ADHD Therapy
Psychodynamic therapy for ADHD, including support with executive functioning and emotional regulation, in Berlin and online.
Is It ADHD, Autism, or Something Else?
Many adults begin to explore neurodivergence later in life sometimes through an ADHD diagnosis, sometimes through recognising autistic traits.
For some, this brings relief. For others, it raises more questions than answers.
As a psychodynamic, attachment-based therapist working in-person in Berlin and online, I work with both the realities of neurodivergent wiring and the relational and emotional patterns that often develop alongside it especially for those who grew up misunderstood, masked their inner world, or adapted to environments that did not fully see them.
Where ADHD and Autism Meet
ADHD and autism are distinct diagnoses but in real life, they often overlap. Research suggests that many autistic adults also meet criteria for ADHD.
Many people navigate challenges with executive functioning, sensory sensitivity, or social overwhelm that do not fit neatly into one category.
For those with more internalised coping styles, this can mean years of adapting, masking, or quietly blaming themselves for difficulties that were never fully understood.
Difficulty with planning, organisation, or memory
Emotional overwhelm or reactivity
Difficulty starting or completing tasks
Sensory overload in stimulating environments
Feeling out of sync socially, emotionally, or cognitively
Not Laziness. Not Failure. A Different Pattern
Overwhelm
A nervous system under sustained stress
Wounds
Unprocessed relational or attachment injuries
Masking
The effort of adapting to meet expectations
Shame
Long-standing patterns of self-criticism
You’re not making excuses, you’re beginning to understand yourself.
In therapy, we can:
- Understand how early environments shaped your current patterns
- Explore the impact of masking, misattunement, or chronic adaptation
- Work with self-criticism, shame, or internal pressure
- Develop ways of functioning that fit your mind, rather than forcing yourself to meet external expectations
Practical Support for Executive Functioning
Planning with
less stress:
Prioritising and organising tasks
Managing
overwhelm:
Including sensory or emotional intensity
Following
through:
Completing tasks without burning out
Creating
systems:
Working with your energy, not against it
ADHD and Autism: Real and Complex
ADHD and autism are recognised neurotypes. For many, receiving a diagnosis brings clarity to patterns that once felt confusing or even shameful.
At the same time, diagnosis is not neutral. It can feel reductive, invasive, or misaligned with how someone understands themselves. A label can describe certain patterns but it does not capture the full complexity of a person’s inner world.
When Medication Helps
Getting the Help You Need
Whether you’ve been diagnosed with ADHD or autism, wonder if you might be on the spectrum, or simply feel your mind works differently, therapy can offer a deeper understanding of yourself.
You don’t have to figure it out alone.