There’s a trend online called “romanticizing your life.” It means finding little moments of joy and magic in everyday things…your morning routine, a walk outside, even doing the dishes. For a lot of neurotypical people, this comes naturally. But for those of us who are neurodivergent, whether that means ADHD, autism, AuDHD, dyslexia, anxiety, or something else entirely, it can feel harder to slow down and notice those moments.
That’s not because we can’t do it. It’s because our brains are wired differently. We might feel things more intensely, get overwhelmed more easily, or struggle to be “present” when our thoughts are moving a mile a minute. But here’s the secret: neurodivergent women are often incredibly good at finding magic in specific things. We just need a guide that actually fits us.
First, let go of what romanticizing is “supposed” to look like
Social media shows romanticizing your life as perfectly lit coffee cups and linen notebooks. But that’s not real life, and it’s definitely not a neurodivergent life. You might eat the same meal every day because it’s safe and comforting. You might wear the same soft hoodie until it falls apart. Or you might have a special interest that other people don’t understand at all.
None of that needs to change. In fact, those things are your starting point. The goal isn’t to become someone who floats through life in a linen dress. The goal is to find the tiny, real sparks of joy that already exist in your actual life.
Try this
Think of one thing you already love, a texture, a smell, a routine. That’s your first “romanticized moment.” You’re not building a new life. You’re noticing the good in the one you have.
Lean into your special interests, hard
If you’ve ever experienced the deep, full-body joy of your special interest, that hyperfocused love for something specific, you already know what romanticizing feels like. That electric feeling when you’re talking about the thing you love? That’s it. That’s the magic.
You don’t have to justify it or make it “productive.” Spend an afternoon completely absorbed in your passion. Let yourself get excited. Make a playlist about it. Buy the thing related to it that makes you happy. Your enthusiasm is not too much. It is, in fact, one of the most beautiful things about you.
Build small rituals around sensory things you love
Many neurodivergent women are highly attuned to their senses…sometimes overwhelmed by them, but also deeply pleased by the right ones. This is actually a superpower for romanticizing life.
Think about what feels good to your senses. Maybe it’s a specific candle scent that makes you feel calm. Maybe it’s the sound of rain, or a soft blanket, or the satisfying click of a good pen. Or maybe it’s a certain playlist that makes even boring tasks feel cinematic.
Start building small rituals around these things. Light the candle before you sit down to work. Put on the playlist while you cook. Wear the soft socks. These little actions tell your brain: this moment is worth paying attention to.
Ideas to try
A morning playlist that feels like a movie soundtrack. A “cozy kit”…a basket of your favorite textures and smells, for hard days. A special mug only for drinks you actually enjoy. One small thing that signals “this time is mine.”
Give yourself permission to live in “slow” moments
ADHD brains crave stimulation. Anxious brains can’t stop worrying about the future. Autistic brains may find transitions really hard. For all of these reasons, being in the present moment isn’t always easy for neurodivergent women.
But romanticizing your life isn’t really about mindfulness in the traditional sense. It’s about noticing things on your own terms. Maybe that means pausing to really look at something that catches your eye. Maybe it means letting yourself feel the warmth of sunlight through a window for thirty seconds. Or maybe it means noticing that your tea is the perfect temperature right now.
You don’t have to meditate or have to do it right. You just have to notice, for a moment, that something is good.
Stop apologizing for the “weird” things that make you happy
Maybe you…
- love alphabetizing things.
- feel genuine joy when a spreadsheet is perfectly organized.
- re-read the same book every year because it feels like home.
- love a TV show that’s “for kids.”
- eat your food in a specific order, and it just tastes better that way.
These are not flaws to fix. These are part of how your brain finds comfort and delight. Romanticizing your life means treating these quirks with tenderness instead of embarrassment. Let them be cute. Let them be yours.
Instead of saying “I’m sorry, I’m weird about this,” try: “This is one of my things, and I love it.” You don’t have to explain yourself to anyone.
Be gentle with the hard days
Some days, romanticizing life will feel impossible. On those days, your brain might be in survival mode…dysregulated, overwhelmed, shutting down, or running on empty. That’s real. That’s valid.
On those days, romanticizing life might look like this: drinking a glass of cold water and noticing how it feels. Wrapping yourself in a blanket and letting that be enough. Watching something comforting without guilt. Telling yourself, “I’m doing the best I can today, and that is enough.”
Finding beauty in life doesn’t mean every day has to be beautiful. It means being kind enough to yourself to notice the small good things, even on the hard days, even when they’re tiny.
You already know how to love things deeply
One of the greatest gifts of being neurodivergent is that when you love something, you really love it. You notice details others miss. You feel things fully. And you find joy in patterns, in rituals, in the specific and the particular.
Romanticizing your life isn’t a skill you need to learn from scratch. It’s a way of directing that gift, that deep, full attention you already have, toward your own everyday world.
You deserve a life that feels beautiful to you. Not to anyone else. Not to the people in your For You page. To you.
Start small. Start with one thing that already makes you happy. Notice it. Protect it. Let it be enough, and then, slowly, let it grow.
