If you're late diagnosed, recently diagnosed, or not yet diagnosed - what's your experience? What's worked for you? Share in the comments - it's so helpful for everyone here ⤵️ And here's Part 1: I'm Actually Autistic: My Diagnosis Journey (in case you haven't seen it): th-cam.com/video/zerlIKPEgTU/w-d-xo.html
The biggest thing for me (46) is the realisation that I'm not a broken person faking it through the world, that it was autism all along. But the frustration and anger that decades of struggle and suffering could've been avoided/mitigated by knowing I was autistic all along. Although I also probably wouldn't have done half the crazy stuff I've done. Or maybe I still would've, some of the professional stuff probably not due to the prejudice against autistics. But the cycles of overachieving and burnout have been amazing/crushing. Trying to move into something more sustainable now.
I'm 41 and diagnosed with autism and AD(H)D for 3 years now and I've been going through this rollercoaster ever since. It helped a lot that I got this diagnose due to the knowledge that everything I was having issues with had a reason other then me being bad at things, but at the same time it's hard as hell to easing up to myself and accept that I am who I am and that this is oke. I am not Superman and can't do everything right, but I'm oke and should be mentally oke with what I do good. This is the part that I'm struggling the most with even though I did accept myself as I am, I'm still too hard on myself when I fail at things or need to take a step back
It has... allowed me to be kinder to myself - to no longer mask at all times; to actually invest in smoked glasses in order to help with my sensitivity to light - I am much less inclined to try and punish or chastise myself for not being normal. Even though I still have a lot of unlearning to do in that regard.
I am 68 years old and just got my diagnosis this week. I am so relieved because it explains what I have been feeling and experiencing for years. I have begun to forgive myself for not accomplishing what I was so perfectly educated to do. Your videos have helped me in my journey.
Good luck on your journey. Mine started officially at 64. Glad you discovered this channel. Hearing the experiences of others has been a great help to me.
I’m 71 and just realized my autism about 4 months ago, did all of the tests, researched everything I can find (my new special interest)…and have been journaling and reflecting on my experiences. I live in the US and I’m retired so not sure it makes sense financially for me to be officially diagnosed. Putting that off for now. I have 4 of my 6 children and their spouses currently diagnosed or working through the process, and I believe some of the grandchildren will be, too.. Maybe as they go through the process they can advise me as to what I would benefit from a formal diagnosis. At any rate, I’m just in the state of relief right now to understand who I am and why I have experienced the problems that I have.
@@BirdKat5324 I'm so sorry that all of you had to go through life for so long with this condition undiagnosed. You have my sympathies, for what little sympathies from a complete stranger online can give.
As an entirely ASD individual, I almost feel as if Chris and some other AuDHD content creators are able to be interpreters and bridges between the ASD community and NTs, in much the same way that a hearing adult child of two deaf parents who is truly fluent in ASL, is able to fulfill that role between the deaf and hearing communities. They may not have the same experience of the world as their deaf parents, but do have far, far more genuine understanding of their “lived experience” than any other hearing person, and can effectively bridge the gap in a truly unique way. Thank you, Chris and Debbie🥰
Thank you - this is so flattering! I agree that we can't speak for all autistic experiences, but our goal is definitely to help bridge that gap. It also helps me a lot to hear the experiences of other people in this community since my late diagnosis means I'm still learning what it means to be autistic too. I appreciate you being part of that 😍
As the most high masking in my family growing up and now as a grownup I feel very often like the translator! This comment really resonated. And I agree. I'm so grateful there are people who can translate and put into words all of these experiences and explain them to both sides of the brain experience! Thank you!
My autism diagnosis at 39 has been aided in the last year by your videos. It was devastating for me to realize how little people cared about how hard my life is/was. Now I am calm, but mostly by myself because neurotypicals have caused me SO much harm and just don't care. Thank you. It's nice to not feel alone. I am trying not to feel irrelevant in the world, but it is hard.
