
Christine Doyle is an educator, speaker, podcast host, and neurodiversity-affirming psychotherapist with 15 years’ experience specialising in the late-identified Autistic and AuDHD experience in women and AFAB adults.
Following her own late identification as AuDHD, Christine’s work increasingly shifted towards education, speaking, training, and identity integration, centring lived experience and nervous system understanding rather than deficit-based narratives.
Her work explores masking and burnout, sensory honesty, nervous system capacity, hormonal transitions, workplace inclusion, and the psychological impact of being missed in childhood.
Christine delivers speaking engagements, organisational training, webinars, and reflective educational spaces for individuals, professionals, and organisations.
She is the host of the Unlearning Autism podcast and founder of the Wild Women Community.
Testimonials
What my clients Say
Don't just take my word for it! Here is what some of my previous clients have to say about their work with me:
1-2-1 Work with Christine
These 1:1 offerings provide structured, reflective spaces for exploring neurodivergent identity, considering assessment, integrating late identification, or deepening understanding as someone supporting a neurodivergent adult.
Purchase my book
HormoneFULL, Not Hormonal is a narrative-led handbook exploring the impact of hormonal transitions on Autistic AFAB people across the lifespan. Grounded in the lived experiences of 101 Autistic AFAB adults, this book brings together verbatim reflections on puberty, menstruation, pregnancy and postpartum, perimenopause, and menopause — stages that are often poorly understood, minimised, or misattributed within both medical and mental health settings.
What I Offer
Find what you're searching for among my offerings. You can expect:
EMAIL: christine@christinedoyle.ie
PHONE: 087 687 1002
Blog
Consistency is not my friend.
Impulsivity, passion, deep focus, thinking outside the box are all no brainers but consistency… as long as it doesn’t require me to keep showing up I’m good 🤣
I don’t do loyalty programmes, have never kept on track long enough to get the reward at the end. My drawer at home is testament to this with loyalty cards of 1-4 stamps on them gathering dust, proof of my inability to stick at something long enough to get to the result.
This is not just about coffee, or a free wash and blow dry. It shows up professionally and relationally too. I’m all in, super motivated, but it just doesn’t stick.
I could ‘try harder’ but that only makes me feel like sh*t. Understanding AuDHD and all that is for me means I’m actually happy with who I am.
I’m excited and excitable, I’m impulsive and passionate, I’m a deep thinker and a soul searcher. I’m all in until I’m not. I’m ever changing ever curious. I follow my gut and no longer the crowd. I don’t stick to the mould I thought was for me.
Today by sheer luck, and a bit of encouragement from Mary @kellys_deli_ I got to 10 stamps and collected my first ever free coffee.
A moment of consistency that may never be repeated so I thought, impulsively and with a bit of a giggle, to capture it.
Don’t call me nice.
Women have spent generations being rewarded for being nice.
Nice enough to stay quiet.
Nice enough to smile.
Nice enough to avoid conflict.
Nice enough to swallow the truth.
Nice enough to keep everyone comfortable.
But here’s the problem.
When “nice” stops us from challenging harm…
When “nice” keeps us silent in the face of injustice…
When “nice” asks us to betray our own instincts…
Or to not stand by the person who is the easy target …
It isn’t a virtue anymore.
Sometimes the nicest person in the room is the one allowing harm to continue.
I’d rather be known for integrity.
Because integrity tells the truth.
Integrity sets boundaries.
Integrity protects the vulnerable.
Integrity can withstand disapproval.
If that means I’m not always nice…
I’m okay with that.
I love numbers .. but not for the reasons you may think. Mine isn’t about luck or superstition. It’s about how certain numbers simply feel.
21 is my all time favourite and every car journey throughout my life has been spent finding the coolest way to make 21 from the car reg - try it, it’s fun!
3 is my favourite number for lists, intentions, directions- any more I get overwhelmed any less, well what’s the point?!! Why bother?!
1 is my least favourite number. I don’t like feeling like number 1 or the competition to be number 1. 1 just screams pressure pressure pressure
8 is my go to when faced with options - number 8 is always good - I have always used this for song choices, short stories .. in games, quizzes, or random choices, 8 is my easy reliable default.
I’d love to know… do numbers have personalities for you too?
We are the generational circuit breakers …
Many (not all) of us can finally say what generations before us couldn’t
difference ⛔️ shame
Overwhelmed ⛔️ unwell
non conforming ⛔️ silenced
For generations, difference was something to hide, correct or fear.
Now, many of us have language that allows us to understand it instead.
That’s not just personal healing.
It’s generational redress.
Because we need more than being together online.
DM me if you’re in ✨
This is why I keep creating.
My Unlearning Autism podcast.
My writing and resources.
My Wild Women Community space.
My After Knowing Course.
My Post-Identification Companion Sessions.
Not because I have the answers.
But because I know what it’s like to finally understand yourself…
And still find yourself saying,
“Yes… but…”
To feel grateful.
Relieved.
Certain.
And somehow uncertain too.
To wonder why something that explains so much can still leave you feeling on the edge of belonging.
Maybe some of us have been living in the middle ground all along.
And maybe what we need isn’t another identity.
But spaces spacious enough to hold the many ways there are to be Autistic.
Perhaps that’s what I’ve been trying to create all along.






