It was never just in your head.
Your brain is not a separate organ floating above the body. It is built by the body and in constant conversation with it. So much of what arrives looking mental actually begins in the physical, and a neurodivergent brain is more likely, not less, to carry these threads.
The body underneath the mind.
Look at the mind on its own and you see anxiety, low mood, poor focus or fatigue. Look at the whole system and you often find the body underneath, quietly driving it. Sometimes the body is the amplifier that tips a brain into struggle. Sometimes it is the cause itself, wearing a psychiatric mask.
The striking thing, once you start looking, is how often these physical threads travel together, and how often they travel with ADHD and autism. Four in particular come up again and again. Most people who recognise one will recognise more.
Four threads we look for.
These are not rare curiosities. They are common, under-recognised, and rarely joined up by anyone else.
A folder of unconnected diagnoses.
People often arrive having collected, over years, a scattered set of labels: irritable bowel, migraines, chronic fatigue, an anxiety diagnosis, joint problems, skin or allergy trouble, difficult periods, a racing heart no one could explain. Each was treated alone. Each came back.
Seen together, they are frequently not separate problems at all, but different windows onto one over-sensitive, dysregulated system. That recognition, that it might all be connected, is often the first time any of it has made sense.
Where it shows up.
Because these systems reach everywhere, the signs can appear almost anywhere in the body. Tap any point on the body to see how it links back to the brain.

Why we look at the body at all.
Most assessments stop at the mind. We do not, because for so many people the answer to a mental presentation turns out to be physical, and because no one else tends to look. A brain health assessment checks these systems as a matter of course, asks the questions other clinicians skip, and joins the dots between things that have always been treated in isolation.
We will not pretend to solve everything in one visit. But understanding the whole system, brain and body together, is what turns a confusing pile of symptoms into something that can finally be worked with.
Talk to us.
If you recognise yourself in more than one of these, that pattern is worth taking seriously, and worth bringing to an assessment that looks at the whole of you. Send an enquiry and we will be in touch, or start with a free screening.
Prefer to talk? Call 0161 768 7634 or email clinics@sanctumhealthcare.co.uk.
Brain and body, finally seen together.
A Sanctum assessment looks at physical health alongside attention, mood, sleep and stress, because they were always one system. Start with a free screening, or explore the assessment built for you.
Start with a free screening