I’m sorry it’s been so tough for you. Hopefully knowing more can help you connect with some better people who can understand and support you for who you are - starting with our little community here. I get the frustration you’re describing too. It’s hard to look back and not feel frustrated or angry but it’s so good you’re accepting things for yourself first. One step at a time…
I feel ya. I'm trying not to get angry about it, because I know it's ignorance that cause NTs to act towards me the way they have. And I do find it odd, that many of those who were closest to me seem to have the biggest problem with my diagnosis, and surprisingly some who I thought would be the most rejectful, has been the most supportive, as I've started to let people know that I'm autistic. They have accepted my peculiarities, even accommodate for some of it, like light settings. The other night one of these acquaintances stood up for me, backing me helping to explain that this is what Toby likes and do not like, he's not being rude. And the trouble stopped there, whilst before it would have lead to an argument, or physical fight even. It felt extremely nice to not only be understood, but defended. And the ones that hasn't got it, or do not want to, I avoid as much as I can. Strangely, I suspect some of them to actually be non-diagnosed neurodivergent. Cognitive dissonance perhaps on their part. Bless. Look after yourself. And don't forget you're not alone, not only are we here, but you'll find people like yourself - try to seek peers. It's really nice once it happens as there's no need for masking, just be yourself. I meet a Aut friend a few times a week. It's bl8ss. He puts up with my oddities, like walking away when I get bored, and I've had to adapt to him by be careful with touching him. It's a great learning process. And I think it's made us both happier. When we get socially tired of each other we're open about it. We've got rules about how to communicate, like no calls, and no stress of messaging back etc. It's not always a dialogue. We each take turns talking about what interest us individually. Sometimes it overlaps, sometimes not, but we both often ask questions to learn more. He's not good with math, I am. He's got a fantastic memory, I do not. He knows names, I know faces, which helps when other people talk to us. I guess it's a bit if a bromance lol But I've also met anautistic women who loves music just like me. Sadly, she's not as social. But it's cool. We message about stuff. Sometimes it takes a few months for a reply, but that's cool.
Thank you. I'm AUDHD and was raised by a narcissist. A parent is supposed to learn who their child is. It's not the child's responsibility to tell them. And she never bothered. When I was having a meltdown, or even just an emotion, she'd just scream at me and mock me. She's incapable of realizing, "Whoa, my son is having trouble, there has to be something to help." Instead I was a problem that was just in her way. So thank you for the idea of creating good images. I'm going to try that. And...trying to find a therapist is so f*cking hard. So hard. I want one that has AUDHD, because they'll _know_ exactly where I'm coming from. If I find one that works for me, their schedule doesn't work with mine. Or they don't take my insurance. Or they only work with women. It's exhausting. Thanks again. I'm looking forward to the next one.
Jay, I'm 75 and just diagnosed AuDHD last month and I was raised by a very troubled parent, too. Watch out for the idea that someone needs to be in your exact shoes to understand. If they take your insurance, that's a near miracle in itself and a fine enough place to start. Its actually within support groups you might find someone with a somewhat similar background, not with therapists. After all, they don't need to perfectly understand you but only provide you the tools and put you on the path to understand yourself better.
I always feel like an elder here, at 74. First inkling -- hearing about Sensory Defensive Disorder in my mid-50s, for which I have compensated with sunglasses, loose comfortable clothes and bedding, etc. Then ~5 years ago, reading on Facebook about my nephew's struggles, I realized that he and I shared some autistic traits. That made me start researching (one of my special interests, and the talent that kept me employed at the same job for 20 years). About a year ago, I said something about autism to my trauma-specialist therapist of 20 years, and he already knew. I took all the on-line tests. So it was a slow burn for me to get to self-diagnosis, but reassessing my entire life, looking at my parents and siblings through a different lens, getting new realizations daily is a trip. Fortunately I didn't have any anger and not too much grief (so far), and acceptance wasn't too bad, but unmasking -- it's just happening, I have no control over it, and I feel like I don't know who I am anymore. My therapist keeps me grounded by reminding me that my basic values and my lifelong interests have not changed. That tidbit might be useful??
