For many autistic and AuDHD women, especially those diagnosed later in life, sensory sensitivities have been an invisible thread running through their lives long before they ever had language for it. These experiences often get brushed off as “quirks,” “being picky,” or “overreacting,” but in reality, they’re deeply connected to how a neurodivergent nervous system interprets the world.
Because many women spend decades masking, adapting, and people-pleasing to fit in, their sensory challenges often go unnoticed—sometimes even by themselves. It’s only after a diagnosis or a late-in-life awakening that the pieces finally begin to click into place.
Let’s take a deeper look at how sensory sensitivities commonly show up in women. especially AuDHD women. And why they may have been missed for so long.
Why sensory sensitivities often go undetected in women
Masking starts early
Girls are socially conditioned to be “easy,” “flexible,” and “accommodating.” When a sensory stimulus feels overwhelming, like loud laughter in a cafeteria or scratchy clothing, they learn to silently endure it.
This can lead to:
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Quiet suffering
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Shut-down responses instead of meltdowns
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Staying small or compliant
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Developing people-pleasing as a survival mechanism
Because these reactions are quieter, adults often miss them.
“High functioning” labels cause misunderstandings
Many women who excel academically, communicate well, or appear socially adept are assumed to be neurotypical. But internal chaos doesn’t show on the outside.
Inside, sensory overload might feel like a buzzing, electric discomfort, a rising wave of anxiety, trouble focusing, or sudden irritability or withdrawal.
They’re often praised for coping, not recognized for suffering.
Hormonal changes amplify sensory sensitivities
This is something many women don’t expect.
Puberty, pregnancy, perimenopause, and menopause can intensify sensory issues.
Especially during menopause, when estrogen drops, sensory overwhelm often spikes.
Many late-diagnosed women have said:
“I thought I was going crazy during menopause…but it was my AuDHD showing itself more clearly.”
How Sensory Sensitivities Actually Show Up in Late-Diagnosed Women
Clothing and fabric issues
Many women with autism or AuDHD have lived their whole lives hating:
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Bras
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Seams
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Waistbands
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Certain fabrics
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Tags
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Anything tight or synthetic
But because they were taught to “dress appropriately,” they push through the discomfort.
Later in life, after diagnosis, they often switch to:
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Soft, stretchy fabrics
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Loose or oversized styles
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Bralettes or no bras
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Clothing based on comfort, not aesthetics
It’s life-changing.
Noise sensitivity that looks like anxiety
Women often report:
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Feeling panicked in loud stores
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Snapping at household noise
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Needing earbuds to calm down
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Struggling with overlapping sounds (kids + TV + appliances)
They’re told they’re “too sensitive,” “overwhelmed,” or “stressed,” but this is sensory overload, not a personality flaw.
Light sensitivity masquerading as migraines or fatigue
Women may often avoid overhead lights, turn off bright lamps, wear sunglasses indoors (or want to), get headaches from screens, or find fluorescent lights unbearable
But instead of linking it to autism, they attribute it to migraines, aging, or hormone changes.
Food texture and smell sensitivities hiding as “picky eating”
Many women have a lifelong pattern of:
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Having a short list of “safe foods.”
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Avoiding mixed textures (like casseroles)
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Struggling with strong smells
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Hating certain textures like mushy, slimy, or gritty foods
They often spend years thinking they’re just being difficult or “childish.”
Touch sensitivity misinterpreted as moodiness
Common experiences include:
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Not liking unexpected touch
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Disliking light touch but craving deep pressure
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Feeling overwhelmed by physical affection, even when they love the person
This can create confusion in relationships, especially if they don’t know why they react this way.
Emotional overwhelm linked to sensory overload
Women often report emotional responses like:
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Irritability
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Crying
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Feeling “on edge”
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Needing to withdraw
These reactions are frequently mislabeled as:
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PMS
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Anxiety
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Mood disorders
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“Being dramatic”
But when the nervous system hits capacity, emotion spills over.
Why a diagnosis brings so much clarity
A late diagnosis often helps women reframe their whole lives:
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They’re not too sensitive.
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They’re not dramatic.
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They’re not difficult.
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They’re not broken.
They’re neurodivergent, and their sensory system has been working overtime for decades.
Recognizing these patterns allows women to:
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Set better boundaries
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Reduce overstimulation
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Create sensory-friendly environments
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Advocate for their needs without guilt
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Drop the mask and honor their nervous system
This shift can be deeply healing.
Sensory sensitivities don’t make you “too much”, they make you human
I spent so much of my life feeling like my sensory sensitivities made me “less than”. I always felt like such a bother, and so often people did NOT understand when a loud sound or bright light would overwhelm me.
What I didn’t understand for so long is that AuDHD women navigate the world with a heightened awareness of their surroundings. What once felt like a personal flaw can finally be understood as part of my neurotype.
And once they understand what’s really going on, they can create a life that nurtures their unique sensory experience, not suppresses it.
