Thursday, 26 March 2026

🧠 Easy Read Handout: ADHD and Comorbid Conditions

 



What Does “Comorbid” Mean?

Comorbid means having two or more conditions at the same time.
For example, someone might have ADHD and anxiety, or ADHD and depression together.
These conditions may overlap or worsen each other.


ADHD Can Happen With Other Conditions

ADHD doesn’t always travel alone.
Many people with ADHD also have other mental health or learning conditions.

Common conditions that may co‑occur with ADHD include:
Depression – long periods of sadness and low energy
Anxiety disorders – worry, fear, or nervousness that is strong or long‑lasting
Learning disabilities – like dyslexia or dysgraphia
Autism spectrum disorder – often overlaps with ADHD

(Note: These aren’t the only possible combinations, but they are common ones.)


Why Comorbidity Happens

Some reasons conditions co‑occur include:
• Shared brain processes or biology
• Similar symptoms that overlap
• Long‑term effects of struggling with ADHD (like low self‑esteem)

For example:
• ADHD can make school and work harder, which can contribute to feelings of depression.
• Anxiety symptoms can be similar to ADHD symptoms (like restlessness).


Common Comorbid Patterns

• Many people with ADHD also have anxiety or depression.
• Sometimes ADHD and depression happen at the same time, especially in adults — up to 70–80% of people with ADHD have another mental health condition.
• ADHD can also occur with learning difficulties like dyslexia.


Why This Matters

Comorbidity means:
✔ More than one condition needs to be understood and treated
✔ It can make diagnosis more complex
✔ Treatment may need to address both conditions together

This is important because treating just one condition might not help if another is present at the same time.


Signs Something Might Be Comorbid

Look for signs such as:
• Problems with attention and anxiety
• Difficulty focusing and sadness or low mood
• Struggles with learning plus ADHD symptoms
• Panic, worry, or avoidance along with executive functioning challenges


Getting Help

If someone has ADHD and another condition, support may include:
✔ A complete assessment by a healthcare professional
✔ A tailored treatment plan (therapy, medication, education support)
✔ Strategies for managing overlapping symptoms
✔ Support from family or caregivers


Key Points to Remember

• ADHD often occurs with other conditions.
• Comorbidity means more than one condition is present.
• Recognising comorbidity helps get better support. 

🧠 Easy Read Handout: Mood Disorders

 


What Are Mood Disorders?

Mood disorders are mental health conditions that affect a person’s feelings and emotional state. They are more than just a bad day — they are persistent and serious mood changes that affect daily life.


Common Mood Disorders

Mood disorders include different types:

🌧 Depression (Major Depressive Disorder)

  • Feeling very sad for many weeks
  • Little energy
  • Not enjoying activities you used to like
  • Trouble sleeping or too much sleep
  • Hard to focus or make decisions
    (These are common symptoms of depression.)

🔁 Persistent Depressive Disorder

  • Long‑term low mood
  • Not as severe as major depression, but lasts a long time (years)

Bipolar Disorder

  • Extreme mood swings from very low to very high
  • High moods can mean lots of energy or racing thoughts
  • Low moods can look like depression

📆 Cyclothymic Disorder

  • Milder, chronic mood changes
  • Low and high feelings, not as severe as bipolar disorder

Seasonal Affective Disorder

  • Low mood during certain times of year (often winter)

😠 Disruptive Mood Dysregulation Disorder

  • Mostly in children
  • Frequent, intense outbursts or anger that affects life

How Mood Disorders Are Different From Normal Mood Changes

Everyone feels sad or happy sometimes. Mood disorders are different because they:
🔹 Last a long time
🔹 Affect daily life and functioning
🔹 Are more intense than usual emotions
They are not a choice or a personality problem — they are health conditions.


Signs and Symptoms

Mood disorders can include some of these:

  • Feeling sad or empty
  • Loss of interest in activities
  • Trouble sleeping or sleeping too much
  • Low energy or feeling tired
  • Feeling worthless or guilty
  • Trouble concentrating
  • Extreme mood swings
  • Feeling anxious or irritable

What Causes Mood Disorders?

