The Labels and the Fire
Living with an AuDHD mind (Autism + ADHD) feels like being both too much and not enough at the same time. For a long time, I thought what I experienced was depression: the heavy stillness, the limbo of not wanting to do anything, the way even my passions could dim to nothing. But as I studied more and listened to my own patterns, I realized, this wasn’t depression. This was me. My wiring.
The world loves to put names on things. Autism. ADHD. Bipolar. Schizophrenia. “Disorders.” Labels meant to explain, but often used to confine. When I first stumbled on the term AuDHD, something cracked open. Suddenly, so many scattered pieces of my life clicked:
Attention in bursts, never in straight lines.
A sensory world is always on maximum volume.
Hyperfocus that turns into brilliance, then vanishes into exhaustion.
Social rules that feel like acting, not being.
The paradox of craving both structure and total freedom.
None of these explained me fully. But together, they mirrored something I’d always known deep down: my mind is different.
Here’s the part I struggled with: people often dismiss self-observation. “Don’t self-diagnose,” they say, as if living in my own skin, my own brain, for three decades isn’t enough evidence. But no one else has walked inside this head but me. I study. I observe. I connect dots. This isn’t even about chasing a box; it’s about owning my map.
I’ve spent years diving into astrology, numerology, personality frameworks, neuroscience, and psychology. Each one gave me a piece of the puzzle. Each one showed me another layer of myself. But none of them said what my heart whispered:
What if this isn’t brokenness at all? What if this fire in me is not a disorder, but a code?
That question wouldn’t leave me alone. It pushed me to dig deeper, beyond psychology, into mysticism and soul work. And there, I started finding the breadcrumbs, thinkers, mystics, and researchers who dared to ask the same question: maybe what we call “disorders” are actually spiritual signals.
This series is my attempt to weave it together. My lived experience. The wisdom of people like Edgar Cayce and Dolores Cannon. And modern voices reclaiming neurodivergence as awakening. A way of looking at things that doesn’t treat sensitivity, intensity, or a mind that doesn’t move in straight lines as flaws, but as proof of soul strength.
It doesn’t mean pretending the pain or the hard parts don’t exist. I know the heaviness, the paralysis, the irritability, the days when nothing sparks. But it’s also about telling the truth: there are gifts here too. Pattern recognition. Depth. Creativity. An antenna tuned to signals others don’t even notice.
So here’s where I begin. With the fire that comes from living in a brain like mine. With the refusal to be defined by dismissals. With the question that has become my compass:
What if these aren’t disorders? What if they’re doorways?
Edgar Cayce, Sensitivity as Soul Gift
If the first part was about naming the fire inside me, this part is about realizing I’m not the only one who has ever seen it this way. Long before modern psychology introduced terms like ADHD and Autism, some mystics recognized that different minds carried different gifts. One of them was Edgar Cayce, often called the Sleeping Prophet.
Cayce was a simple man from Kentucky who, in the early 1900s, began entering trance states where he gave thousands of psychic readings. These readings covered everything from health to spirituality to the evolution of the soul. But what struck me most when I discovered him wasn’t his predictions; it was his deep respect for sensitivity.
Cayce taught that psychic perception wasn’t supernatural; it was natural. Everyone, he said, could connect with higher planes of awareness. The difference was in how open or sensitive the channel was.
When I read this, something clicked. Suddenly, I could see my own struggles, the sensory overload, the hyper-awareness of moods and energies in a room, the way my brain could never quite turn off, not as flaws, but as signs of a wide-open channel.
In his readings, Cayce often said that illness or imbalance could arise when the body or mind was “too sensitive” to certain energies. But instead of condemning it, he framed sensitivity as a gift that needed care, grounding, and direction.
Doesn’t that sound exactly like neurodivergence?
ADHD attention is a multidimensional awareness. Not scattered, but spread across layers most people never notice.
Autism has a deep resonance with frequency. A nervous system tuned so finely that sound, texture, and emotion land with full force.
Bipolar swings as polarity mastery. Moving between extremes because you are wired to feel the full spectrum.
Cayce never used those words, but the parallels are impossible to ignore. He described people whose nervous systems seemed built to perceive more, and how the world often misunderstood them.
