Estrangement Ideology – Part 29. What Role Neurodiversity?
What role does neurodiversity play in Estrangement Ideology and family breakdown?
This is number twenty-nine in a series of articles concerning Estrangement Ideology. Key concepts are introduced in Part 1. Tenets, Goals and Methods; Part 2. Transgressions, Moral Certitude and Traditional Values; and Part 3. The One-Sided Path to Redemption. Other parts can be found here.
Over the course of this Estrangement Ideology series, I have explored how modern therapeutic language, online communities and shifting cultural expectations contribute to the normalisation of family estrangement. One recurring but underexamined theme is the role of neurodiversity—specifically how conditions like Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD) and Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) shape relational expectations, conflict resolution and emotional processing within families. As awareness of neurodivergence grows, so too does its influence on the discourse surrounding estrangement, often providing a framework that recasts generational misunderstandings as insurmountable harm.
By observation of the online Estranged Adult Child forums, there seem to be a lot of implied issues with ASD and ADHD. We know there has been an epidemic of both in the last 40-50 years, with diagnosed ASD going from 1 in10,000 to now 1 in 35 and climbing. I leave it to others to explain why this is likely so, but I think many parents have struggled with the impacts on their children's ability to navigate emotional landscapes and communicate in non-black and white terms. As these children have aged into maturity, this has resulted in major family conflicts as political and ideological positions widen between the generations and conflict becomes overlaid with therapy speak and grievance amplifying online echo chambers.
The rising number of ASD and ADHD diagnoses—along with a significant increase in self-diagnosis—raises important questions about how these frameworks influence estrangement decisions such as harsh, often peremptory “No Contact” rules. Does neurodivergence make estrangement more likely? Are these individuals being empowered to set healthy boundaries or are they being guided toward permanent severance as the only viable solution?
The Neurodiversity Lens and Relational Complexity
ASD and ADHD significantly shape how individuals communicate, regulate emotions and navigate relationships. Neurodivergent individuals often experience heightened emotional sensitivity, difficulties with implicit social cues and atypical responses to conflict. In particular, traits commonly associated with ASD—such as black-and-white thinking, heightened emotional sensitivity and social processing differences—may increase the likelihood that conflicts with parents are framed as fundamental incompatibilities rather than challenges to navigate.
Traits like impulsivity (in ADHD) and cognitive rigidity (in ASD) can make family interactions particularly fraught, as misunderstandings may escalate into seemingly irreparable rifts. When parents and children process emotions and intentions differently, repeated breakdowns in communication can reinforce feelings of invalidation and frustration, leading some neurodivergent individuals to interpret family conflict as a pervasive and unchangeable pattern rather than an evolving dynamic.
For instance, the Double Empathy Problem research (Frontiers for Young Minds) highlights how misunderstandings between neurodivergent individuals and neurotypical family members are often mutual rather than one-sided. Parents may struggle to interpret their neurodivergent child's intense emotional responses, while the child may perceive parental feedback as dismissive or harmful, regardless of intent. Black-and-white thinking—a common trait in ASD—can further entrench estrangement by framing relational conflicts as absolute: either a parent is entirely safe and supportive or they are irredeemably toxic. This cognitive rigidity, coupled with emotional hypersensitivity, makes it challenging for some neurodivergent individuals to contextualise parental behaviours within broader generational or relational frameworks, potentially reinforcing the idea that severance is the only path to “self-protection.”
Online Communities, Language Framing and Therapeutic Narratives
Online estrangement communities create an environment where neurodivergent individuals, particularly those with ASD and ADHD, can reframe family interactions through a therapeutic lens that emphasises pathology over relational complexity. The articles Why Are Autistic Adults Estranging Their Parents? and Autistic Adults and Parental Estrangement (National Autistic Society) highlight how many neurodivergent individuals struggle with emotional reciprocity, social nuance and sensory overload—factors that can make familial relationships particularly challenging. Within estrangement forums, therapy-speak terms such as “trauma response”, “gaslighting” and “emotional labour” provide a structured way for neurodivergent users to process their interpersonal discomfort, but they may also encourage rigid interpretations of family dynamics. This linguistic framework can transform natural misunderstandings or parental difficulties in adapting to neurodivergence into evidence of abuse or toxicity, reinforcing the belief that estrangement is the healthiest or only viable solution.
The article When People Say That My Explanations Are Excuses as a Neurodivergent Person further illustrates how frustration with neurotypical expectations can escalate into estrangement when family members fail to validate an ASD or ADHD individual’s perspective. Many neurodivergent individuals experience persistent feelings of being misunderstood or dismissed, particularly when their emotional or sensory needs clash with neurotypical social norms. When conflicts arise, the inability of neurotypical family members to immediately accommodate these differences may be perceived as deliberate harm rather than a lack of understanding. This can lead to a cognitive reframing of family tensions as “violations” of personal “boundaries” rather than complex, bidirectional struggles. Consequently, the emphasis on “self-protection” in Estrangement Ideology aligns with the tendency toward black-and-white thinking common in ASD and ADHD, making disengagement appear not just reasonable but necessary for self-preservation.