Mood disorders can happen for many reasons — often a mix of factors:

  • Brain chemistry: changes in brain systems that control mood
  • Genes: mood disorders can run in families
  • Stress: major life events or ongoing stress
  • Health problems: long‑term conditions can affect mood
  • Hormones: body chemical changes can affect emotions

How Mood Disorders Are Treated

Mood disorders can be treated with help. Treatment can include:
Talk therapy (like counselling)
Medication when needed
Lifestyle support — sleep, social support, exercise
Routine & structure in daily life

Getting support early can help people feel better.


Important

Mood disorders are health conditions, not weakness or choice.
People with mood disorders can lead fulfilling and meaningful lives with the right help.


When to Seek Help

Talk to a doctor or mental health professional if:
🌟 Mood makes daily life hard
🌟 Feelings last for weeks
🌟 Thoughts of self‑harm occur
Help is available — you are not alone.


Remember

Mood disorders affect thoughts, feelings, and behaviour — and support and treatment help people manage their mood and live well.

🧠 Easy Read PowerPoint: Nervous System, Neurodivergence & Mood Disorders

 


Simple, clear learning for all audiences


Slide 1 — Title

The Nervous System, Neurodivergence, and Mood Disorders
How the brain and emotions are connected
(Add a brain icon or nervous system image)


Slide 2 — Learning Goals

You will learn:
✔ What the nervous system does
✔ What autism and ADHD are
✔ What mood disorders are
✔ How these conditions are linked
✔ Shared brain mechanisms
✔ Support and treatment
(Use checkmark icons)


Slide 3 — What Is the Nervous System?

The nervous system helps your brain talk to your body.
It controls thoughts, feelings, movement, and reactions.
(Icon: brain + nerve lines)


Slide 4 — Two Parts of the Nervous System

  1. Central Nervous System: brain and spinal cord
  2. Peripheral Nervous System: nerves everywhere else
    Both work together to help you think, feel, and act.
    (Diagram of two parts)

Slide 5 — Autism & ADHD

Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD):

  • A brain development difference
  • Affects social skills, senses, and routine thinking

ADHD:

  • Affects attention, self‑control, and activity
    (Use icons for each)

Slide 6 — Mood Disorders

A mood disorder means strong changes in
feelings or emotions over a long time.
Examples:
Depression: long sadness
Bipolar: swings from low to high mood
These conditions affect daily life.
(Sad and happy face icons)


Slide 7 — Mood Disorders Are Not Just “Bad Behaviour”

Mood disorders are brain‑based, not a choice.
Someone may look “moody” but their body and brain are affected.
Behaviour is a symptom, not a personal flaw.


Slide 8 — Shared Brain Mechanisms

Neurodevelopmental conditions (like autism/ADHD) and
mood disorders (like depression/bipolar) share brain differences
in:
• Genes
• Brain chemicals (serotonin, dopamine)
• Brain networks
• Stress systems
These help explain why people can have both conditions together.


Slide 9 — Emotional Regulation and the Brain

The brain areas that affect mood and behaviour include:
• Prefrontal cortex — thinking and planning
• Amygdala — emotion and threat detection
Both are involved in neurodivergence and mood symptoms.


Slide 10 — What Happens in the Brain

When brain chemical systems are out of balance:
• Mood can swing between low and high
• Stress response becomes stronger
• Emotional control becomes harder
This can make everyday life harder.


Slide 11 — Why These Conditions Can Co‑Occur

Research shows:
• Autism/ADHD and mood disorders often happen together
• They share brain pathways
• Stress and early experiences affect the brain
So symptoms can overlap.


Slide 12 — Symptoms of Mood Disorders

You or someone else might notice:
• Persistent sadness
• Loss of interest
• Big mood swings
• Trouble sleeping
• Agitation or slow movement
Symptoms affect everyday life.


Slide 13 — Biological Risk Factors

The brain systems involved include:
• Serotonin — mood regulation
• Dopamine — motivation and focus
• HPA stress system — stress response
Disruptions here can cause mood changes.


Slide 14 — Emotional Dysregulation

When you can’t easily calm down, this is called
emotional dysregulation — common in autism, ADHD, and mood disorders.

It can make reactions feel bigger than the situation.


Slide 15 — Treatment & Support

Support may include:
✔ Talking therapy (like CBT)
✔ Medication when needed
✔ Self‑care (sleep, routine, movement)
✔ Supportive relationships

Talking to a professional helps.


Slide 16 — Reflection & Learning

Think about:
• When do emotions feel too heavy?
• What helps you feel calm?
• How can we understand others better?