That misunderstanding hasn’t changed much. Today, we pathologize what Cayce might have seen as spiritual sensitivity. We call it a deficit, a disorder, a malfunction. And yet, the very traits that feel unbearable at times, the overwhelm, the hyperfocus, the “too muchness”, are also the traits that allow us to perceive truths others overlook.
Cayce’s message was clear: sensitivity is soul memory trying to surface. It is the nervous system remembering its original role as antenna, to feel, to sense, to connect.
For me, that reframed everything. Instead of asking, “Why am I broken?” I started asking, “What am I picking up that others aren’t?”
And that question alone turned the weight of my wiring into wonder.
Dolores Cannon, The Volunteer Souls
If Edgar Cayce showed me that sensitivity could be a soul’s antenna, Dolores Cannon revealed why some of us might feel like we were given the wrong manual for being human in the first place.
Cannon was a hypnotherapist who, through decades of past-life regressions, stumbled into something extraordinary. Her clients began describing memories not just from Earthly lives, but from other dimensions, planets, and realms of existence. The stories were consistent: souls who volunteered to come to Earth during a time of crisis, to help shift humanity into a higher state of awareness.
She called them the Three Waves of Volunteers.
The First Wave struggled deeply with life on Earth. Many felt they didn’t belong, battled depression, and longed to “go home.”
The Second Wave carried energy that influenced others just by being present. They were bridges, holding frequency.
The Third Wave came in as children with extraordinary abilities and new ways of seeing the world.
When I first read about this, my chest tightened, but not with fear, but with recognition. How many times had I said, “I don’t belong here”? How many times had I felt both the beauty and the unbearable heaviness of simply existing in a world that didn’t feel built for me?
Cannon wrote that volunteer souls often feel out of place in their families, communities, and even in their own bodies. They resist rigid systems. They can’t tolerate inauthenticity. They may appear restless, scattered, or uninterested in “normal” ambitions, not because they are lazy or broken, but because their compass points elsewhere.
Doesn’t that sound eerily like the experience of neurodivergence?
Autism: refusing to play along with social codes that feel unnatural.
ADHD: restless in the face of repetitive systems, always reaching for stimulation that feels meaningful.
Other “disorders”: ways the nervous system rebels against conformity, forcing the soul to carve its own path.
To Cannon, these weren’t disorders. They were signs of a soul on assignment.
She even noted how many volunteers struggled with the heaviness of Earth’s density, the noise, the violence, the chaos of modern life. Some didn’t want to stay. And yet, they chose to, because their presence was part of the mission.
That reframed my own battles in a way nothing else had. Maybe my AuDHD traits, the cycles of fire and burnout, the sensory overwhelm, the bursts of brilliance followed by stillness, weren’t obstacles to overcome, but evidence of being a volunteer soul in the middle of its assignment.
It also explained the longing. The way I sometimes look at the stars and ache for a place I can’t name. The way Earth feels is both beautiful and brutal at the same time.
Cannon’s message was both humbling and empowering: you are here for a reason, even if your wiring doesn’t match the world’s expectations.
And maybe, the very reason it doesn’t match is because you weren’t meant to fit in. You were meant to change it.
Modern Bridges, Psychology Meets Spirit
If Cayce showed me that sensitivity is a soul’s antenna, and Dolores Cannon showed me why some souls feel alien on Earth, then modern psychology gave me a mirror, though not always a kind one.
For the last few years, I’ve been reading, studying, and observing myself through the lens of psychology. Terms like ADHD, Autism, Complex PTSD, and AuDHD (the overlap of autism and ADHD) kept appearing like puzzle pieces on my desk. I began to wonder: am I just pathologizing myself? Or is there something here?
The truth is, both Cayce and Cannon would say: yes, there is something here.
But here’s the twist:
Psychology tends to see divergence as “disorder.”
Spirituality sees it as a difference.
Gnosticism sees it as gnosis, a path back to remembering who we are.
Take ADHD. Psychology frames it as difficulty with focus, impulsivity, and poor executive function. But from a spiritual lens, what if it’s simply a refusal of the soul to be boxed into tasks that hold no meaning? What if the so-called “hyperfocus” is actually a deep immersion into soul-aligned flow?
