The Allender Center Podcast

Neurodivergence, Trauma, and Story with Stephanie Isbell, MA, LCPC

Mar 20, 2026
Stephanie Isbell, MA, LCPC, a narrative-focused trauma clinician working with neurodivergent adults and families, explores neurodivergence, trauma, and story. She discusses masking and its energy cost. She explains developmental misattunement, late diagnosis identity shifts, sensory profiling, and relational approaches for couples and parents. She highlights community responses and the unexpected gifts of neurodivergence.
Ask episode
AI Snips
Chapters
Books
Transcript
Episode notes
INSIGHT

Neurodivergence Is Broad And Individual

  • Neurodivergence names wide physiological differences in sensory-motor and social processing.
  • Stephanie emphasizes it's not a single thing; people labeled autistic differ more from each other than from neurotypicals.
ADVICE

Shift Clinician Stance To Curiosity First

  • Turn empathy down and curiosity up when working with neurodivergent clients to avoid misattunement.
  • Stephanie advises clinicians to put attunement on high and treat each client as a different neurology rather than relying on automatic empathic feedback.
INSIGHT

Early Miscues Produce Unique Developmental Trauma

  • Chronic miscuing from infancy creates a layered developmental trauma for neurodivergent people.
  • Parents repeatedly interpret sensory signals wrong (e.g., touch aversion), starting feedback loops that produce shame and relational wounds.
Get the Snipd Podcast app to discover more snips from this episode
Get the app