The Role of Sensory and Emotional Overload in the Decision to Estrange
Neurodivergent individuals, particularly those on the autism spectrum, often experience heightened sensory and emotional overload in family settings, which can significantly lower their tolerance for relational conflict. Family gatherings, with their unpredictability, overlapping conversations and emotional demands, may be especially overwhelming, leading to an instinctive need for withdrawal.
For instance, the Quora discussion How Someone with ASD Copes with Family Estrangement highlights how some ASD adults choose estrangement as a form of self-protection, viewing ongoing familial engagement as an unsustainable drain on their emotional and sensory resources. Unlike neurotypical individuals, who may have greater capacity for managing relational ambiguity, ASD individuals may struggle to regulate emotional distress caused by family interactions, making severance seem like the most effective way to regain equilibrium.
This tendency toward total disconnection rather than incremental boundary-setting reflects broader challenges in emotional reconciliation for ASD individuals. Difficulties with processing interpersonal nuance and interpreting intent can make misunderstandings appear irreparable, reinforcing the belief that estrangement is necessary rather than situational. Family conflicts that a neurotypical person might frame as “difficult but manageable” may instead be seen by an ASD person as intolerable and inescapable, leaving no option but to cut ties completely. The rigidity of Estrangement Ideology, with its emphasis on absolute “boundaries” and “self-preservation”, aligns closely with the cognitive patterns common in ASD, further reinforcing the idea that maintaining family relationships is not only undesirable but actively harmful.
Emotional Immaturity and Cognitive Rigidity in Estrangement Narratives
Accusations of “emotional immaturity” within estrangement discourse often apply selectively to parents, framing their struggles to navigate conflict as proof of their inadequacy while excusing similar traits in their neurodivergent adult children. Estrangement Ideology – Part 9: The Emotional Immaturity Paradox explores how therapy culture and online estrangement spaces pathologise parental responses, branding them as emotionally stunted or narcissistic for expressing grief, confusion or a desire for reconciliation.
Meanwhile, the same narratives frequently overlook how cognitive rigidity—a hallmark of conditions like ASD and ADHD—can contribute to relational breakdowns. Neurodivergent individuals may struggle with flexible thinking, making it difficult for them to contextualise past conflicts, accept gradual change or recognise genuine parental attempts at repair. However, rather than acknowledging these challenges as mutual, Estrangement Ideology casts parental struggles as moral failings while portraying the adult child’s perspective as self-evidently correct.
This double standard places parents in a no-win situation, as highlighted in Psychology Today – When Autistic Adults and Their Parents Are Estranged. Parents of neurodivergent adult children often report being blindsided by rigid, uncompromising estrangement decisions and find that even minor missteps are framed as proof of their unworthiness. The expectation that they "do the work" often fails to account for generational and neurocognitive differences, treating misunderstandings as evidence of intentional harm rather than natural gaps in communication styles. As a result, intergenerational neurodiversity is overlooked in favour of a moralised framework where one party is expected to conform entirely to the other's terms, reinforcing the estrangement community’s broader tendency to externalise blame and discourage reconciliation.
The Boomer Narrative and the Generational Divide
Older generations, many of whom are either neurotypical or undiagnosed neurodivergent, often struggle to adapt to the rapidly shifting norms of emotional validation that define modern estrangement discourse. In online communities, Estranged Adult Children—many of whom may identify as neurodivergent—frequently frame their parents’ inability to “do the work” as a fundamental character flaw rather than a reflection of generational or cognitive differences.
The expectation that parents should engage in ongoing emotional labour to meet their children’s therapeutic expectations ignores the reality that previous generations were socialised with different emotional frameworks. Many of these parents did not grow up with therapy-speak or the concept of radical emotional transparency, leading to a cultural and cognitive disconnect. As a result, their attempts to communicate using their own relational models are often dismissed as “gaslighting”, “defensiveness” or “emotional immaturity”, reinforcing the perception that reconciliation is impossible unless the parent entirely reshapes their worldview.
As discussed in Part 28. Cleaning Home: A Multi-Dimensional Exploration, this tendency to flatten familial complexity into rigid power dynamics mirrors Herbert Marcuse’s critique in One-Dimensional Man, where he argues that modern ideological frameworks reduce nuanced human relationships into simplistic, transactional terms. Within Estrangement Ideology, neurodivergent individuals often interpret relational struggles through an absolutist lens—seeing their parents’ perceived failures as evidence of oppression rather than inevitable intergenerational gaps in communication.
This is especially evident in forum discussions where estranged individuals berate their parents for failing to engage in “deep emotional work” while simultaneously struggling to tolerate relational ambiguity themselves. The expectation that all familial interactions be neatly resolved within a therapeutic framework ignores the complexity of human relationships, particularly when neurodiversity plays a role in how both sides process conflict. In many cases, the demand for emotional validation becomes a one-way street, where parents are expected to meet exacting standards of introspection and accountability while the Estranged Adult Child’s own limitations are rarely subjected to similar scrutiny.