Take Autism. Often described as a social communication disorder, heightened sensory processing, or rigid thinking. But what if it’s actually a form of authenticity so raw that it can’t tolerate the lies of performance? What if sensory sensitivity is simply a nervous system tuned to frequencies most people have forgotten to notice?
Even Complex PTSD, psychology calls it a wound, a scar of survival. But in the gnostic sense, it’s also a shattering that allows light to pour in through the cracks. The trauma may fracture us, but the remembrance comes through those very fractures.
This is where modern thinkers like Gabor Maté step in. He speaks of ADHD not as a random dysfunction, but as a response to the environment, the nervous system shaped by disconnection, stress, or lack of safety. He argues that healing is less about medication and more about reconnection.
Then there’s Stephen Porges with the Polyvagal Theory, showing us that what we call “mental illness” is often just the body’s nervous system shifting states, fight, flight, freeze, or fawn. In other words, your “symptoms” are your body’s intelligence, not its failure.
On another level, thinkers like Carl Jung (who walked closer to mysticism than psychology often admits) saw neuroses as the soul’s attempt to awaken the Self, the deeper, timeless part of us. He once said, “There is no coming to consciousness without pain.”
So maybe what psychology calls “symptoms,” spirituality calls “signals.”
Maybe what psychiatry calls “disorders,” mystics call “initiations.”
Maybe what society calls “abnormal,” the soul calls homework.
When I hold Cayce, Cannon, and modern psychology side by side, a picture forms:
Cayce: You are sensitive because you are tuned to spirit.
Cannon: You don’t fit because you came from somewhere else to help.
Maté, Porges, Jung: Your “symptoms” are your nervous system, your survival strategy, your soul knocking on the door.
And me? I am both the experiment and the student.
Studying astrology. Studying psychology. Studying myself.
Not in the sterile way of a textbook, but in the raw, messy way of living it.
Because here’s the thing: psychology may give me labels, spirituality may give me meaning, but only lived experience gives me truth.
My Own Alchemy, Living Between Worlds
By now, I’ve walked through Cayce’s visions, Dolores Cannon’s volunteer souls, the clinical gaze of psychology, and the mystical bridge that links them. But where do I stand in all of this?
I stand in between.
I’m not purely mystical, nor purely scientific. I am an alchemist.
And my laboratory is my own life.
I’ve suspected for a while that I fall into what’s now called AuDHD, that mix of ADHD and Autism. I’ve read, researched, and observed myself. I’ve noticed how I can hyperfocus with intensity and then burn out completely. How can I be deeply empathetic and yet crave solitude? How I struggle to unmask, so people think I’m “fine”, though inside, it feels like drowning.
I’ve also noticed the subtler traits that textbooks call “symptoms” but which feel more like the language of my nervous system. Holding eye contact can feel almost painful, as if too much energy or information is pouring in at once. My body seeks release through movements, tapping my feet, fidgeting with my hands, or even pressing my teeth together in rhythmic ways, as if stimming helps me regulate energy I can’t yet ground. Even certain textures feel overwhelming, like my skin itself is tuned to a higher frequency. These sensitivities can be exhausting.
For a long time, these things felt like flaws. “Disorders.” Weaknesses.
But the more I study psychology, astrology, spirituality, the more I see:
These are not weaknesses. They are codes.
Every trait I carry, from the so-called distractibility to the sensory overwhelm, is a kind of doorway.
When I hyperfocus, I enter flow states where creation pours through me, songs, drawings, words that feel not just mine but something larger.
When I burn out, it’s my nervous system whispering, rest, recalibrate, reconnect to source.
When I feel “too much”, too sensitive, too intense, too restless, it’s only because I am tuned to frequencies most people ignore.
And maybe that’s exactly the point.
Because, as Cayce said, sensitives are here to remind others of spirit.
As Cannon said, volunteers came here to shift the collective.
And as Maté, Jung, and others imply, what looks like disorder is actually the nervous system’s wisdom.
So when I strip away the masks I’ve worn all my life, the performer, the achiever, the chameleon who absorbs everyone else’s dreams, what remains?
A soul who simply wants to be.
To sing, to create, to write, to guide.
