Category: Grounding and Mindfulness

  • ✨ The Strengths We Learn to Hide

    A reflection on neurodivergence, childhood messages, and the skills we never realised we were building

    There are some conversations that stay with you long after they end.

    Not because they were dramatic or difficult, but because they reveal something quietly profound about how we move through the world — and how the world responds to us in return.

    This week, I had one of those conversations.

    We weren’t talking about labels or diagnoses.
    We were talking about lived experience — the kind that shapes people quietly, deeply, and often invisibly.

    And it reminded me just how many neurodivergent adults either grew up feeling — or were repeatedly told — things like:

    • “too much”
    • “too sensitive”
    • “too emotional”
    • “too messy”
    • “too slow”
    • “too intense”
    • “too forgetful”
    • “too different”
    • or simply “not enough”

    And so often, these messages came not because anything was wrong with them — but because their brains didn’t behave in the way the world expected.

    Instead of support, they got labels:

    “difficult.”
    “lazy.”
    “unfocused.”
    “scatterbrained.”
    “awkward.”
    “overreacting.”
    “dramatic.”
    “in their own world.”
    “not trying hard enough.”

    So they hid the parts that made them stand out.
    Masked. Over-adapted. Over-performed.
    Held everything together while quietly wondering why life seemed easier for everyone else.

    But here’s the truth that struck me most deeply:

    👉 Many of the traits people once criticised are the roots of someone’s greatest strengths.
    👉 The “unusual” ways of thinking they were shamed for are often the source of their creativity and insight.
    👉 The workarounds they invented as children became the strategies shaping their careers and relationships.
    👉 The resilience they built in silence became their strongest asset.

    And this is something most people never get told:

    You’re skilled because of your wiring and the clever workarounds you built to survive — not despite any of it.

    Most neurodivergent strengths don’t look like strengths when you’re younger.
    They look like problems other people want you to fix.

    Yet later in life, they reveal themselves as:

    ✨ creative solutions
    ✨ pattern spotting
    ✨ deep empathy
    ✨ intense focus
    ✨ intuition
    ✨ innovation
    ✨ adaptability
    ✨ problem-solving
    ✨ strategic insight
    ✨ emotional intelligence
    ✨ leadership rooted in lived experience

    None of this comes from fitting in.
    It comes from navigating a world that never adjusted for you — and surviving anyway.

    And this matters, because so many late-diagnosed or self-discovered neurodivergent adults believe they are “behind,” “failing,” or “not getting it,” when in reality:

    There has never been anything wrong with them.
    Their wiring is not the problem.
    A world that only rewards one style of wiring is.

    Unmasking isn’t about becoming someone new.
    It’s about finally allowing yourself to be who you’ve always been underneath the survival strategies.


    Let’s take this one step further.

    If so much of your strength, creativity, resilience, and clarity came from the parts you once hid…

    Here’s the real question:

    What are you still covering up because of how you were treated back then?

    What parts of you learned to shrink?
    What abilities did you mute because they made someone else uncomfortable?
    What dreams did you bury because you were told they didn’t belong to someone like you?
    What aspects of your identity still sit in the shadows because of the labels others placed on you?

    And then — the question that changes everything:

    What could you do with all of that… if you knew you couldn’t ever get it wrong?

    Not in a reckless sense, but in a permission-giving sense.

    ✨ If every detour was information, not failure.
    ✨ If every trait you were shamed for became a tool.
    ✨ If every workaround you created in childhood became a resource.
    ✨ If every sensitivity became a signal rather than a flaw.
    ✨ If every “difference” was simply a different kind of intelligence.

    And then imagine combining all of that — every lived experience, every instinct, every workaround, every reflection, every skill you’ve developed — and asking:

    What becomes possible when nothing about you is wrong anymore?

    Because here’s the truth:

    You’ve already built a life on strength you didn’t know you had.
    You’ve already navigated challenges most people will never understand.
    You’ve already adapted to systems not designed for your needs.
    You’ve already succeeded under conditions that would have broken others.

