Aimee Whaley, LCMHC
Client Services
Individual Therapy for teens and adults
Autism Assessments (starting early 2026)
Services for Professionals
Professional Consultation
I have extensive training and experience working with clients to address topics around autism, ADHD, and LGBTQ+ identities.
I am especially interested in working with clients who have discovered they’re neurodivergent later in life, whether through formal evaluation or self-identification.
I also work with trans and gender-diverse clients who are exploring identity, and can assist with the documentation needed to access gender-affirming medical services.
Who I work with
Intake Session: $175
55-Minute Session: $150
Insurance: I’m in-network with Aetna, BCBS*, CBHA, Cigna, MedCost, United Health/Optum (*excluding Blue Local, Blue Value, & High Performance Network plans)
I’m only offering telehealth services to clients living in:
North Carolina NC LCMHC #10252
South Carolina SC TLC #90PC
Pennsylvania PA PC #018749
Wisconsin WI LPC #12207-125
Fees & Location
As a neurodivergent lesbian therapist, I bring both professional and lived experience into therapy sessions. I value creating a space where neurodivergent, queer, and marginalized people can feel fully seen, heard, and respected.
Therapy with me is collaborative and nonjudgmental. I center autonomy, curiosity, and connection. I also understand how hard it can be to trust therapy if your life experiences have been invalidated by a therapist in the past. We will move at your pace and address the things that are important to you. Depending on the session, that may include exploring your emotions and experiences, creating new systems to help your life run more smoothly, or talking about your special interests. Whether you’re exploring facets of your neurodivergence and/or queer identity, or just need a space where you don’t have to mask—you’re welcome here.
Working with me
In 2007, I formally stepped into ‘the autism world',’ when I took a job at a group home for autistic teens. Not only did I meet a lifelong friend and future business partner, Chris, but I quickly felt a connection to and understanding of autism and knew I had to learn more about it. Since that time, I’ve continued to work with autistic clients and their families in various therapeutic settings, while expanding my knowledge about the overlap of autism with ADHD and LGBTQ+ identities.
My work as a therapist was guided by all-things-autism long before I discovered that I’m also autistic. I’m personally familiar with the experience of connecting to one’s neurodivergent identity, the process of unmasking and the sense of peace that can come from more fully understanding one’s internal and external experiences of neurodivergence.