I always wondered about my own Audio Processing Disorder and why the fuck did I say "huh" so much. My God, even I got on my own nerves. I'm also audio hypersensitive and I've begun to use a unique earplug product called "loop". They;ve helped so much and my point is, until I knew what was the issue - my processing wires didn't touch - I just stood and dealt and so much angst and frustration could have been avoided for years. I experienced some anger and some grief for the years I felt I had lost. Especially academically. I knew I was "smart" but because I didn't learn traditionally, I had difficulty in school and then at 37, to discover that my "math stupidity" was actually dyscalculia, blew my mind. Like, this is a real thing!!! Math anxiety??? who knew. I'll tell who didn't..my teachers, counselors, parents and me. I felt broken forever. And the irony - to end up in a successful career in finance!!! I showed them. I mastered the calculator ;) us.loopearplugs.com/pages/homepage-lp1?gadid=647946549327&cq_src=google_ads&cq_cmp=19674497232&cq_con=145314081359&cq_term=loop%20earplugs&cq_med=&cq_plac=&cq_net=g&cq_plt=gp&gad_source=1&gclid=Cj0KCQiArby5BhCDARIsAIJvjITB7_cFU4UhBOhXLOK386wXt9GRCLGhYX_DSoij6OCywQegA_X22lAaAhHJEALw_wcB
I'm a late-diagnosed therapist, and I'll be showing this video to my clients! I was diagnosed at 43 by a therapist I'd been seeing for years. It was 5 years after the DSM changed the definition of autism, but it wasn't work that gave me the final clue. My brother had been searching the internet for solutions to his social issues at work and found a book about Asperger's in the workplace that was actually helpful. Autism explained much about my brother, my father, my nephew, and myself. I spent a couple of years learning to understand and care for myself before I started diagnosing and treating others with autism. Now most of my clients are adults with autism and/or ADHD, and I love my work! I've learned that I need to take a break between each client, instead of seeing one right after the other and wondering why I was so exhausted and irritable. I'm careful to identify when I'm holding myself to neurotypical standards. I've learned to focus on what I do well and seek work that allows me to bring that out. Right now I'm creating a Psychology Today profile, so that others exploring their neurodiversity can find me and have a therapist who can really empathize with their journey!
This is amazing!! And thank you for sharing with your community - but even more so, for being a great advocate for this community AND being a great example of a therapist who cares and is supportive. The autistic community NEEDS more people like you! Also sounds like you’re learning great adjustments for yourself too - and really interesting to read your story. Similar to me not recognizing the similarities when I was working with neurodivergent students too - I think sometimes people who have adhd or autism struggle with self observing. So really helps to have access to supportive therapists who care about their clients 😊
I’m 61 and at this point self diagnosed. My husband is supportive which is wonderful. I was surprised at the response a very close friend; when I shared my thoughts with her, she said that that was impossible because I’m too empathetic. I also shared my insight with my therapist, and she totally invalidated me without even asking any questions about why I felt that way. I’ve taken the surveys and made sure that I was utilizing the correct surveys. They all put me clearly on the spectrum. I would love to have a true diagnosis, but insurance has been horrible for me and I know it’s expensive to get a diagnosis anyway. I have stiff person syndrome and had to take LOA. It was during that time that I was able to take a breather and look into my situation and that’s when I realized that I am most likely autistic. It has been a roller coaster ride; at first I was very convinced, and then not so much after being invalidated. Whenever I researched autism, I felt like I had to do it in hiding. Some days I feel like “this is me” and other days I feel like I’m making it up. One thing that really helped was a nurse making a comment that maybe I was autistic and I had not brought up the topic to her at all. She was a nurse that sat with me throughout the day for five days while I had infusions for my stiff person syndrome. I was so surprised when she mentioned autism and my reaction startled her. She thought I was mad at her comment, but I was so glad that someone noticed something without prior knowledge of my history or personality. I feel like I’m rambling because there is just so much to get through. This video really helped me to see that the ups and downs are expected, even when you have a real diagnosis. Thank you for that insight.
I dropped one of my friends because she laughed at me. She said I was always diagnosing myself with something. Six months before I thought I had borderline personality disorder. Turns out psychologists are always making the misdiagnosis of autism as borderline. Like your therapist, she never asked why I thought that.
empathy is overrated. people confuse it with compassion, which is the actual act of being sympathetically kind. some of the most empathetic people couldn't care less about being kind. as for apparently being able to 'read' people's emotions, if you have to use logic instead of instinct, that's neurodivergent.
Wow, I cannot believe this video came out today. I am a mess!!!!!!!😩, I was diagnosed autistic at the end of September and am going through exactly what you have said in this video. I have totally lost my way after the initial relief and happiness at a diagnosis. I am seeing my doctor next week to get some anti-depressents. I have had a bad year, I lost my dad to cancer, one of my close friends died and now my diagnosis. I am burnt out, overwhelmed and struggling big time. I am so grateful to have watched this video as it explains so much of how I feel. Thank you so much. I do have support and am also doing a follow up course with the diagnostic team so just got to hang in there. 🙏🤞
I’m sorry that you’ve had a tough year. Geez… when it rains it pours. Sounds like you’re brave and doing what you have to do to inch forward. As big of a struggle as life is for you right now, it will get better. Sometimes it feels like a bit of a roller coaster ride at times, but it always smooths out long enough for us to catch our breath. I’m really glad that you have support through this time. That’s so important. Keep your head up and thanks for being here 🤗🤗
@sarahb2652 I can almost promise you that you are going to come out the other side of this learning what YOU need to do that works for you and you're already here seeking tips and tools and encouragement. You won't BELIEVE the community of us that exist and it still makes me teary eyed after feeling alone for so long. Don't get me wrong, there are going to be sucky, sucky periods, but you're doing the work to understand what yours look like and how to navigate this NT world. You are not broken, you're not too sensitive, you're not a 'flake' (or, insert common adj here), you're not too little or too much of anything. You are YOU and that's the best you can do! (thanks Dr. Suess) but it's actually true. You are good enough and you have more support than you know. Figure out what works for you and do more of that :)
I needed this right now. I’ve been going through the frustration of accepting what I can realistically do vs what I used to do. It’s hard and it helps so much to know that I’m not alone in my feelings.
