Most RSD advice is aimed at the wrong target.
If cognitive behavioral therapy, mindfulness, and affirmations have plateaued for you, it is not because you have failed to apply them properly. Rejection Sensitive Dysphoria does not stay at the level of the thought long enough for those tools to reach it. The reaction is faster than the thought. The pain is older than today's trigger. The schema is older than the spark.
A schema therapy approach to RSD in the AuDHD brain.
This book applies schema therapy, the integrative depth model developed by Jeffrey Young, to the particular shape Rejection Sensitive Dysphoria takes in adults who are both autistic and have ADHD. Schema therapy reaches the layer underneath the thought. It works with the eighteen early maladaptive schemas, the four mode categories, and experiential techniques designed to change patterns that cognitive behavioral therapy alone cannot reach. The framework is translated into the AuDHD context, accounting for monotropism, alexithymia, sensory load, autistic pattern recognition, and the lived experience of having grown up with a nervous system the world was not built for.
A structured framework, not a memoir.
Across fourteen chapters, the book teaches you to identify your schemas through three routes that do not require fluent emotional language in the moment: the body, the behavior, and the story. It walks through the eight lifetraps most commonly behind RSD in AuDHD adults, with composite case examples and step-by-step exercises. The book introduces imagery rescripting, limited reparenting, and chair work, adapted for readers with aphantasia, alexithymia, or role-play activation. The closing chapters cover a post-storm protocol and the long-term work of building a fluently neurodivergent Healthy Adult mode.
Who this book is for.
This book is written for adults who have been diagnosed with autism, ADHD, or both, and who recognize Rejection Sensitive Dysphoria in their lives. Late-diagnosed readers will find a structured account of how childhood patterns shape the adult RSD storm. Those who have tried CBT, mindfulness, or DBT and found them helpful but incomplete will find what those approaches were not designed to reach. Clinicians working with AuDHD adults and partners or family members seeking to understand the experience will find a framework that translates into adjacent practice.
A clear path through the storm.
If you are ready to think about Rejection Sensitive Dysphoria with more clarity, more depth, and more compassion than the standard advice has offered, this book provides a structured place to begin. The schemas weaken. The recovery time shortens. The life around the storm becomes larger.