It’s not you.
For the early teenage years, when everything got harder at once and somewhere along the way you started to think the problem was you. It isn’t. Here is what is actually going on, written like you are clever, because you are.
The years it all gets harder.
Primary school had a teacher who knew you, one room, one routine. Then secondary arrived, with five subjects a day, seven teachers, a locker you can never find the right book in, and the unspoken expectation that you should just be able to organise all of it yourself. For a brain like yours, that shift is not a small thing. It is a cliff.
And it happens at exactly the moment your body is changing, your sleep is shifting later, and everything socially feels turned up to maximum. No wonder it feels like a lot. It is a lot.
When school stops fitting.
You can be clever and still be drowning. You can understand the lesson and still lose the homework, miss the deadline, blank in the test, and get told you are not applying yourself. That gap, between how capable you are and how it keeps going wrong, is the most exhausting part, because from the outside it looks like a choice. It is not a choice.
It is what happens when a brain that runs on interest and urgency is asked to run on neat timetables and quiet focus instead.
Your body, and your cycle.
If you have periods, you may have noticed that some weeks your focus, your mood and your patience are completely different from others. That is not in your head. The hormones that move across the month genuinely change how attention and emotion work, and for a brain like yours the swing can be bigger. Knowing it is coming does not make it disappear, but it makes it make sense.
What the brain reaches for.
A restless, under-stimulated brain looks for something to feel. For some people that is the phone, endlessly. For some it is risk, or food, or the first experiments with things that are not good for a developing brain. None of this makes you a bad person. It makes you someone whose brain is trying to regulate itself the only ways it has found so far. There are better ways, and they can be learned.
How to get help.
Tell someone. A parent, a teacher you trust, your GP, the school counsellor. You are allowed to say that things are harder than they look, even when your grades are fine, even when you seem okay. Being assessed is not about being labelled; it is about finally being understood, and getting the things that would make all of this less of a fight.
The bright child who is quietly struggling.
The early secondary years expose the gap between ability and executive function that primary school could hide. A bright young person who is suddenly disorganised, dysregulated, or withdrawn is not necessarily being difficult; they may be hitting the limits of what they can compensate for unaided, often at the same time as puberty changes the picture again. Read this piece first yourself, then, where it helps, with them. Our child assessment looks at the whole picture, with feedback from school as well as from you, so support can be put in place before things slip further.
Talk to us.
If this has read like your child, our team is here. Send an enquiry and we will be in touch, or explore the assessment built for exactly this.
Prefer to talk? Call 0161 768 7634 or email clinics@sanctumhealthcare.co.uk.
It was never you.
A clear, whole picture of how your brain actually works, and a plan that makes school and life fit you better. Start with a free screening, or explore the assessment.
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