DiscoverNeurodivergent Strategies for Late-Diagnosed Adults: Find Your Divergent PathNeurodivergent Grief: When Your Brain Just Won't Cooperate
Neurodivergent Grief: When Your Brain Just Won't Cooperate

Neurodivergent Grief: When Your Brain Just Won't Cooperate

Update: 2025-10-31
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Grief is never simple but for neurodivergent folks, it can feel like trying to swim through wet cement. In this deeply personal solo episode, Dr. Regina McMenomy, PhD, shares her own experience of loss while exploring how grief collides with executive dysfunction, emotional numbness, and rejection sensitivity.

If you’ve ever struggled to make phone calls, fill out forms, or even feel your emotions after someone you love has died, this episode is for you. You’ll learn why grief scrambles our executive functioning, how alexithymia can make it hard to name what we’re feeling, and why guilt and self-blame often hit especially hard for late-diagnosed neurodivergent adults.

Because sometimes the hardest part of grieving isn’t the loss itself—it’s learning to be gentle with a brain that’s already overloaded.

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About Dr. Regina McMenomy PhD,

Dr. Regina McMenomy, Ph.D., is a neurodivergent coach, educator, and founder of Divergent Paths Consulting. She helps late-diagnosed adults unmask, heal, and thrive without burning out. Author of the N.E.R.D. Notes Newsletter and host of the Divergent Paths podcast, Regina blends academic insight with nerdy joy to build belonging from the inside out. Catch her on Instagram

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Neurodivergent Grief: When Your Brain Just Won't Cooperate

Neurodivergent Grief: When Your Brain Just Won't Cooperate