Psilocybin Therapy for Neurodivergent Adults & Complex Trauma

Wild Kin | Colorado

For ADHD, autism, late-diagnosed adults & complex trauma survivors

You've spent your whole life being told the problem is you. It's not.

If you've always felt like you were too much, too sensitive, or somehow wired wrong — and therapy has helped but never quite gotten there — this page is for you. You're about to learn why the tools you've been given might not be the right ones. And what else is possible.

First — let's name what you've probably already lived through

Maybe you got a diagnosis recently — ADHD, autism, something else — and suddenly your whole life started making a different kind of sense. The jobs that didn't work out. The friendships that dissolved without explanation. The years of being told you were smart but not trying hard enough, sensitive but too much about it, creative but impossible to manage.

Or maybe you don't have a diagnosis and you're not sure you need one. You just know that you've always felt slightly out of step with the world. Like everyone else got a rulebook you never received.

Either way, you've probably spent a lot of energy trying to understand yourself. Therapy, books, journaling, medication, meditation — you've done the work. And it's helped. But there's still something that hasn't shifted. Something that lives deeper than insight can reach.

That's not a personal failing. That's a clue about where the real work needs to happen.

 

Here's something most people aren't told: neurodivergence and trauma almost always go together

When most people hear the word "trauma," they think of a single catastrophic event — an accident, abuse, combat. But there's another kind of trauma that's much more common and much less talked about: the kind that comes from years of chronic, repeated experiences of not being understood.

Think about what it does to a child to grow up constantly being corrected, redirected, misread. To be praised only when you're performing a version of yourself that doesn't feel natural. To learn that the way you move through the world — the way you are — makes other people uncomfortable.

That's not just painful. Neurologically, it's traumatic. It's a slow accumulation of experiences that teach your nervous system: being yourself isn't safe.

Clinicians call the result Complex PTSD — not PTSD from one event, but from ongoing, relational experiences that shaped how you learned to exist in the world.

For neurodivergent people — those with ADHD, autism, high sensitivity, or related experiences — Complex PTSD isn't an additional problem. It's almost always part of the same story. The two are so intertwined that treating one without the other is like trying to tend a garden while ignoring the soil.

This is the intersection that most therapists aren't trained to hold. It's what this work is specifically designed for.

Our Services

Explore our range of services designed to help you move forward with confidence, wherever you're headed next.

Meet the Team

  • "Their attention to detail and commitment" to quality truly stood out. We’ve already recommended them to others.

    —Former Customer

  • "Creative, reliable, and genuinely passionate about what they do."

    —Former Customer

  • "A professional team that delivers on their promises."

    —Former Customer

  • "Every detail was thoughtfully executed. We're thrilled with the outcome."

    —Former Customer

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