Major life changes have a way of surfacing questions that have been sitting quietly in the background for years. A career shift, a retirement, a divorce, an empty nest, the loss of a parent — these transitions disrupt the routines and structures that may have been holding everything together. And when those structures fall away, many adults find themselves face to face with a question they’ve carried for a long time: Why has life always felt this hard?
In my experience, life transitions are one of the most common catalysts for adults to seek an autism assessment. Not because autism suddenly appears, but because the change removes the scaffolding that was making it possible to compensate — and what’s underneath becomes impossible to ignore.
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A major life change has left you struggling in ways you didn't expect
You've lost the routines, structures, or roles that helped you function, and rebuilding feels overwhelming
A career transition has exposed challenges you were able to hide in your previous role
Retirement or an empty nest has removed your sense of purpose and daily structure
You've started researching autism after a child, grandchild, or partner was diagnosed
Midlife has brought a growing awareness that your experience of the world is fundamentally different
You've handled change before, but this time the usual coping strategies aren't working
You're re-evaluating your entire life through a new lens and wondering what you've been missing
Many autistic adults develop sophisticated compensatory strategies over the course of their lives. Routines, roles, and structures serve as a kind of scaffolding that makes it possible to function at a high level — sometimes for decades. The problem is that this scaffolding is often invisible, even to the person using it. You may not realize how much your job structure, your marriage, or your daily routines have been doing the heavy lifting until they change.
There’s also a growing pattern of adults who explore autism after a family member’s diagnosis. Learning that your child or grandchild is autistic prompts a recognition: the traits being described sound familiar — not because you learned about them, but because you’ve lived them. This is particularly common among adults in their 40s, 50s, and 60s, who grew up in an era when autism was understood very differently.
I offer comprehensive autism assessments for adults through secure telehealth, available anywhere in California. My practice is designed specifically for adults — including those who are exploring autism for the first time later in life — and I understand the unique considerations that come with late assessment.
If you’ve already been assessed and are navigating a transition with the added complexity of autism, individual therapy can provide practical support for building new structures, managing change, and developing strategies that account for your neurology.
Telehealth only (no in-office visits)
Licensed in California only
Whether you’re seeking targeted skill-building, help navigating work or relationships, or a space to better understand yourself, therapy can help.
A: Yes. Many adults aren’t assessed until their 30s, 40s, 50s, or later. Life transitions, a family member’s diagnosis, or the collapse of long-standing coping strategies are common catalysts. Late diagnosis is neither unusual nor too late to be valuable.
A: It can. Autistic adults often rely heavily on routines and structures to function. When a major transition disrupts those supports, the resulting difficulty may be disproportionate to what others expect — not because you lack resilience, but because your neurological needs are different.
A: Very common. Autism has a strong genetic component, and many adults recognize their own traits through their child’s diagnosis. I work regularly with adults in this situation.
A: Yes. All of my services are available 100% via secure video to adults anywhere in California.