Slide 17 — Summary

• The nervous system affects mood and behaviour
• Autism, ADHD, and mood disorders are linked
• These conditions share brain biology
• They are not choices or “bad behaviour.”


Slide 18 — Helpful Resources

📌 WHO mental health factsheet
📌 Mayo Clinic mood disorders
📌 Neurobiological research links

🧠 Easy Read PowerPoint: Conditions Affecting the Nervous System & Mood

 



Slide 1 — Title

Conditions Affecting the Nervous System & Mood Disorders
How the nervous system, autism, ADHD, and mood connect
(Picture idea: Nervous system + brain icon)


Slide 2 — What You Will Learn

You will learn:
✔ What the nervous system is
✔ What autism and ADHD are
✔ How mood and emotions work
✔ What mood disorders are
✔ Ways to get support
(Icon: checklist)


Slide 3 — What Is the Nervous System?

The nervous system is the body’s main communication system.
It sends messages from the brain to the body.
(Icon: brain + nerves)


Slide 4 — Two Parts of the Nervous System

1. Central Nervous System — brain & spinal cord
2. Peripheral Nervous System — nerves all over the body
(Icon: diagram of brain + nerves)


Slide 5 — Nervous System Modes

Sympathetic (Go Mode):

  • Body gets ready for danger
  • Heart beats fast
    Parasympathetic (Calm Mode):
  • Body relaxes
  • Breathing slows
    (Icon: gas pedal & brake pedal)

Slide 6 — Autism and the Nervous System

Autism affects how the brain processes information.
This can make:
🔹 sensory feelings strong
🔹 communication harder
🔹 emotions harder to manage
(Icon: puzzle piece or brain with sparks)


Slide 7 — ADHD and the Nervous System

ADHD affects focus and self-control.
It can make:
🔸 paying attention hard
🔸 emotions intense
🔸 waiting or stopping hard
(Icon: lightning bolt + brain)


Slide 8 — What Is Mood?

Mood is how you feel inside.
Moods can be happy, sad, angry, calm, or stressed.
Everyone has moods.
(Icon: smiley faces)


Slide 9 — What Is a Mood Disorder?

A mood disorder is when feelings are strong and don’t go away easily.
It affects how a person thinks, feels, and acts.
(Icon: broken heart + brain)


Slide 10 — Examples of Mood Disorders

Depression — long period of sadness
Bipolar Disorder — very high and very low moods
(Icon: sad and high energy faces)


Slide 11 — Signs of Mood Disorders

You may feel:
➡ Very sad for many weeks
➡ No interest in things you used to enjoy
➡ Low energy
➡ Very big mood swings
(Icon: emotion chart)


Slide 12 — Why Mood Disorders Are Not “Bad Behavior”

Mood disorders are not a choice.
They come from how the brain works.
This means:
❗ It’s wrong to think “someone is just being mean.”
(Icon: brain vs angry face with cross)


Slide 13 — What Causes Mood Disorders

Mood disorders can come from:
🔹 brain chemistry
🔹 stress
🔹 genetics
🔹 life experiences
(Icon: brain + DNA + stress symbol)


Slide 14 — How Mood Disorders Connect to Autism & ADHD

People with autism or ADHD may have:
✔ Strong emotions
✔ Anxiety
✔ Feeling overwhelmed
This can look like a mood disorder too.
(Icon: overlapping circles of conditions)


Slide 15 — Self‑Regulation Strategies

Things that help the nervous system calm:
✔ Deep breathing
✔ Slow movement
✔ Quiet space
✔ Routine
(Icon: calm breathing picture)


Slide 16 — When to Ask for Help

Talk to a doctor or therapist if:
⭐ Mood affects daily life
⭐ You feel stuck for many weeks
⭐ You feel unsafe
(Icon: phone + therapist icon)


Slide 17 — Support That Helps

✔ Therapy (talking support)
✔ Support groups
✔ Family support
✔ Healthy routines
(Icon: group + heart)


Slide 18 — Summary

• The nervous system helps control feelings and reactions
• Autism and ADHD can make emotions harder to manage
• Mood disorders affect how someone feels for a long time
• Mood disorders are not bad behaviour
(Icon: summary checklist)


Slide 19 — Reflection / Discussion

Think about these questions:

