Therapy for burnout and feeling stuck in Portland, Oregon
Expressive Arts Therapy for ADHD & Autistic Adults Across Oregon (Online)
Creative, sensory‑aware therapy for masking burnout, identity shifts, and the exhaustion of always having to hold everything together.
Years of masking and over‑functioning can leave you depleted — and unsure who you are underneath it all.
I work with autistic and ADHD women (and other adults who resonate with this experience) who are exhausted from trying to function in ways that don’t match how their brains and nervous systems actually work.
This is therapy that works differently.
Not just talking — but using creative, sensory‑aware processes to help you access what’s been hard to reach, so you can feel more like yourself and less like you’re constantly managing or overriding your experience.
Sound Familiar?
You can hold it together in front of people — but afterward you crash, overstimulated, wrung out, or strangely blank.
In groups or family settings, you slip into old roles without meaning to… masking, managing, performing, trying to keep up while your system quietly overloads.
After a day of being “on,” your nervous system feels fried. You need hours — sometimes days — to come back to yourself.
Late at night, something feels off. You can sense the burnout, the overwhelm, the misalignment… but you don’t have language for it yet.
You’re starting to wonder if the exhaustion, the masking, the shutdowns, the constant self‑monitoring — all of it — might be ADHD burnout, autistic burnout, or the impact of being late‑identified.
You’re functioning.
But it’s costing you more than anyone around you realizes — and more than you can keep paying.
If Talk Therapy Didn’t Work For You...
You’re not broken. You’re just wired differently — and words alone were never going to reach the places that hurt.
You can explain everything: the burnout, the masking, the shutdowns, the sensory overload, the constant self‑monitoring. You can name every pattern and still feel like you’re living behind glass — watching yourself cope instead of actually feeling relief.
You’ve done the work. You’ve analyzed, journaled, reflected, talked it through.
And yet your body still hums with tension. Your mind still loops. Your nervous system still won’t settle.
That’s not failure. That’s your system trying to communicate in a language talk therapy doesn’t speak.
Expressive arts therapy meets you where words stop — through movement, imagery, and sensory experience.
It’s how ADHD burnout, autistic burnout, and masking fatigue finally start to unwind.
It’s how you stop just understanding yourself and start feeling like yourself again.
How Expressive Arts Therapy Works
You already know yourself inside out — the patterns, the history, the burnout cycles.
You can analyze every thought, every reaction, every shutdown.
And still, your body keeps humming with tension. Your mind keeps looping. Your system won’t let you rest.
Expressive arts therapy opens a different door.
Instead of staying in words, we move through image, metaphor, sound, and sensory experience — the language your nervous system actually speaks.
This is where ADHD burnout, autistic burnout, masking fatigue, and sensory overload start to show themselves in real time — not as concepts, but as sensations you can finally work with.
You don’t need to be “artistic.”
This isn’t about making something pretty or profound.
It’s about giving your body and brain a way to communicate that doesn’t require translation — so what’s been buried, blurred, or unreachable can start to surface and make sense.
For many clients, this is the moment things begin to shift.
The pressure to analyze everything eases.
The noise quiets.
And there’s finally space for recognition, relief, and change that feels real — not forced.
What this work helps shift
The changes that happen here aren’t flashy.
They’re quiet — the kind you feel before you can name.
You start noticing the subtle things: the way your chest tightens before you speak, the flicker of shutdown, the moment your body goes still even though your mind keeps running.
The vague, hard‑to‑name sensations begin to take shape.
You start recognizing what’s actually happening inside — without rushing to fix it or push it away.
And then, something loosens.
The constant internal fight — the bracing, the self‑correction, the pressure to “get it together” — starts to ease.
You stop pushing against yourself just to survive the day.
Gradually, a different rhythm emerges:
More connection to yourself — not the masked version, not the over‑functioning one, but the real you underneath.
Less conflict with your own mind and body.
Moments of genuine relief, where your nervous system finally exhales.
For many autistic and ADHD adults, this is the first time therapy has touched the burnout, the masking fatigue, the sensory overload — not as symptoms to fix, but as signals that finally make sense.
This is where healing begins: not by forcing change, but by letting your system recognize itself and find its own way back.
This work may be a good fit if…
You’re exhausted from managing yourself every minute of the day — monitoring, masking, adjusting, bracing.
