Matthew Simpson, LMHC — IFS therapist for autistic and AuDHD adults in Washington State
IFS Therapy · Autism · AuDHD · Washington State Telehealth

IFS Therapy for Autistic and AuDHD Adults in Washington State

Parts work for masking, autistic burnout, sensory overwhelm, shame, and the exhaustion of trying to become more neurotypical.

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IFS therapy for autism and AuDHD is not about making an autistic nervous system look more neurotypical.

The work is different. We look at the parts that formed around years of masking, correction, sensory overload, social translation, burnout, and shame. The masking parts. The perfectionistic parts. The inner critic. The shutdown parts. The parts that learned to hide what was natural because being natural kept creating consequences.

Autism is not a part. AuDHD is not a part. They are the nervous system your parts are operating through.

That distinction matters. If therapy treats autistic neurology as the problem, the work becomes another form of masking. If therapy understands autistic neurology as the system's native operating style, then the work can finally turn toward what actually hurts: the shame, fear, overcompensation, and exhaustion built around it.

Autism Is Not a Part. Neither Is AuDHD.


In IFS terms, autistic neurology is not a part to be healed. AuDHD is not a part to be healed. Neurology is the operating style of the system. The parts are what formed inside it.

The Self of an autistic person is autistic. The 8 Cs that IFS describes — curiosity, calm, clarity, compassion, courage, creativity, confidence, connection — get expressed through autistic neurology, not against it.

Sarah Bergenfield and Martha Sweezy make this point directly in Wired to Feel: the Self of an autistic person is not a neurotypical Self trapped inside an autistic body. That means the qualities IFS calls the 8 Cs may show up through autistic expression rather than neurotypical presentation. Curiosity may look like deep special-interest knowing. Calm may come through sensory organization, predictability, stimming, or time alone. Connectedness may be strongest with animals, places, routines, objects, or ideas — not only through face-to-face relational warmth. Compassion may be behavioral and concrete rather than verbally expressive. Courage may mean trying something new while honoring capacity limits, not pushing through overwhelm.

This matters clinically because an autistic person in Self may not look conventionally “calm” or socially warm. Self-energy may look like precise language, direct boundaries, sensory honesty, pattern recognition, or deep engagement with something meaningful. A therapist who expects neurotypical markers can misread autistic Self-energy as intensity, rigidity, obsession, avoidance, or dysregulation.

The goal is not to make sensory sensitivity less sensitive, monotropic focus less focused, or direct speech more diplomatic. The work is with the protective strategies and shame burdens that formed around being autistic or AuDHD in environments that were not built for that nervous system. For more on the underlying modality, see the IFS Therapy page.

If you are ADHD without autism, the IFS Therapy for ADHD page is the closer match. This page is for autistic adults and for AuDHD adults — where autistic and ADHD neurology are both present and often amplify each other.

The Different Kinds of Parts That Can Show Up


Once autism or AuDHD is understood as the nervous system the parts operate through, the next question becomes more precise: what kind of part are we working with?

Some parts directly express autistic or AuDHD traits — the systematizing part, the sensory sentinel, the monotropic part that wants to go deep, the direct part that says what is actually happening. These are not problems to solve. They are part of how the system functions when it is allowed to function as itself.

Some parts carry shame about those traits — the part that believes you are too much, too rigid, too sensitive, too intense, too difficult, or somehow built wrong. These are not the neurotype itself. They are the meanings that got assigned to the neurotype after years of correction, misunderstanding, or rejection.

Some parts formed to compensate for years of mismatch — masking managers, perfectionistic managers, social-analysis parts, productivity tyrants, shutdown parts, and inner critics trying to keep the system safe by forcing performance. These parts are often exhausted, but they are not stupid. They formed because the system was trying to survive in environments that demanded more neurotypical performance than it could sustainably deliver.

And some parts begin to show up differently when shame softens. Directness becomes cleaner. Focus becomes less compulsive. Stimming carries less apology. Boundaries become more honest. Rest becomes less contaminated by guilt. This is not becoming less autistic or less AuDHD. It is becoming less organized around shame.

That distinction matters because the same behavior can come from very different places. Intense focus might be a natural monotropic strength, a compulsive manager strategy, a firefighter escape, or Self-led immersion in something meaningful. The therapeutic move depends on what is happening inside.

If terms like managers, firefighters, and exiles are new, the IFS Therapy page covers the basic vocabulary.

What Parts Form Around Masking?