  1. How did your mood feel today?
  2. What helps calm you down?
  3. Who can you talk to if you’re struggling?
    (Icon: thinking emoji)

Slide 20 — Resources

Helpful links:
World Health Organization – Mental Health
https://www.who.int/news-room/fact-sheets/detail/mental-disorders
Mayo Clinic – Mood Disorders
https://www.mayoclinic.org/diseases-conditions/mood-disorders
(Icon: world + book)



🧠 Mood Disorders: Historical Misunderstanding and Modern Understanding

 


📌 1. What WHO Says About Mental Disorders Today

According to the World Health Organization (WHO), a mental disorder is a clinically significant disturbance in a person’s cognition, emotional regulation, or behaviour that causes distress or problems functioning. This includes mood disorders such as depression and bipolar disorder.

The WHO also reports:

  • Nearly 1 in 7 people worldwide lives with a mental disorder, with anxiety and depression being the most common.
  • Mental health conditions, including mood disorders, can severely disrupt daily life and well‑being.
  • Despite effective treatments existing, most people do not have access to care, and stigma still persists globally.

📌 2. Why Mood Disorders Were Misunderstood in the Past

In earlier decades and centuries:

  • There was little scientific understanding of mood and mental conditions.
  • Emotional and behavioural symptoms were often seen as character flaws, moral weakness, or “bad behaviour.”
  • Terms like “hysteria,” “melancholia,” or “insanity” were used without accurate scientific definitions.
  • People with mental disorders were often ignored, institutionalized, or stigmatized rather than supported with treatment.

In fact, as late as the early 2000s, WHO reported that many people with mental disorders were not treated at all, and stigma and neglect prevented understanding and care — a cycle of misunderstanding that persisted for decades.


📌 3. Modern Understanding of Mood Disorders

Today, mood disorders are clinically recognised conditions, not moral failings or choices. They involve real disturbances in how a person’s brain regulates emotion, energy, and motivation. This is different from temporary sadness or distress.

Common mood disorders include:

  • Depressive disorders — prolonged periods of sadness and low energy.
  • Bipolar disorder — mood swings between depressive episodes and manic (high energy) phases.

These conditions:

  • Affect mood, thinking, and daily functioning.
  • Are recognised in diagnostic systems like the ICD (used internationally).
  • May result from complex interactions between genetics, brain chemistry, and life experiences.

📌 **4. Important Distinction: Mood Disorders vs Temporary Moods

Mood disorders are not just typical emotional reactions:

  • Everyone feels sad or stressed sometimes.
  • Mood disorders involve persistent symptoms over weeks, months, or longer that significantly affect life.

This scientific definition helps separate diagnosable conditions from normal human emotions, which historically were blurred.


📌 5. Stigma and Treatment

Even today:

  • Many with mood disorders don’t receive effective care because of stigma and lack of resources.
  • WHO advocates for community‑based treatment, early intervention, and human‑rights–based care.

🧠 Summary

✔ Mood disorders affect how the brain regulates emotions, not just behaviour.
✔ Historically, misunderstandings led to stigma and neglect.
✔ Today, organisations like WHO recognise mood disorders as major health conditions needing support and care.
✔ Modern definitions help separate medical conditions from temporary emotional states.


If you’d like, I can help integrate this WHO perspective into your PowerPoint Easy Read course, with slides that explain how historical misunderstanding affects stigma and how mood disorders really work. Just let me know!

all versions please.

Perfect — we can create a full multi-format training package covering mood disorders, historical misunderstanding, and modern understanding, in the same style as your previous Easy Read and neurodivergent-friendly modules. This will include all versions you’ve asked for:


Mood Disorders Training Package – All Versions


1. Full PowerPoint Version

Slide-by-slide Easy Read / accessible format:

Slide 1: Title
Mood Disorders — Understanding Emotions, Behaviour, and the Brain
Visual: Brain + heart icon

Slide 2: Learning Goals

  • Define mood disorders
  • Understand historical misunderstandings
  • Recognize symptoms and behaviour
  • Explain modern treatment and support
  • Explore self-care strategies

Slide 3: What Is a Mood Disorder?

