There’s a story many of us have been carrying for a long time. A quiet, persistent narrative that says we’re too much, not enough or somehow wired wrong.
Too sensitive. Too intense. Too distracted. Too in our heads.
We’ve heard it from well-meaning teachers, partners, colleagues or simply from the voice inside our own minds that has absorbed years of subtle messages about what it means to function correctly in the world.
But what if that story isn’t true? What if the qualities that have felt like your greatest burdens are actually some of your greatest strengths simply waiting for the right context, the right understanding and the right support to come into their own?
The Overthinker
If you’ve ever been told you think too much, you’ll know how exhausting it can be to live inside a mind that never quite goes quiet. The replaying of conversations, the anticipating of problems, the tendency to analyse situations from every possible angle before arriving at a decision. It can feel like a flaw and like everyone else moves through life with an ease and lightness that somehow eludes you. But here’s what the overthinker often also is – deeply caring, unusually thorough, remarkably perceptive, the person who notices what others miss, the one who thinks through the consequences before everyone else has even considered them and the friend who remembers what you said three months ago because they were genuinely listening.
Overthinking and deep thinking are not so different. One is simply deep thinking without the anchor of calm.
The Person Who Feels Everything
Emotional intensity is one of the most misunderstood traits a person can have. In a culture that prizes composure and efficiency, feeling things deeply can feel like a liability, like it is something to manage, suppress or apologise for. And yet the person who feels everything is also, almost always, the person with the greatest capacity for connection for empathy, for love. For the kind of joy that is genuinely felt rather than performed.
Intense emotion is not dysfunction, it is aliveness. The difficulty isn’t the feeling itself, it’s the absence of tools to navigate it with and the absence of a framework that honours it rather than pathologises it. When emotional intensity is met with understanding and the right support, it stops being something that happens to you and begins to feel like something that belongs to you.
The Person Whose Brain Never Switches Off
Whether it’s ADHD, anxiety, a highly creative mind or simply the particular shape of your neurology, the experience of a brain that won’t rest is genuinely exhausting. The ideas that arrive at 2am. The inability to sit still with a task that doesn’t spark interest. The feeling of being perpetually behind despite being perpetually busy and yet this same brain is also almost always the brain with the most curiosity, the most original thinking, the most restless drive to understand and create and connect.
The world is full of innovations, art, discoveries and businesses built by people who were told they couldn’t concentrate. What they lacked wasn’t intelligence or capability, they lacked an environment and a support system designed for the way their brain actually works.
So Much of What We’ve Been Told Is Wrong With Us
The common thread running through all of these experiences is this – so much of what we’ve been told is wrong with us is simply a trait that hasn’t yet found the right context or the right support.
This is not a call to bypass real struggle or to minimise the genuine difficulty of living with anxiety, neurodivergence or emotional dysregulation because these experiences are hard, and the support available to navigate them matters enormously. It is, however, an invitation to hold both things at once. To acknowledge the difficulty and to begin to look with fresh eyes at the qualities underneath it because when we only ever see our traits as problems to be solved, we miss the extraordinary things those same traits make possible.
How Hypnotherapy Helps You Work With Your Brain
Solution-focused hypnotherapy takes a fundamentally different approach to the idea of “fixing” people. Because the starting point of this work is not the assumption that something is broken. It is the belief that the resources, strengths and capacities a person needs are already there and that the role of therapy is to help them access those things more fully. In practice this means we spend our sessions not dwelling on everything that has gone wrong but building a vivid, detailed picture of how you want to feel and who you want to be. The hypnotherapy itself works with the brain’s natural processes replicating the REM state in which the brain consolidates, processes and rewires to help embed those new patterns at a deep level.
For people who have spent years feeling at war with their own minds, this can be a genuinely revelatory experience because it helps you stop fighting yourself long enough to discover what was always there. The overthinker who learns to direct their analytical mind rather than be driven by it. The highly sensitive person who begins to experience their emotional depth as a gift rather than a burden. The restless, creative brain that finds its rhythm and its flow.
These are are reframes and reframes, when they land at the right depth, change everything.
A Note on Neurodivergence
Much of what is described in this post will resonate strongly with people who identify as neurodivergent whether that’s ADHD, autism, dyslexia, high sensitivity or any of the many other ways human brains can be wired differently from the mainstream.
I work with neurodivergent adults and young people regularly and I bring personal as well as professional understanding to this work. I live with ADHD myself and I know from the inside what it feels like to spend years interpreting your own neurology as a deficit rather than a difference.
If any of this resonates with you, whether you have a formal diagnosis or simply recognise yourself in these words then I’d love to support you.
Ready to Work With Your Brain Rather Than Against It?
If you’re ready to explore a different relationship with your own mind, one built on understanding, self-compassion and genuine, lasting change solution-focused hypnotherapy might be exactly what you’ve been looking for.
Sessions are available across the UK online via Zoom, as well as in person in Bath, Paulton and Midsomer Norton in Somerset.
Book an initial consultation here
Healing space and time for body and mind…