understand this feeling deeply. Familiar places aren’t just preferences for us. Sometimes they become regulation, routine, and emotional safety all at once.

When your nervous system spends so much time bracing for unpredictability, familiar spaces can feel like relief. They allow your body to rest instead of constantly preparing for overwhelm.

Whenever I’m in new surroundings or around new people, I feel emotionally dysregulated. I try to process the situation to find a sense of safety. I adapt to new sensory input, and I familiarize myself with new acquaintances to find ease and comfort. Otherwise, if I sit with the discomfort too long, I can react in ways I don’t fully understand in the moment—sometimes emotional overwhelm, sometimes shutdown, sometimes tears or breakdown.

That’s why routines and predictable environments help me function.

It’s healing to find spaces that allow your nervous system to finally unclench a little—places where you don’t feel like you have to constantly brace yourself.

And maybe that’s why we return to them again and again—not because we’re stuck, but because some places help us feel more like ourselves.

What familiar spaces help you feel more like yourself again?

“Sometimes healing looks like returning to the same places until your nervous system feels safe again.”

#ADHD #Autism #AutismSpectrumDisorder #Anxiety #SocialAnxiety #Neurodiversity #MentalHealth #MightyTogether

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It's the Little Things

Lately I’ve been realizing how much healing happens in small moments instead of big breakthroughs.

For a long time, I thought that healing had to be instant. Like suddenly becoming a completely different person overnight or finally “fixing” every part of myself that felt heavy, anxious, overwhelmed, or broken.

But honestly, some of the moments that have helped me the most have been incredibly small.

Like making a cup of coffee in the morning when my mind hasn’t fully woken up.

Taking a long hot shower after feeling overstimulated all day. It helps relax all of the tension I have built up in my shoulders.

Lighting a few of my favorite scented candles and reading in a quiet space.

Morning or evening walks while listening to music to help clear my mind.

Just small little things like that make my life feel a little softer and more manageable. I think that healing is sometimes just learning how to create tiny pockets of safety and comfort for yourself again.

What’s been a small moment of healing for you lately?

#MentalHealth #Anxiety #Depression #Neurodiversity #ADHD #Autism #mighty

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What’s your current comfort food obsession?

Mine is anything warm and comforting—pasta, soup, fresh bread, cozy coffee drinks… basically food that feels like a hug right now.

Does comfort food help you on days where you feel too emotionally heavy? Or do you turn to other things for comfort? I'd love to hear your thoughts.

#MentalHealth #Anxiety #ADHD #Depression #selfcare #Neurodiversity #MightyTogether #Food

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