  • A mental health condition affecting emotion, behaviour, and thinking
  • Not the same as temporary sadness
  • Persistent and long-lasting

Slide 4: Historical Misunderstanding

  • Mood disorders often misunderstood as “bad behaviour”
  • Terms like hysteria, melancholia, or insanity used
  • People were stigmatized or institutionalized

Slide 5: Modern Understanding

  • Mood disorders are biological and psychological conditions
  • Affect brain chemistry, emotions, and daily life
  • Examples: depression, bipolar disorder

Slide 6: Symptoms of Depressive Disorders

  • Sadness, low energy, low motivation
  • Trouble sleeping, appetite changes
  • Trouble concentrating
  • Feeling worthless

Slide 7: Symptoms of Bipolar Disorders

  • High energy or mania
  • Impulsive behaviour
  • Rapid thoughts
  • Then low mood or depression

Slide 8: Why Moods Are Not Just “Bad Behaviour”

  • Mood disorders affect the brain’s ability to regulate emotion
  • Not a choice
  • Behaviour may reflect internal distress

Slide 9: Causes of Mood Disorders

  • Brain chemistry differences
  • Genetics
  • Stressful life events
  • Physical health conditions
  • Medication side effects

Slide 10: Mood and Behaviour

  • Moods can influence how someone acts
  • Anger or irritability may reflect internal struggle
  • Does not excuse harmful behaviour, but explains it

Slide 11: Treatment and Support

  • Talk therapy (e.g., CBT)
  • Medication for brain chemistry
  • Self-care: sleep, exercise, routine
  • Supportive environment and understanding

Slide 12: Reflection & Activity

  • When have you felt misunderstood due to mood?
  • How can we support people with mood disorders?

Slide 13: Summary

  • Mood disorders are medical conditions, not choices
  • Historical misunderstanding caused stigma
  • Modern understanding allows treatment and support

Slide 14: Resources


2. Easy Read / Dyslexia-Friendly Version

  • Same slides as above, but with:
    • Large, readable font
    • Simple sentences
    • Short paragraphs
    • Icons for each symptom or concept (e.g., brain, heart, sad face, happy face, therapy icon)
    • Colour-coded sections for clarity

3. Printable PDF Handout Version

  • Condensed content from slides 3–13
  • Large icons for mood, behaviour, and brain
  • Short, bulleted points with simplified explanations
  • Reflection questions included

4. Interactive/Worksheet Version

  • Activities to reinforce learning:
    • Match symptoms to disorder (depression vs bipolar)
    • True/False: “Mood disorders are a choice” → False
    • Identify supportive strategies (self-care, therapy, talking to a professional)
  • Designed to be printed or filled digitally

5. Visual Icon / Symbol Version

  • Each concept represented with visual aids:
    • Sad face = depression
    • Lightning bolt = mania / high energy
    • Brain = nervous system
    • Heart = emotional regulation
    • Hands = support / help

6. Summary Table for Trainers

Slide/TopicKey PointsSymbols / Visuals
1 – TitleMood disorders affect emotions and the brainBrain + heart
2 – GoalsDefine, explain, supportChecklist icons
3 – DefinitionPersistent mood changesClock/calendar icon
4 – HistoryMisunderstood as behaviourOld-fashioned medical icon
5 – Modern UnderstandingMedical + biological basisBrain icon
6/7 – SymptomsDepression & bipolarSad/happy faces
8 – BehaviourNot a choiceThought bubble + angry face
9 – CausesGenetics, stress, chemistryDNA, stress icon
10 – Mood & BehaviourExplains internal distressBrain + behaviour icon
11 – TreatmentTherapy, meds, supportTherapy icon, pills icon
12 – ReflectionQuestionsSpeech bubble icon
13 – SummaryKey takeawaysBrain + check icon
14 – ResourcesWHO, Mayo ClinicLogo icons

🧠 Easy‑Read PowerPoint: Mood Disorders Understanding mood, behaviour, and emotions

 



Slide 1 — Title

Mood Disorders — What They Are & How Emotions Work
Understanding how mood affects behaviour and daily life.
Visual idea: Simple brain + heart icon


Slide 2 — Learning Goals

You will learn:
✔ What mood disorders are
✔ Different types of mood disorders
✔ How mood affects thinking and behaviour
✔ Why someone’s mood isn’t just “being not nice”
✔ How mood disorders are treated and supported
Visual idea: Checklist with icons


Slide 3 — What Is a Mood Disorder?

