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Speaker(s)
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Online streaming only
Times:
6:00 pm – 8:00 pm, London UK
1:00 pm – 3:00 pm, New York, USA
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£59.00 – £79.00
When the Whole Family Is Wired Differently
Most clinical training treats neurodivergence as an individual phenomenon—a child to assess, an adult to diagnose. But neurodivergence doesn’t exist in isolation. It runs through family systems, shapes intergenerational patterns, and creates relational dynamics that conventional family therapy frameworks often miss entirely.
Dr. Samantha Hiew brings a rare trifecta to this work: research expertise in neurodivergence, lived experience as an AuDHDer diagnosed at 40, and deep practical knowledge from building one of the world’s largest communities for neurodivergent women. Her perspective illuminates what becomes visible when you stop treating neurodivergence as the “identified patient’s problem” and start seeing it as a family ecology.
This session examines the lived reality of multi-neurotype households where communication styles, sensory needs, and emotional regulation patterns don’t just differ—they sometimes actively clash. Where one person’s necessary stimming is another’s sensory nightmare. Where a parent’s executive function challenges intersect with a child’s need for structure. Where undiagnosed neurodivergence in parents creates invisible labor, inherited shame, and patterns of disconnection that span generations.
Hiew’s framework centres intersectionality in ways that transform clinical understanding. How does late diagnosis in mothers—often triggered by their children’s assessments—reshape family narratives? How do cultural expectations about motherhood, gender performance, and “good parenting” compound the challenges neurodivergent parents face? How do siblings navigate households where one child’s needs for routine conflict with another’s need for spontaneity?
The session moves between systemic patterns and practical strategies. You’ll learn to recognise the signs of inherited narratives—where parents unconsciously transmit their own experiences of shame, masking, or misunderstanding to children still forming self-concept. You’ll explore how diagnostic timing shapes family dynamics differently: the adolescent who grows up validated versus the parent discovering their neurodivergence decades into parenthood. You’ll examine how intersecting factors—race, class, migration, queer identity—layer additional complexity onto neurodivergent family life.
What makes Hiew’s approach distinctive is her refusal to pathologise while acknowledging real struggle. Neurodivergent families aren’t broken systems needing repair—they’re systems operating under frameworks designed for different neurologies. The therapeutic task isn’t normalisation but translation: helping family members develop shared language, recognise different nervous system needs as legitimate rather than problematic, and build communication patterns that honour rather than erase neurodivergent ways of being.
This means moving beyond surface-level accommodation toward deeper relational repair. It means helping families identify where disconnection comes from misattunement rather than malice. It means supporting parents in processing their own diagnostic journeys while holding space for their children’s experiences. It means recognising that co-regulation looks different when multiple family members have different regulation needs.
For clinicians, this session offers a framework for working with neurodivergent families that starts from validation rather than deficit, from curiosity rather than correction. You’ll leave with concrete strategies for facilitating conversations that centre multiple truths, reduce shame, and build toward sustainable patterns of connection that respect everyone’s neurobiology.
Learning Objectives
By the end of this session, participants will be able to:
About Samantha Hiew
Dr. Samantha Hiew is the author of Tip of the ADHD Iceberg, a compassionate and practical guide to navigating life after diagnosis and learning how to self-advocate with clarity and courage. An AuDHDer, scientist, and storyteller, she is the founder of ADHD Girls, a platform that has transformed how the world understands and supports neurodivergent women and global communities. Diagnosed with ADHD at 40 after years of feeling lost in a world that didn’t quite fit, she built the community she wished had existed for her. With a PhD in cancer research and communications, Samantha bridges science and story to humanise neurodiversity. Through her pioneering AuDHD Advanced Practitioner Programme and Neurodivergent Phoenix Convention, she brings together lived experience, trauma-informed science, and collective healing. She has spoken to more than 100,000 people, trained over 100 FTSE companies, and led landmark events including ADHD & Autism in Women: Missed, Dismissed & Reclaiming Your Voice. Recognised as a Difference Maker by PBS America and Positive Role Model for Gender at the National Diversity Awards, her work has been featured in The Guardian, Forbes, Psychology Today, and numerous other major media outlets.
© nscience 2025 / 26
Dr. Samantha Hiew brings a rare trifecta to this work: research expertise in neurodivergence, lived experience as an AuDHDer diagnosed at 40, and deep practical knowledge from building one of the world’s largest communities for neurodivergent women. Her perspective illuminates what becomes visible when you stop treating neurodivergence as the “identified patient’s problem” and start seeing it as a family ecology.
Develop the ability to interpret and modulate the body’s nervous system (sensory and autonomic) to regulate arousal levels in clients and for safer trauma therapy
Identify and acquire recovery options and strategies for trauma clients inappropriate for trauma memory processing, particularly for those who don’t want to and those who decompensate or dysregulate from memory work
Also develop the ability to interpret and modulate the body’s nervous system (sensory and autonomic) to regulate arousal levels for professional self-care
Dr. Samantha Hiew is the author of Tip of the ADHD Iceberg, a compassionate and practical guide to navigating life after diagnosis and learning how to self-advocate with clarity and courage. An AuDHDer, scientist, and storyteller, she is the founder of ADHD Girls, a platform that has transformed how the world understands and supports neurodivergent women and global communities. Diagnosed with ADHD at 40 after years of feeling lost in a world that didn’t quite fit, she built the community she wished had existed for her. With a PhD in cancer research and communications, Samantha bridges science and story to humanise neurodiversity. Through her pioneering AuDHD Advanced Practitioner Programme and Neurodivergent Phoenix Convention, she brings together lived experience, trauma-informed science, and collective healing. She has spoken to more than 100,000 people, trained over 100 FTSE companies, and led landmark events including ADHD & Autism in Women: Missed, Dismissed & Reclaiming Your Voice. Recognised as a Difference Maker by PBS America and Positive Role Model for Gender at the National Diversity Awards, her work has been featured in The Guardian, Forbes, Psychology Today, and numerous other major media outlets.
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Enjoy 20% off on all of our video courses this Christmas season.
Your 20% discount will be automatically applied to eligible products in your cart.