How compliance culture silences neurodivergent voices
Have you ever noticed how quickly people shift when you stop playing by the rules?
Not legal rules, but the subtle, invisible ones. The ones that tell you how to sit, speak, smile, react. The ones that reward you for blending in and quietly penalize you for standing out.
You say what you mean, and someone winces. You stim or flinch, and someone stares. You don’t match the mood or tone, and suddenly, you’re “off.”
This shift isn’t in your head. It’s a product of compliance culture—a web of social expectations designed to keep everyone in line. For neurodivergent people, that line is especially narrow. And stepping outside it, even for a second, can cost you.
What Compliance Culture Really Looks Like
Compliance culture is more than just rules about behavior. It’s an entire atmosphere; a quiet, persistent demand to be easy. Easy to understand. Easy to manage. Easy to forget.
It shows up when a teacher calls you “disruptive” for asking too many questions. When your manager raises an eyebrow because you skipped the team lunch to recover from a loud meeting.
When friends joke that you’re “a bit much” after you share something that genuinely excites you.
Over time, these signals accumulate into something heavy and hard to name.
That weight is compliance culture exerting pressure on your identity.
How Neurodivergent People Respond to Compliance Culture
Autistics and ADHDers often exist in contrast to what’s expected. We move, think, and respond in ways that don’t always fit neatly into the social flow. And for that, we’re often asked to do something subtle but insidious: self-edit.
Edit your pace of speaking. Edit your irregular gait. Edit your emotions so they don’t take up too much room.
You’re told—explicitly or not—that your presence is only welcome if it’s polished, predictable, and pleasant. Not intense. Not inconsistent. Not real.
And when you can’t meet those expectations, the consequences are often the withdrawal of warmth, of patience, of connection.
The Trouble With “Spiky” Abilities
Many neurodivergent people have what’s known as a spiky profile. Our abilities aren’t flat or predictable. They spike in some areas—deep knowledge, creative insight, emotional depth—and dip in others, like short-term memory, sensory processing, or small talk.
This mismatch confuses people. You might explain a complex system effortlessly, then forget to return a text. You might be calm in a crisis but unravel when the lights are too bright or the music’s too loud.
Compliance culture doesn’t allow for this kind of unevenness. It prefers consistency over complexity. When we can’t maintain a steady, expected performance, we’re met with frustration, not curiosity.
Instead of, “What do you need?” We hear, “Why can’t you just…?”
Burnout Disguised as Functioning
Masking—shaping yourself to appear more “acceptable”—is often rewarded. People praise you for being so “high functioning,” for how “well you manage.” But they don’t see the energy it takes.
They don’t see the days where basic tasks feel like running uphill through an active mudslide. They don’t see the sensory overload, or the panic when a routine is thrown off or your brain short-circuits from too much noise.
They only see the moment you stop coping, and then they act surprised. As if the warning signs weren’t visible all along. As if you suddenly became someone else.
That’s the trap of compliance culture: perform until you break, and then be blamed for breaking.
Compliance Culture Is Systemic
This pressure doesn’t exist in a vacuum. It’s embedded into institutions.
In school, it’s the child who finishes worksheets quietly who gets labeled “gifted,” even if they’re quietly falling apart inside.
At work, it’s the employee who doesn’t ask for accommodations who gets seen as a “team player.”
In healthcare, it’s the patient who doesn’t push back who gets called “compliant”, a term that says so much about who the system is designed to serve.
This happens because neurotypicals get to determine which behaviors are seen as “normal,” and which are flagged as disruptions. That’s structural ableism.
What Gets Lost When We Comply
Every time you contort yourself to meet an unspoken expectation as a neurodivergent, something gets chipped away.
That impulse you stifle. That laugh you mute. That question you don’t ask. It adds up.
And over time, it becomes harder to tell the difference between who you are and who you’ve had to become just to be allowed in the room.
That’s what makes compliance culture so dangerous.

Pushing Back: What Resistance Can Look Like
Undoing the impact of compliance culture doesn’t mean becoming reckless or confrontational. It means practicing something quieter, but far more radical: honesty.
It might look like letting yourself stim in public without apology. Turning off your camera on Zoom when your sensory load is too high. Correcting someone when they misinterpret your silence as disinterest. Saying “I need a minute” instead of pretending you’re okay.
It’s about reclaiming your right to show up as yourself, and not the polished version others find more comfortable.
And yes, that might make some people uncomfortable. But discomfort isn’t danger. Discomfort is how people grow.
Final Thoughts
Compliance culture tells us that our differences are obstacles to connection. That to be accepted, we must be less us. But what if that’s a lie?
What if our difference isn’t the problem, but the key?
If you’ve ever felt like your existence depended on being manageable, I want you to know this: you don’t have to perform your way into belonging. You deserve to take up space as you are.
Not because you’ve masked well enough. Not because you’ve earned it through labor. But because you’re human, and that should be enough.
What’s one expectation you’ve stopped following in order to honor your neurodivergent self?

Essy Knopf is a therapist who likes to explore what it means to be neurodivergent and queer. Subscribe to get all new posts sent directly to your inbox.







