It's a slow, dawning, and deeply uncomfortable horror. You mention a term like "Rejection Sensitive Dysphoria," and your therapist cocks their head with a blank look. You find yourself carefully editing your own experience in real-time, simplifying your non-linear thoughts and leaving out the "weird" parts so you don't confuse them. You realize, with a sinking feeling in your stomach, that you are working harder in this room than they are.
"I feel this wave of guilt every time I bring up something I read. I feel like I'm embarrassing them or challenging their expertise, so I just... stop. I end up pretending I know less than I do, just to keep the session comfortable for them."
The System Failed Them, and They're Failing You
The mental health industrial complex has churned out a generation of well-meaning generalists who are utterly unprepared for the specifics of neurodivergent brains. The system has failed them in their training, and in turn, they are failing you. They have left you, the paying client, with the absurd and exhausting job of being a patient, a teacher, and an emotional support animal for your own therapist, all at the same time.
And the research names exactly what's happening: epistemic injustice is a significant and direct cause of mental health inequities for marginalized groups. When a therapist doesn't recognize your knowledge about your own experience — when they dismiss your self-research because it didn't come from their textbook — they are committing epistemic injustice. They are telling you that your knowledge doesn't count.
And the damage compounds: the harm of epistemic injustice is compounded by intersectionality (race + gender + disability). If you're a woman of color with late-diagnosed ADHD, you're not just fighting one layer of dismissal. You're fighting three. Each intersection multiplies the silencing.
A Fawn Response in the Therapy Room
Your unconscious drive to manage the therapist's feelings is a brilliant trauma adaptation, often called a fawn response. It's a strategy your nervous system learned to stay safe in unpredictable environments. But when it's activated in a therapy room — the one place designed to be safe — it becomes a trap.
You believe your job is to be a "good, easy patient." You are terrified of embarrassing the professional you are paying. This is a lie your trauma taught you.
You are not their patient; you have become their unpaid supervisor.
And the research confirms why this dynamic is clinically fatal: cultural competence is essential for both diagnosis and the therapeutic alliance. A therapist who doesn't understand your neurotype can't build the alliance. And the therapeutic alliance is the most robust predictor of positive outcomes. No competence → no alliance → no outcomes. The math is simple.
Your "Kindness" is Self-Abandonment
You are not in a space of healing; you are in a dysfunctional workplace where you are paying for the privilege of training your own boss. Your "kindness" in protecting their ego is a profound act of self-abandonment that makes your own healing impossible.
"You are not paying for the privilege of educating a well-meaning amateur. You are paying for expertise. If you are the most knowledgeable person in the room about your own condition, you are in the wrong room."
It is time to tender your resignation from your unpaid supervisory position. Your energy is a precious, finite resource. Stop spending it managing the feelings of an unqualified professional. You deserve a therapist who is a colleague, not a student. Explore neuro-affirming care, read about our collaborative philosophy, or when you're ready to fire your student and hire a colleague: The search starts here →
Part of: Therapy & Coaching → | Related: Finding the Right Therapist · Collaborative Therapy