Masking is not just a behavior. It is often a coalition of protective parts working in alliance with an inner critic — parts that suppress stimming, monitor facial expressions, rehearse scripts, force eye contact, over-explain, soften direct speech, mirror neurotypical rhythm, and hide sensory distress. These parts formed for a reason. They are protecting exiles that carry shame, rejection, humiliation, or attachment fear.

Two distinct mechanisms run inside masking, and they have different costs:

  • Camouflage — hiding what is actually there. Suppressing stims, modulating visible sensory responses, concealing distress, not disclosing differences.
  • Compensation — performing what does not come naturally. Scripted conversational openers, forced eye contact, mirrored facial expressions, timed laughter, neurotypical small-talk rhythm.

Most high-masking autistic adults are running both at the same time, every social hour. The metabolic cost is real, even when it is invisible. By the time many late-identified autistic adults arrive at therapy, the coalition has been running so continuously and for so long that they no longer experience it as effortful. The fatigue has gone underground. The cost has not.

Unmasking is not simply a behavioral decision. In IFS terms, sustainable unmasking happens when the manager system can relax because the vulnerable parts underneath are no longer in acute danger — when the inner critic has softened, when Self is reliably in the room, when the environment carries at least some safety. Some masking is contextually rational and contextually protective. The goal is not to strip every mask away. The goal is more choice, more flexibility, and less shame.

Autistic Burnout Is Not the Same as Depression


Autistic burnout is not the same thing as depression, though the two can overlap and are often confused. Many late-identified autistic adults arrive at therapy after years of being treated for "treatment-resistant depression" when the actual presentation was autistic burnout.

Autistic burnout often involves:

  • Chronic exhaustion that does not respond to ordinary rest
  • Loss of previously available skills or function — organization, conversation, self-care routines
  • Increased sensory sensitivity or reduced tolerance to stimulus
  • Increased visibility of autistic traits as the masking infrastructure breaks down
  • Collapse after sustained masking, transitions, workplace stress, family stress, or years of operating beyond capacity

The two conditions usually require different interventions. Depression often responds to gradual behavioral activation. Autistic burnout usually requires load reduction first. Pushing harder during burnout can deepen the collapse. Rest, during burnout, is not avoidance — it is part of recovery.

Parts work during active burnout should be gentle. The goal is not immediate deep exile work if the system is depleted. The early priority is stabilization: naming the burnout accurately, reducing demands, and helping protector parts stop treating rest as failure. As capacity returns, the deeper work with managers and exiles becomes possible.

AuDHD: When Structure and Novelty Both Matter


AuDHD is not just autism plus ADHD. It often creates a system with competing needs — and the contradiction between those needs has been running inside the person for decades.

One part of the system may need sameness, predictability, completed sequences, and explicit structure. Another part of the system may need novelty, stimulation, spontaneity, movement, and sensory variety. The autistic side may build a structure with real conviction. The ADHD side may blow it up by Tuesday. Then shame parts, inner critics, or perfectionistic managers attack the system for inconsistency — and the cycle restarts.

On top of the polarization is the load: masking and executive dysfunction at the same time, sensory accounting running continuously, social translation in the background. Many AuDHD adults present with what is sometimes called a spiky profile — extraordinary capacity in one or two domains sitting next to genuine and stubborn depletion in others. The peaks often get colonized by manager parts that use the strengths to compensate for the valleys. The valleys themselves become exile territory.

The goal is not to make the autistic side and ADHD side collapse into one tidy compromise. The goal is enough Self-leadership that neither side has to run the whole system alone — so that structure becomes supportive rather than coercive, and novelty becomes enlivening rather than destructive. For more on the execution side of AuDHD, see the Executive Function page.

How Neurodiversity-Affirming IFS Is Different


This page sits inside the neurodiversity paradigm: the view that there is no single correct style of human mind. Autistic neurology is not a failed version of neurotypical neurology. It is a different configuration.

That does not mean impairment is imaginary. Many autistic adults are disabled by the mismatch between their nervous system and environments built for someone else — workplaces, schools, families, therapy models, and social expectations that reward neurotypical performance.

That distinction changes the therapy. The goal is not normalization. The goal is to work with the shame, fear, and protective strategies that formed around years of mismatch, while also respecting the access needs that are not asking to be healed.

CBT, coaching, and skills work can be useful — but they are different from IFS. CBT can help with structure, psychoeducation, and specific thought or behavior patterns. For some clients, CBT tools are genuinely useful. They just do not always reach the parts of the system carrying shame, masking, and threat.

