After ADHD or autism testing
Therapy can help translate diagnostic insight into regulation strategies, executive functioning support, ADHD coaching-style skills, school or work planning, and day-to-day follow-through.
Turn evaluation results and treatment recommendations into practical next steps for daily life, school, work, and relationships.
Talk therapy in Kentucky
Twilight Psychology does not provide ABA, occupational therapy, play therapy, speech therapy, or other specialty therapy modalities. When those services are needed, we help with referrals to providers closer to the client.
Many Twilight Psychology clients start with testing and then use therapy to work through what the results mean in real life. Counseling can create space to process a diagnosis, build new routines, adjust expectations, and support the emotional impact of finally understanding long-standing patterns.
Therapy can also help children, teens, adults, and families use recommendations more consistently over time, especially when accommodations, regulation strategies, identity work, or relationship changes need follow-through beyond the written report.
Therapy after evaluation may include insurance-covered treatment for eligible mental health diagnoses, along with practical support for ADHD skills, sensory regulation, executive functioning, accommodations, and neurodivergence-affirming care.
Therapy after evaluation is often less about starting from scratch and more about carrying recommendations into the settings where life is actually happening.
Therapy can help translate diagnostic insight into regulation strategies, executive functioning support, ADHD coaching-style skills, school or work planning, and day-to-day follow-through.
Clients often use therapy to process results, understand patterns, build accommodations, and decide what changes are realistic next.
Adults who receive a first diagnosis later in life often benefit from therapy that addresses identity, grief over missed support, and what a new framework means for relationships, work, and self-understanding.
Counseling can complement medication support by helping clients build routines, track patterns, and work through the emotional side of treatment changes.