Let's be clear: If you've been to therapy and it "didn't work," the problem isn't you. It's that you were sold a treatment designed for a single-issue, neurotypical brain, and you were pathologized for your body's sane, logical rejection of a flawed product.

You've done the work. You've sat in rooms with well-meaning therapists. Maybe they understood your trauma but had no language for your AuDHD. Maybe they were LGBTQIA+ affirming but used ableist, "try harder" language for your executive dysfunction. You left each time feeling more broken, more complex, and with a new label for your failure: "treatment-resistant."

"Treatment-resistant" is not a diagnosis. It is an insult. It is the system's gaslighting term for "our one-size-fits-all model failed to account for your intersectional reality, so it must be your fault." It is a profound act of clinical violence, and you have every right to be furious about it.

The Neurobiological Truth Bomb

You were not "resistant to therapy." Your nervous system correctly identified an invalidating and neurologically unsafe environment and rejected it. That is not a pathology; it is a sign of a brilliant, self-protective system.

Traditional therapy often fails people like us because it makes two fundamental, arrogant assumptions:

1. It Assumes a "Top-Down" Approach Works: It believes the "thinking" brain (your prefrontal cortex) can simply logic the "feeling" brain (your limbic system) into submission. But research confirms: healing from trauma requires "bottom-up" approaches that regulate the body's physiology, as "top-down" talk therapies are often insufficient. For a nervous system shaped by C-PTSD, asking it to think its way out of a body-based response is a biological impossibility. It's like trying to use a software patch to fix a hardware problem.

2. It Ignores Intersectionality: It treats you like a checklist. It tries to "fix" the trauma while ignoring the sensory hell of your autism. It tries to "manage" the ADHD while ignoring the social context of your queer identity. And the research names the cost: epistemic injustice is a significant and direct cause of mental health inequities for marginalized groups, and the harm is compounded by intersectionality — race + gender + disability. Every intersection your therapist can't see multiplies the silencing.

What Actual Fit Looks Like

The goal isn't to "try therapy again." The goal is to try a different kind of therapy — one built from the ground up for complex, intersectional, neurodivergent people. And the research gives us a clear roadmap:

  • Bottom-up first: A therapy that starts with the body, not the story. Bottom-up approaches regulate the nervous system so the prefrontal cortex can come back online.

  • Alliance over modality: The therapeutic alliance is the most robust predictor of positive outcomes — more powerful than any specific technique. The relationship IS the treatment.

  • Your expertise honored: Our practice is built on the core belief that you are the expert on your life. We are the specialists with the map.

When you're ready to work with a guide who sees all of you: Start here →


Part of: Trauma Recovery → | Related: You've Been Burned Before · Bottom-Up Therapy