Not because I must carry every label (“singer, artist, VA, supervisor, podcaster, graphic designer…”) but because all of these are just expressions of the same essence:
The alchemist of experience.
And here is where I feel the calling:
Maybe those of us with “labels”, AuDHD, bipolar, schizophrenia, complex PTSD, are not broken at all.
Maybe we are initiates.
Carrying nervous systems so finely tuned they can no longer play along with the illusion.
Carrying sensitivities so heightened they point us back to truth.
Carrying differences that, once embraced, become bridges for others.
So my alchemy is this:
I take the language of psychology and let it validate me, but not define me.
I take the wisdom of mystics and let it expand me, but not inflate me.
I take my lived experience and let it ground me, even when messy, even when uncertain.
I am still remembering. Still piecing together the codes.
But I know now that my “disorders” are not accidents.
They are part of my design.
And maybe, part of my soul’s purpose as a Master Teacher (In numerology, my life path is a Master 33, often called the Master Teacher...which feels like an archetype I deeply resonate with.) is to guide others who feel the same, to show them that what they carry is not a curse, but a key.
The Missing Piece: How Mainstream Medicine Frames It
Psychology and psychiatry have given us language to recognize patterns of mind, but they also come with a shadow. The modern medical model is built on categorization and control. When someone presents with traits outside the “norm,” the system often says, “This is a disorder. You are broken. You need to be managed.”
But what does this do to a human being?
It places them under a lens of deficiency. It tells them: “You are worse off than others. Your difference is an illness.” And often, the solution offered is a prescription, not an invitation to explore the depths of their wiring, their creativity, their sensitivity.
This isn’t a conspiracy; it’s economics. A world where every divergence is labeled as dysfunction is also a world where pharmaceutical companies thrive. Medication can numb, dull, and pacify, but rarely does it invite awakening. It’s not that medicine is evil; it has its place. But when it becomes the only narrative, people are cut off from the deeper truth: their so-called disorder might be a doorway.
Carl Jung once said, “The shoe that fits one person pinches another; there is no recipe for living that suits all cases.” What if instead of asking “How do we fix you?” we asked: “What is this difference trying to show you about your true design?”
This is why I study myself. This is why I observe, connect dots, and dare to say: what psychology calls disorder may be what the soul calls gift.
The Invitation, Guiding Others Like Me
If you’ve read this far, chances are something in you resonates. Maybe you’ve always felt “different.” Maybe the world’s labels, ADHD, Autism, bipolar, anxious, and sensitive, have weighed heavily on your chest. Maybe you’ve wondered if you’re broken, or if you’ll ever “fit.”
Here’s the truth as I’ve come to know it:
You are not to be fixed because you are not broken.
You are coded.
What feels like disorder is often a kind of spiritual architecture. Your nervous system, your emotions, and your perception are all tuned differently because you are here to live, sense, and remember differently.
I believe this is not random. This is design.
When I look back at Cayce’s readings, Dolores Cannon’s regressions, Jung’s visions, and Maté’s trauma work, they are all pointing to the same thing:
There is more to us than the surface.
The psyche, the soul, the nervous system, they are intertwined.
And those of us who struggle the most are often those standing closest to the veil.
So here’s my invitation.
If you, like me, suspect you carry one of these “codes,” I want you to know:
You are not a diagnosis, you are a dimension.
You are not an accident, you are an answer.
You are not here to be “fixed,” you are here to remember.
I don’t have all the answers. I’m still in my own alchemy, studying, observing, breaking masks, and piecing myself back together. But I know this:
Every time I honor my difference instead of shaming it, I step closer to the truth.
Every time I turn my fire, even the fire to fight back, to burn away illusions, into creation, I feel my purpose.
Every time I guide, whether through words, music, art, or conversation, I feel the call of the Master Teacher within me.
So maybe this is the real awakening:
Not to escape the labels, or even to prove them wrong, but to transmute them into light, into wisdom, into guidance.
If you’re walking this same path, with AuDHD, with any so-called disorder, with any soul-deep difference, know that you are not alone. You are part of the wave, the harvest, the remembering.
And together, maybe we can show the world what these “codes” really mean:Not disability.
Not disorder.
But divine design.

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