
I’m Christine Doyle — a late-identified Autistic & ADHD (AuDHD) woman, podcast host, speaker, trainer, and community builder
Through my 1:1 Post-Identification Companion Sessions, the Wild Women Community, and my podcast Unlearning Autism, I create spaces for reflection, connection, and unlearning. My focus is supporting Autistic, ADHD, and AuDHD women after late discovery — exploring identity, masking, sensory worlds, burnout, relationships, and belonging.
It’s not about having all the answers. It’s about asking better questions, validating lived truths, and walking alongside others as they make sense of who they are.
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1-2-1 Work with Christine
I offer both counselling psychotherapy and wellbeing life coaching to adults. My therapeutic style is compassion focused, goal oriented and positively challenging.
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Self-Reflect is a journal I designed for you. Each page has a date prompt for you to fill - inviting you to journal only on the days that are right for you. Throughout the journal you will find pops of positivity that I hope you love and at the start of the journal there is a space for your personal self-care affirmation. Enjoy x
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Blog
…
There’s a part of unmasking that I hadn’t felt — until I did. It’s not the relief. It’s the vulnerability.
This week I finished up a tricky fix on my podcast and went for a pedicure I hadn’t realised would be a sensory nightmare — never again! What I thought would be a treat had me wriggling and squirming, desperate for it to end. Self care for some, sensory hell for me!
The appointment ran over and I had to dash straight to the dentist.
By the time I got there, I had nothing left.
Lying back in the chair, imagining the drill working on my teeth — its high pitch screaming through my ears — I knew I had to say something.
“I just want you to know I’m really sensitive,” I said quietly.
“Oh, today?” she asked.
“No — it’s always been like this. I know you need to do your job, but I have to let you know how sensitive this is for me.”
“Okay,” she said, “we’ll go as gently as we can.”
The hygienist leaned over, handed me a tissue, and squeezed my hand — and only then did I realise the tears were streaming down my face.
I was proud of myself for naming my need.
I felt supported and deeply grateful for the care I was met with.
But the vulnerability that came with asking — that moment of being seen — caught me off guard.
Unmasking isn’t just about authenticity.
It’s about letting yourself be known — and that is tough.
After a lifetime of holding it in, pushing through, and not letting others see the cracks, allowing myself to be comforted felt unfamiliar.
There is relief in not carrying it in silence —
and a quiet grief for all time that I thought I had to.
Difference is often spoken about as though it lives inside a person.
Even when the language shifts from deficit to difference, it can still quietly place the weight of adapting on the same shoulders.
As an Autist, that’s often meant learning how to:
make eye contact — but not too much,
speak — but not in ways that make others uncomfortable,
be myself — but only within narrow limits.
Neurodiversity asks for something more honest than that.
Not “you are different”,
but “we are different” — and that difference matters.
This is part of the wider work I do with late-identified Autistic women, many of whom have spent years carrying the cost of difference alone, long before they had language for it.
Understanding doesn’t remove difference.
It allows and appreciates it.
…
Unlearning Autism Episode 1 is live.
This is a short welcome episode - laying the ground for the conversations to come.
Available now on Spotify & Apple Podcasts.
Link in bio
…
Over the years I’ve carried a lot of shame around meltdowns.
Fleeing, running away, shutting the world out.
Feeling so many emotions all at once that I can’t process them.
And all I want to do is scream, jump up and down, burst into tears, and run away.
Putting it down here,I know to anyone who hasn’t experienced this, it must sound unusual at best, pathetic at worst … a grown woman feeling and behaving this way
And I’m glad that if that person is you
That you don’t know
That you never have to feel like this
Because it’s sh*t, deeply confusing and, honestly, rocks my sense of self and the security and safety I feel when not experiencing meltdowns.
Tonight’s meltdown was over burnt dinner, Mondays was an app I couldn’t get to work. Both, on the face of it, small things, but in reality these small everyday things that go t*ts up when I’m at capacity, make my curated neuro affirming life feel impossible, too hard.
My life isn’t impossible, and it’s not too much. But the movement to January after a long easy Christmas period has taken its toll.
Transitions are really hard for me .. from deep focus in work to mum duties, from Christmas time off to January routines, getting up in the morning, having to leave my downtime to get to bed at a good time at night. Transitions exhaust and deplete me.
I also often don’t realise the impact something is having on my nervous system until my nervous system screams (meltdown). As you may have heard 😜 my podcast is launching tomorrow and whilst this is a hugely positive and proud moment for me, it is not without anxiety and fear that my body is holding as I continue through my days.
All together .. my recent meltdowns are no surprise.. still very discombobulating, but no surprise.
The benefit of late identification is having the language, lens and landscape to understand these heretofore confusing parts of me and with this awareness, let go of shame and in its place, take a long shower, put on my cosies and ask for an extra hug.
Disruption is really overstimulating for me.
The school run, the rushing, the cold, the noise, the switching, the conversations, the traffic — by the time we get home my nervous system feels totally ramped up.
I realised that as soon as we touch base, the kids naturally go to their own spaces.
They decompress. They take a breather. They come down after the day.
And I realised how much I need that too.
But I found it hard to take, with dinner to make, the kitchen to clean, things to organise.
And being a mum, there is an expectation of always being ‘on’ and I want them to feel I am always here.
But it was too much and often what they got was an overstimulated, spent, zoned out me.
So we talked. And we figured a new way for us.
Now, when I collect them, we have the chats in the car, as we always did - questions, stories, telling about our day — and then we come home its quiet time for us all as I get dinner on.
This small permission to step into my own bubble — headphones on, no talking, often with a bit of Netflix — helps me to drop my shoulders, to feel relief, to come back to myself after the dysregulation of the school run.
For many AuDHD women, it’s not the tasks that exhaust us.
It’s the constant interruption, switching, and sensory demand — without any pause in between.
Understanding that changed how I support myself.
No-one cares, of course, we have a very you do you house,
but I feel proud for my small win,
I feel proud for seeing me need
And for backing me.
#unlearningautism #autisticwomen #audhd #audhdwoman #lateidentified
…
AuDHD
Hyperfocus is the state my Autistic brain craves — and the one my ADHD most easily disrupts.
When I reach calm, my thoughts don’t always settle. They start pinging instead.
Book the holiday. Text Kate back. Do that thing I forgot.
This is one of the quieter, everyday ways AuDHD shows itself.
Up to 80% of Autistic people are also ADHD, yet many have been missed or identified late. Until 2013, this co-occurrence wasn’t even recognised, and even now it remains poorly understood.
One of the main reasons for late identification is that Autistic traits can mask ADHD traits, and ADHD traits can mask Autistic traits. When they’re looked at separately, something essential is lost.
AuDHD isn’t “Autistic and ADHD”.
It’s a distinct, nuanced identity, often in internal conflict with itself — a nervous system that may crave calm, order and predictability, alongside a mind that seeks stimulation, novelty and movement.
So much of what is written still speaks about Autism and ADHD in isolation.
For many of us, the missing piece has been understanding how they meet.
This is why so many AuDHD people feel like imposters.
The descriptions don’t quite fit.
The experiences don’t fully match.
Naming AuDHD matters.
It answers so much of the confusion — and allows people to stop questioning themselves, and start understanding themselves.
#AuDHD #LateIdentified #AutisticExperience #NeurodivergentLife #neurodiversity #afterknowing #unlearningautism #Neuroaffirming #AutisticAdults
#audhdwoman
….
It’s because I’m not (just) Autistic and maybe you are the same.
It took me so long for the penny to properly fully drop.
And when it did, it explained so much — especially why so many late-identified Autistic women struggle to believe it, or feel like imposters once the idea is even on the table.
For years, so many of us were trying to make sense of ourselves using explanations that only ever told part of the story.
If you’re both Autistic and ADHD, those parts can cancel each other out on the surface — while exhausting your nervous system underneath.
So you look “fine”.
Capable. Articulate. Coping.
And inside, you’re confused, overwhelmed, and wondering why none of this still doesn’t quite add up.
For a long time, I was given an ADHD diagnosis and an Autistic diagnosis — and I kept trying to understand myself by reading them separately.
That was the mistake.
The understanding came when I stopped looking at them side-by-side and started looking at what happens when they collide.
That’s why AuDHD matters.
Not as a label — but as the piece that finally made everything make sense.
…
Yes, this podcast is for Autistic women —
late-identified, newly identified, and those who are quietly curious.
It’s also for the people who love them.
For partners, friends, family members, and professionals
who want to understand the Autistic experience without asking Autistic women to keep explaining or justifying themselves.
And it’s for anyone interested in the wider human experience —
in sensitivity, nervous systems, belonging, and what happens when we are finally understood.
Sometimes the most powerful support
is being able to say:
“Listen to this — this explains it better than I ever could.”
Episode 1 is live this Wednesday 14 January on Spotify, Apple Podcasts and Amazon Music
Click on the link in stories and hit the ✔️ follow button to be part of this unlearning with me
Will you be tuning in?
…
This podcast is for women who have spent a lifetime trying to understand themselves — and were given the wrong explanations.
It’s for those who felt sensitive to a world that often felt too intense, too much… when in truth, they were navigating the world with a nervous system that needed more care, more honesty, and more understanding.
Here, we talk about late identification, what it means for us to be Autistic, ADHD, AuDHD, unlearning old narratives, regulation over performance, and what it means to build a life that actually fits.
Unlearning autism - my new podcast is available now .. well my little ad is .. so come follow along as episode 1 lands Wednesday 14 January 🥳🤸✨
➡️ Link in bio
🙏Follow for conversations, musings and gentle truths
🎧 Episode 1 launches 14 January
Available on Spotify & Apple Podcasts.
#unlearningautism #lateidentified #neuroaffirming #autisticwomen #gentlespaces #autisticstories






