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Kathy Seppamaki

Kathy Seppamaki

Finding Myself In Midlife

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How to Explain to Someone You Love Why Quiet Time Matters When You’re Neurodivergent blog post title with picture of woman sitting on couch with her feet up holding a cup of coffee

How to Explain to Someone You Love Why Quiet Time Matters When You’re Neurodivergent

kathyseppamakiDecember 23, 2025December 16, 2025

If you’re neurodivergent, chances are quiet time isn’t a luxury for you…it’s a necessity. But explaining that to someone you love can feel surprisingly hard. You don’t want them to think you’re pulling away, shutting them out, or choosing solitude over connection. You just want them to understand that quiet time is how you stay regulated, present, and emotionally available in the first place.

This post is about helping you put words to that need in a way that’s honest, compassionate, and grounded in connection rather than distance.

Define what quiet time is for you

First, it helps to reframe what “quiet time” actually is. For many neurodivergent people, quiet time isn’t about being antisocial or disengaged. It’s about nervous system care. Our brains often process more information, more intensely, and for longer periods of time. Sounds, conversations, emotions, decisions, lights, screens, and even joyful interactions can all stack up. Quiet time is how we discharge that buildup so we don’t burn out, shut down, or snap.

You might explain it like this: quiet time is to your brain what sleep is to your body. Without it, things start to glitch. Focus slips. Emotions get louder. Patience gets thinner. When you get that quiet space, you’re not withdrawing, you’re resetting.

Let them know it isn’t about them

It can also help to emphasize that this isn’t about them. Many loved ones take a need for quiet personally, especially if they equate love with togetherness, conversation, or shared activity. Reassure them gently and clearly. Let them know that your need for quiet exists even when you’re alone, even when you’re with people you adore. It’s not a reaction to their presence; it’s a response to how your nervous system works.

You might say something like, “When I ask for quiet time, it’s not because I don’t want to be with you. It’s because I want to be my best self when I am with you.”

What happens when you don’t get quiet time

Another useful approach is to describe what happens when you don’t get quiet time, without blame. This isn’t about making them responsible for your regulation, but about helping them understand the stakes. Maybe you become irritable. Maybe your thoughts race. Maybe you shut down or feel emotionally numb. These are not character flaws; they’re signs of overload.

Framing it this way helps loved ones see quiet time as preventative care rather than avoidance. It’s not something you do after you’ve reached your limit. It’s something you do so you don’t get there in the first place.

Not always about isolation

It’s also important to explain that quiet time doesn’t always mean total isolation. For some neurodivergent people, quiet time might look like being in the same room without talking, wearing headphones, reading, doing a repetitive hobby, or simply sitting without input. Letting your loved one know what quiet time actually looks like for you can reduce confusion and fear.

You could say, “Sometimes quiet time means I still want to be near you, I just don’t have the capacity to talk or engage.”

Setting good boundaries

Boundaries matter here, too. Quiet time works best when it’s intentional and respected. If you’re constantly having to defend it, justify it, or negotiate it in the moment, it stops being restorative. Explaining ahead of time, during a calm, connected moment, makes a huge difference. Let them know when you usually need it, how long it tends to last, and how they can support you.

Support might look like not taking it personally, not pushing for conversation, or even helping protect that space from interruptions. Some loved ones feel relieved once they understand how to help.

Invite curiosity

It can also be powerful to invite curiosity rather than demand understanding. You don’t have to convince anyone of your needs. You can simply share your experience and let them sit with it. Love grows in understanding, but understanding takes time…especially when someone’s nervous system works differently from yours.

If guilt comes up, and for many neurodivergent people it does, remind yourself that needing quiet does not make you difficult, cold, or selfish. It makes you human. Taking care of your nervous system is an act of responsibility, not rejection. When you honor that need, you’re actually showing up more fully for the people you love.

A few last thoughts…

Finally, remember that the right people don’t just tolerate your need for quiet, they respect it. They learn that your quiet time is part of the ecosystem of your relationship. It’s one of the ways you sustain connection, not something that threatens it.

Explaining quiet time is really about explaining yourself. And you deserve to be understood…not as someone who needs less love, but as someone who needs love expressed in a way that works with your brain, not against it.

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How to Explain to Someone You Love Why Quiet Time Matters When You’re Neurodivergent

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Hi, I’m Kathy!
I discovered I’m autistic and ADHD (AuDHD) in midlife—right in the thick of menopause and a full-on identity unraveling. Now, I’m on a journey to unmask, heal, and rediscover who I really am. This blog is where I share the messy, magical path of being neurodivergent in midlife, and finally coming home to myself.

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