A mood disorder is a mental health condition that mainly affects a person’s emotions and mood.
This is not the same as a mood change that everyone has sometimes; mood disorders are long‑lasting and can make life much harder.


Slide 4 — Normal Mood vs Mood Disorder

Normal mood changes: short and related to situations
Mood disorder: intense emotions that stay for weeks and affect daily life
Example: Feeling very low for weeks even when things are going well.
Visual idea: Side‑by‑side emotional chart


Slide 5 — Types of Mood Disorders

Depressive disorders – long periods of sadness, low energy, loss of interest.
Bipolar disorders – alternating between low moods and very high or energetic moods.
Related kinds include seasonal mood changes and temper‑based disorders in children.


Slide 6 — Symptoms of Depressive Disorders

Depressive mood disorders can include:
• Feeling sad, empty, or hopeless
• Low energy
• Trouble sleeping
• Changes in appetite
• Difficulty concentrating
• Feeling worthless
• Thoughts about death or suicide in serious cases
Visual idea: Simple icons for each symptom


Slide 7 — Symptoms of Bipolar Disorders

Bipolar mood disorders can include:
Manic or hypomanic episodes (high mood and energy)
• Feeling unusually happy or full of energy
• Rapid thoughts
• Less need for sleep
• Impulsive actions
and then phases of depression.


Slide 8 — Why Moods Are Not Just “Bad Behaviour”

Feeling sad, angry, or irritable does not mean someone chooses to be that way. Mood disorders affect brain, body, and feelings in powerful ways — not just “attitude.”
A mood disorder can make someone feel out of control of emotions.
Visual idea: Brain vs behaviour image


Slide 9 — What Causes Mood Disorders?

Mood disorders have many causes:
🔹 Brain chemistry differences
🔹 Genetics and family history
🔹 Stressful life events
🔹 Long‑term health conditions
🔹 Some medications or drugs
Important: No single cause applies to everyone.


Slide 10 — Mood & Behaviour: Why Actions Can Seem Hard

When someone has a mood disorder, their feelings and reactions — such as irritability or anger — can be stronger and longer than expected. This is not just “being difficult” but part of how the disorder affects the brain.
Visual idea: Emotion intensity scale


Slide 11 — Mood Disorders and Emotional Regulation

People with mood disorders may:
• Find it harder to manage strong emotions
• Feel overwhelmed by stress
• Have sudden changes in energy or feelings
This shows mood disorders affect internal brain processes — not just behaviour.
Visual idea: Emotional regulation thermometer


Slide 12 — When to Seek Help

Talk to a doctor or mental health professional if:
• Mood is stopping daily life
• Emotions last many weeks
• You can’t enjoy activities
• There are thoughts of harm or suicide
If someone feels unsafe, call emergency help right away.


Slide 13 — How Mood Disorders Are Treated

Mood disorders are often treated with:
Talk therapy (e.g., CBT)
Medication to balance brain chemicals
Self‑care strategies (sleep routine, exercise, support)
• Sometimes other treatments like brain stimulation in serious cases
Treatment is personalized — not one size fits all.


Slide 14 — Supporting Someone with a Mood Disorder

✔ Listen without judgment
✔ Encourage professional help
✔ Notice changes in mood behaviour
✔ Be patient — improvements can take time
Visual idea: Support hands icon


Slide 15 — Summary

• Mood disorders are medical conditions affecting emotions.
• They are not just “being not nice” or choice‑based behaviour.
• Mood swings and emotional dysregulation can be part of how the brain functions differently.
• Help and treatment improve outcomes.


Slide 16 — Reflection & Activities

Questions:

  1. What is the difference between normal mood changes and a mood disorder?
  2. Why doesn’t bad behaviour always mean someone chooses to act that way?
  3. What treatment options are there?
    Activity: Practice naming emotions in different scenarios.

Easy Read PowerPoint Course Understanding Autism, ADHD, and the Nervous System

 



Slide 1: Title Slide

Title: Understanding Autism, ADHD & the Nervous System
Subtitle: Nervous System Regulation, Emotional Health, and Support
Visual: Simple nervous system diagram


Slide 2: Learning Goals

You will learn:

  1. What autism and ADHD are
  2. How the nervous system works
  3. What dysregulation means
  4. Emotional and stress responses
  5. Strategies that help regulate the nervous system
    (Use icons / simple pictures on this slide)

Slide 3: What Is the Nervous System?