You’ve talked things through a hundred different ways, but nothing actually shifts inside.
You’re craving a therapy that isn’t just conversation — something experiential, creative, sensory‑aware, and actually aligned with how your brain and nervous system work.
You want support that helps with ADHD burnout, autistic burnout, masking fatigue, shutdown cycles, and the constant pressure to “hold it together.”
You’re ready for a process that meets you where words stop.
This may not be the right fit if…
You’re looking for in‑person sessions (I work entirely online across Oregon).
You want therapy that stays strictly in conversation and analysis.
You need a structured, protocol‑driven treatment model rather than a relational, experiential, expressive‑arts approach.
You’re seeking therapy for children or teens, or looking for behavioral/ABA‑style interventions — that’s not the work I do.
You’re looking for therapy that bills insurance directly. My practice is private‑pay, which means we work outside insurance systems so sessions can move at your pace, without diagnostic or coverage restrictions.
About Lisa Headings
I work with autistic and ADHD adults — especially those who are late‑diagnosed or beginning to wonder if they might be neurodivergent — who feel disconnected from themselves despite years of trying to understand.
Many of my clients are thoughtful, insightful, and highly self‑aware.
They’ve spent years analyzing their experiences, adapting to expectations, masking without meaning to, and trying to “figure themselves out.”
And yet… something still doesn’t click.
There’s a gap between what they know about themselves and what they can actually feel or access.
My work focuses on helping you move from understanding yourself in theory → to experiencing yourself more clearly and directly.
I use expressive arts therapy to support this process — so we’re not relying on words alone, but engaging your full sensory, emotional, and embodied experience.
This isn’t about performing, explaining yourself perfectly, or getting it “right.”
It’s about creating space to relate to yourself in a way that feels more accurate — and less like a constant effort to manage, mask, or hold yourself together.
I’m drawn to this work because I’ve seen how powerful it is when neurodivergent adults finally have a space that speaks their language — one that honors how their minds and bodies actually process the world.
Therapy topics we might explore…
In our work together, we might explore things like:
Autistic burnout and chronic exhaustion — the kind that doesn’t go away with rest because it’s rooted in years of masking, over‑functioning, and pushing past your limits.
Masking, people‑pleasing, and the loss of a clear sense of self — the ways you’ve shaped yourself around others without even realizing it.
Overthinking, rumination, and mental overload — when your mind won’t stop analyzing, replaying, or preparing, even when you’re exhausted.
Emotional processing beyond words — noticing what your body, imagery, and sensory experience reveal that talking never quite reaches.
Sensory sensitivity and nervous system needs — understanding what overwhelms you, what soothes you, and what your system has been trying to communicate.
Late diagnosis and re‑understanding your life — making sense of your past through an autistic or ADHD lens, and finally seeing the patterns that were there all along.
Boundaries, relationships, and energy limits — learning how to stay connected without abandoning yourself.
Reconnecting with creativity, joy, and self‑trust — rebuilding the parts of you that got buried under survival mode.
FAQs
Do I need to be artistic?
Not at all. This work is about expression, not performance — and definitely not about making “good” art.
Do you take insurance?
I’m a private‑pay practice and don’t bill insurance directly.
What happens in the first session?
We go at your pace. You don’t need to prepare or have everything figured out — we start exactly where you are.
What if I don’t know what to say?
That’s completely okay. Many autistic and ADHD adults find it hard to put things into words at first. We can start with image, movement, or sensory cues — whatever feels most accessible.
What if I shut down or get overwhelmed?
That’s part of what we work with. Sessions are designed to honor your nervous system’s limits, not push past them. You can pause, move, draw, or simply notice what’s happening — there’s no “wrong” way to show up here.
Ready to explore whether this fits?
If something in this page resonated — especially that sense of understanding yourself in theory but still feeling disconnected in practice — you’re welcome to reach out.
There’s no pressure to commit.
No expectation to show up a certain way.
No need to have the “right” words or a polished story.
A free 20‑minute consultation is simply a chance for us to talk about what you’re experiencing, ask questions, and get a feel for whether this kind of work feels supportive for you.
It’s not a therapy session — just a low‑key conversation to see if we’re a good fit.
Specialized Areas of Support
Many clients I work with are Autistic or ADHD women navigating masking, burnout, and late autism discovery. You can learn more about these experiences here: