Challenges and Barriers for Neurodivergent People
While neurodivergent thinking brings many strengths, it can also come with challenges — especially in environments that aren’t designed with different brain styles in mind.
Understanding these barriers is the first step towards removing them.
Sensory Overload
Many neurodivergent people are more sensitive to sights, sounds, textures, or smells.
A noisy open-plan office, flickering lights, or strong perfumes can cause discomfort, distraction, or even distress.
Communication Differences
Some may find verbal communication difficult, while others might prefer direct, literal language over figures of speech.
This can lead to misunderstandings, especially if others don’t adapt their communication style.
Executive Functioning Difficulties
Planning, organising, starting tasks, and managing time can be harder for some neurodivergent people — not due to laziness, but because of how their brains process information.
Social Expectations and “Masking”
Many feel pressured to hide their differences (masking) to fit in.
While this can help them avoid stigma, it’s exhausting and can lead to burnout.
Stigma and Misunderstanding
Stereotypes, myths, and lack of awareness can lead to unfair treatment in workplaces, schools, or social situations.
This can mean missed opportunities, discrimination, or exclusion.
Inflexible Systems
Rigid processes, one-size-fits-all policies, and lack of reasonable adjustments can make it unnecessarily difficult for neurodivergent people to thrive.
In short: The biggest barriers are often not the neurodivergent differences themselves, but the environments and systems that fail to recognise and support them.
Version: Version: 1.00