The Consequences of Estrangement for Neurodivergent Individuals and Families
Estrangement can have profound long-term consequences for neurodivergent individuals, many of whom already struggle with social isolation, executive dysfunction and emotional regulation. A Hidden Cause of Some Difficult Family Relationships (Psychology Today) highlights how neurodivergent individuals often face interpersonal challenges due to differences in communication styles, sensory sensitivities and emotional processing. By severing ties with family, they may inadvertently eliminate one of the few stable support systems available to them.
While estrangement communities frame “No Contact” as an act of empowerment, the reality for many neurodivergent individuals is that they may find it difficult to establish new, reliable sources of emotional and practical support. Those with ASD or ADHD often rely on structured relationships for guidance, assistance with daily living and a sense of continuity—resources that can be difficult to replace in adulthood, especially if social skills or executive functioning deficits make forming new relationships challenging.
Beyond emotional loss, estrangement also carries tangible risks, particularly in terms of financial stability and long-term care. Many neurodivergent individuals face employment instability due to difficulties with workplace social dynamics, sensory overload or the need for accommodations that are not always granted. Family members often serve as informal safety nets, providing everything from financial assistance to housing support during difficult periods. Severing these ties may leave neurodivergent adults particularly vulnerable to economic precarity, homelessness or reliance on overburdened social services.
Additionally, the same cognitive rigidity and difficulty with relational ambiguity that contribute to estrangement may make it harder for neurodivergent individuals to repair or rebuild relationships later in life, potentially exacerbating social isolation and mental health struggles as they age. The broader implications suggest that while estrangement may feel like an immediate solution to familial conflict, it can lead to unforeseen hardships, leaving neurodivergent individuals more isolated and without the security net that even imperfect family relationships might have provided.
Conclusion: Can There Be a Better Way?
It seems reasonably evident that neurodiversity plays a significant role in shaping Estrangement Ideology, particularly through its influence on communication breakdowns, emotional processing differences and black-and-white thinking. Online estrangement communities, often dominated by therapeutic discourse, provide neurodivergent individuals with a framework that reinforces externalising familial conflicts rather than working through them. While this may validate personal experiences, it also risks promoting avoidance strategies rather than encouraging adaptive conflict resolution.
The reliance on rigid concepts like “toxic” relationships and “emotional labour” can appeal to those who struggle with ambiguity, but it possibly does little to equip neurodivergent individuals with the tools to manage difficult but salvageable relationships. Instead of fostering resilience or understanding, Estrangement Ideology and its concomitant online communities can reinforce a sense of victimhood and discourage the development of long-term relational skills.
The modern therapeutic framing of estrangement as a form of self-care may feel validating in the short term, but does it genuinely serve neurodivergent individuals well? Or does it encourage impulsive relational severance without addressing underlying interpersonal challenges? Given the long-term risks for both parents and the Estranged Adult Children, is current estrangement discourse is genuinely beneficial or if it merely offers a temporary sense of control while deepening the relational and self-protection issues it claims to resolve?
Note: This article was developed with assistance of ChatGPT, used as a structured analysis and writing tool. All ideas, interpretations and final outputs were authored, verified and edited by me. The model was conditioned to reflect my reasoning, not to generate content independently.
Yes, yes, and yes! I have just discovered this substack — also learned about it through a reference from Dr. Josh Coleman — and am finding these posts to be very helpful. My 37 yo son has estranged (mostly — we get birthday cards) himself from my his father and me. My son has been diagnosed with ADD — but not (yet) ASD. But I have long suspected he is on the spectrum and I see this trouble with non-verbal social cues and other measures of emotional skills to be weak in many of my husband’s family members. I’m also finding your distinction between “estrangement as a reality” and “estrangement ideology” to be very informative. Also liked the post looking at estrangement as a subcategory of elder abuse. My husband and I are cut out of our granddaughter’s life (our only grandchild) and I do think the point is to punish us. Mission accomplished! I have reached out with loving communications as well as offers for family therapy but my son is angry and implacable. He and his wife and daughter lived with us for five months in 2023 and it was awful. I’m ready to let bygones be bygones but my son is dug in. I am 68 yo and for my own health, I’ve decided to let things be as they are, at least for now. The question of ASD seems like one of many strands in this sad situation. Thank you. 🙏
This was the first of your articles I have read - pointed this way by referral from Dr Joshua Coleman. How very very interesting, what a thought provoking read. As a 65 year old mother teetering on the brink of being estranged by my only child and his wife, I have undertaken a year of weekly therapy. During the course of which the diagnosis of my previously undiagnosed ADHD emerged. My son was diagnosed aged 33 with ADD 3 years ago. Part of the reason for the last year of "low contact" where my relationship sits with my (dearly beloved) son and his wife, was my emotional regulation. An actual argument once a year or so, but "walking on eggshells" was apparently how they felt around me. 10mg of Ritalin daily has brought me to a place of genuine calm. Hence my interest in your article.