    So imagine what becomes possible
    — in your work, your relationships, your confidence, your creativity, your decisions —
    when you stop treating the real you as something that needs approval.

    What expands?
    What softens?
    What becomes clearer?
    What becomes easier?
    What finally feels possible?


    And one final reflection — a gentle but powerful one:

    What passion from your childhood have you quietly or unknowingly carried into your adult life?

    There is almost always a thread.
    A spark.
    A pull.
    Something that never left, even when you didn’t have the language for it.

    It might show up now through your work, your art, the way you help others, the way you think, or the way you solve problems.

    If you can trace that thread…
    you can often find your truest direction.

    And if you weave that thread together with everything you’ve gained —
    your wiring, your insight, your intuition, your lived experience, your hard-earned strengths —
    you unlock a version of yourself that feels both familiar and finally free.

    We spend so long trying to get ourselves “right” by someone else’s definition
    that we forget: we were never wrong to begin with.

    You’re not here to shrink.
    You’re here to arrive — fully.

    And the moment you stop trying to be who the world wanted,
    you make space for who you’ve always been.

    💛 Michelle Shaw
    Neurodivergent Mentor & Life Strategist
    Helping people rebuild confidence, clarity, structure and self-trust — without masking who they truly are.


  • The Journey to Self-Advocacy | Find Your Voice and Take Ownership 🌟

    🌟 Who Is Looking After Your Well-Being? 🌟

    For a long time, I thought the people in my life would just know what I needed—even when I didn’t know myself. I assumed they would notice when I was struggling and step in to help. But when that didn’t happen, I felt invisible and alone.


    The Hard Truth:

    If you don’t know what you need—or can’t say it—how can anyone else know how to help?

    For over 20 years, I waited for others to see what I needed. Learning to speak up for myself changed everything. But it didn’t happen overnight—it took time, patience, and practice.


    Where Self-Advocacy Starts:

    1. Understand What You Need 📝
      • What helps you feel calm and supported—physically, emotionally, and mentally?
      • Think about small things that make a difference, like taking a quiet break, having clear instructions, or knowing when someone is available to listen.

      Ask Yourself:
      “What helps me feel safe and supported?”

    2. Be Brave Enough to Speak Up 🗣️
      • You don’t have to use fancy words. Try simple phrases like:
        • “I need some quiet time to clear my head.”
        • “Can we agree on a clear plan before we move forward?”
        • “I’m feeling overwhelmed—can we check in later?”
      • Asking for what you need shows strength, not weakness.

      Reminder:
      “It’s okay to ask for support, even if it feels uncomfortable.”


    How to Practice Self-Advocacy:

    Start Small: Ask for one small thing—like time to finish a task without interruptions. Each small step helps build your confidence.

    Write It Down: If speaking up is hard, write down what you need to say before you say it. It can help you stay calm and focused.

    Find an Ally: Think of someone who understands and supports you—a friend, family member, or colleague.

    Learn from Each Experience: If things don’t go as planned, that’s okay. Ask yourself: “What can I do differently next time?”


    Key Reminders:

    💡 Taking Time for Yourself Is Self-Care: Whether you need a few minutes or a few days, taking time for yourself is not selfish—it’s necessary.

    💡 Listening to Your Body Is Kindness: When you notice what your body is asking for and respond with care, you’re showing yourself that you matter.

    💡 Speaking Up Empowers You: Knowing what you need and asking for it can change how you live your life.


    Simple Reflection Prompts:

    • When do I feel calm, safe, and supported?
    • What is one small way I can practice speaking up for myself today?
    • Who can I ask for support if I need it?

    Final Thought:

    If a few minutes isn’t enough, that’s okay. You deserve time, space, and support to feel whole again.

    What does speaking up for yourself look like to you? Let’s share our ideas and support each other.