Coaching can help with external scaffolding, routines, accountability, and execution. IFS works with the protective system: the inner critic, masking managers, shutdown parts, and exiles carrying shame. Social-skills training or compliance-oriented approaches risk reinforcing the mask if they treat neurotypical performance as the goal.

Many AuDHD adults need both tracks: internal parts work and external scaffolding. Therapy can address the shame, masking, and protective system. Coaching can help with systems, routines, accountability, and execution. They are related. They are not the same thing. For non-clinical executive function support outside Washington State, High Signal Coaching offers coaching for neurodivergent professionals — coaching, not therapy.

Who This Therapy Is For


This therapy may be a good fit for adults who:

  • Are autistic — formally diagnosed, late-diagnosed, self-identified, or somewhere in the assessment process
  • Are AuDHD and exhausted by the internal conflict between rigidity and novelty
  • Are dealing with autistic burnout, masking exhaustion, or sensory overload
  • Have spent years trying to appear more neurotypical
  • Feel like they have spent their whole life translating themselves for other people
  • Can perform competence, but pay for it later through shutdown, exhaustion, resentment, or collapse
  • Have been told they are too intense, too sensitive, too rigid, too direct, or too much
  • Have done therapy before but felt like the model did not account for how their system actually works
  • Want neurodivergent-affirming therapy, not compliance training
  • Want clinical care rather than coaching only

It may not be the right fit for:

  • Adults seeking ABA or compliance-oriented social-skills training
  • People outside Washington State seeking therapy
  • People in acute crisis who need a higher level of care than weekly outpatient telehealth
  • People looking only for executive function coaching rather than therapy

Therapy services are available only to clients physically located in Washington State at the time of session. Related pages: Men's Therapy covers people-pleasing and Nice Guy patterns common in AuDHD men; Private Pay covers the payment model for specialist private-pay therapy.

If this sounds familiar, you can book a free 20-minute consultation to see whether this approach fits.

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Common Questions

Frequently Asked Questions

IFS therapy for autism and AuDHD does not try to make an autistic nervous system less autistic. It works with the protective parts and shame burdens that formed around being autistic or AuDHD in a world that often rewards neurotypical performance — masking parts, perfectionistic managers, inner critics, shutdown parts, and exiles carrying the belief that the way you are is wrong.

Yes, but the first priority is usually load reduction. Autistic burnout is not the same thing as depression, though the two can overlap. During active burnout, parts work should be gentle and stabilizing. The goal is to help the system recover capacity, not push harder.

IFS can be autism-affirming when it treats autistic neurology as the nervous system the parts operate through, not as a part to be healed. The Self of an autistic person is autistic. Self-energy may show up as directness, focused attention, sensory honesty, pattern recognition, or clear boundaries.

No. You may be formally diagnosed, late-diagnosed, self-identified, or still exploring whether autism or AuDHD fits. Therapy can begin with the lived experience: masking, sensory overwhelm, burnout, shame, rigidity, executive dysfunction, or the sense that you have spent your life translating yourself for others.

CBT focuses on thoughts, behaviors, and skills. Social-skills training often focuses on becoming more legible to neurotypical people. IFS works with the parts that built the mask in the first place — the protectors, critics, managers, firefighters, and exiles carrying shame. Skills can still matter, but they are not the center of the work.

Yes. AuDHD often involves a real internal tension between structure and novelty, sameness and stimulation, routine and movement. IFS can help the different parts of that system stop fighting for total control.

Yes, but sustainable unmasking is not forced. In IFS terms, unmasking happens when the protective system has enough safety to relax. Some masking is contextually rational. The goal is more choice, less compulsion, and less shame.

Yes. I offer telehealth therapy for autistic, AuDHD, ADHD, and other neurodivergent adults who are physically located in Washington State at the time of session.

Working Together

Working With an IFS Therapist in Washington State

I'm Matthew Monroe Simpson, a Washington State LMHC and IFS Level 1 trained clinician. I work with neurodivergent adults — autistic, AuDHD, ADHD, late-identified, self-identified, and people who recognize the pattern even without a formal label.

I came to this framework because many intelligent, self-aware autistic and AuDHD adults work hard in therapy and still feel like they are failing at it. Often, the missing piece is not effort. It is a framework that actually accounts for how their system works.

This is a telehealth-only practice. I am licensed as an LMHC in Washington State (License #LH61238290), and therapy services are available only to clients physically located in Washington State at the time of session. If you are outside Washington and looking for an IFS therapist, the IFS Institute practitioner directory is a good place to search.

If this framing resonates, the next step is a free 20-minute consultation. We can talk through what you are dealing with, what has and has not helped before, and whether this approach makes sense for you.