The nervous system has 2 parts:
🌟 Central Nervous System (CNS) – brain and spinal cord
🌟 Peripheral Nervous System (PNS) – nerves in the body
The Autonomic Nervous System (ANS) is part of the PNS and works without thinking — controlling heart rate, breathing, digestion.


Slide 4: Two Nervous System Modes

Sympathetic Nervous System
🔴 “Fight-or-Flight” – body gets ready for danger

  • Faster heart rate
  • Faster breathing
  • Tense muscles
    🍃 Parasympathetic Nervous System
    🟢 “Rest & Digest” – body calms down
  • Slower heart rate
  • Deep breathing
  • Relaxed muscles
    (Use simple icons for gas pedal vs brake pedal)

Slide 5: Autism & ADHD Nervous System

Autistic and ADHD nervous systems can be more sensitive and reactive than neurotypical nervous systems.
This can make the fight-or-flight (sympathetic) switch turn on easily.


Slide 6: Window of Tolerance

🎯 Window of Tolerance = area where emotions and body are balanced
Outside this window:
📈 Hyperarousal: anxiety, anger, panic, vigilance
📉 Hypoarousal: shutdown, numbness, low energy
(Use simple zones graphic: balanced / high / low)


Slide 7: Hyperarousal

When the nervous system is in High Alert:
😣 Anxiety
😠 Anger
🏃‍♂️ High stress
Triggered even by everyday things when the body thinks it is a threat.


Slide 8: Hypoarousal

When the nervous system shuts down:
😶 Numbness
😴 Low energy
😐 No motivation
This can feel like being stuck in slow motion.


Slide 9: Faux Regulation

Sometimes you look calm on the outside but feel stressed inside.
This is called faux regulation — common in autistic people who have learned to mask or hide stress.


Slide 10: Vagal Tone & Balance

The vagus nerve helps the body calm down.
If vagal tone is low, it’s harder to switch out of stress mode.
High vagal tone = body can calm down easier.


Slide 11: Emotional Challenges

People with autism and ADHD often experience:
😧 Anxiety
😞 Depression
😡 Anger & frustration
These are linked to nervous system reactions and sensitivity.


Slide 12: Sensory Overload

Many autistic and ADHD people have strong reactions to:
🔊 Loud noise
💡 Bright lights
👕 Scratchy clothes
This can trigger stress and anxiety.


Slide 13: Executive Dysfunction

Executive dysfunction makes it hard to:
📅 Plan
⏰ Manage time
🧠 Remember tasks
These difficulties can cause stress and frustration.


Slide 14: Self-Regulation Strategies

These help the nervous system calm:
🧘‍♀️ Breathwork
❄️ Cold exposure (e.g., cool splash of water)
🏃 Activity / movement
😄 Laughter
🎵 Singing, humming, chanting
💆 Massage or self-touch
🧠 Meditation & mindfulness
Start one at a time, slowly.


Slide 15: Breathwork

Slow, deep breathing helps the body switch to rest mode.
In: breathe in through the nose
Out: breathe out gently
(Include visual breath arrows)


Slide 16: Cold Exposure

30 seconds of cold water can help calm the nervous system.
Try:
🌬 Cold water on the neck
🌊 Brief cold shower at the end
(Use simple water + cold icon)


Slide 17: Movement & Exercise

Walking, stretching, or dancing help calm the body.
Find what feels good — not stressful.


Slide 18: Mindfulness & Meditation

Mindfulness = paying gentle attention to your body and breath.
Can help reduce stress and expand the window of tolerance.


Slide 19: Support & Understanding

Support includes:
🧑‍⚕️ Therapy tailored for neurodivergent needs
🗣 Education about stress triggers
👥 Safe people and routines
Medication can help but isn’t the only tool.


Slide 20: Summary

✔ Autism and ADHD affect the nervous system
✔ Nervous system responses affect emotions
✔ Window of tolerance helps explain stress states
✔ Self-regulation strategies help calm the body
✔ Support + understanding improve wellbeing


Slide 21: Reflection Questions

• What helps calm your nervous system?
• What makes you feel overwhelmed?
• How can you track your states?

🧠 Easy Read Handout: ADHD and Comorbid Conditions

  What Does “Comorbid” Mean? Comorbid means having two or more conditions at the same time . For example, someone might have ADHD and a...