This has been my experience, too. So much grieving and resentment, and I found out I'm autistic in the midst of a very long burnout that I'm still not out of yet. It's so exhausting every day. I need a Debbie, too. 😭😭😭
I feel this video very strongly. Debbie is a saint compared to what I faced. If I had to place it, I'm at the 5 minutes past the honeymoon phase and wallowing in the bottom of the next curve at a new job, new living space, freshly separated from my wife (not a Debbie), and up against a wall for a cybersecurity exam in a few days. Work is worlds out of my comfort zone, and I'm distinctly unincluded by my coworkers. The anger about the past hit last night along with thoughts of self harm that I rode out and made it through . . . and I think that I'm currently in the position that you were in, where you realize that the work environment isn't sustainable anymore. Because of your video showing me that I don't have to force myself through that, I'm going to actively seek change instead of facing inevitable burn out and anguish. Keep making content. You're saving lives.
I'm going through a divorce right now because of the same. The change is hard. But it also gives me hope. Instead of being my best friend as I thought we were, she turned out to be my worst bully, ever. Who needs bullies. Better of without her. X And I've also had to rethink where I live, and my job. It's a lot of changes all at once. But one day at a time...
This is very helpful, getting a late diagnosis, 60 yo, amidst a wicked mother of all burnouts can be a very very lonely place. Thank you for alleviating this.
I'm 54 and diagnosed several years ago with the ADHD piece and later with the ASD. I am in a year long burnout but having trouble climbing out. Please understand that hormones play a large part in this also. In earlier years, I had hormone cycled migraines, anxiety PMSDD and this makes total sense to me, but the coping mechanisms are hard to find. Good luck and I know you'll do you just fine.
I understand having multiple disabilities, I have seizures/epilepsy and ADHD. I also have to keep moving my hands around I just don't know why. My gf has been autistic since she was little. We've known each other since kindergarten. I don't know if I saying it right I've never been able to say stuff or explain stuff good so please don't get mad.
Thanks for sharing this - and we can understand too. And you're always welcome to share your experiences here - we appreciate hearing and learning from everyone
@@ChrisandDebby what's bad sometimes when I'm trying to explain stuff to my dad or answer him if I don't answer quick enough I get yelled at sometime my brain will just go blank or be like its going 100mph plus. He sometimes just doesn't give me enough time to think sometimes.
To the once with itchy skin: a therapist once bought me a good lotion and told me, that everytime my skin starts to itch, I should be aware of it and remember it. Then take the lotion (whenever it is possible but at the same day) and while applying it to the itchy spots I should ask myself: "where did someone or did I cross my boundarys?" because skin is the barrier of our body and problems with it can be signs of crossing our barriers/boundaries. I loved that. She was the best.
This feels so much like what I'm going though (currently early 40's). I'm currently in the middle of the sort of crisis explained in the first 5 minutes or so. Everything is overwhelming and I don't really know what to make of it. And yeah, I'm reflecting a lot, and thinking back on all the awful things that happened growing up, and how my family never could handle me. I tried therapy again just two days ago. I was so excited, armed with actual WORDS that I could use to finally articulate what's going on in my head. But it went spectacularly awful. I felt so uncomfortable with how little the therapist was interested in what *I* wanted to say, that I thanked them and left the tele-health 15 minutes in. And I'm also uncertain. I've been diagnosed with ADHD for years, but always felt like a lot of ASD symptoms fit me. So I went for diagnostic testing. They confirmed the ADHD diagnosis, and said that I tested well into whatever range would qualify as ASD for that test, but he refused to issue a diagnosis, saying I had past family trauma that may be confusing me. So.. I would have had ASD, but because my mother is awful, I actually don't? This was a huge opportunity to feel validated, and understand why I feel like I do, and they couldn't give me that.
The perspective of not focusing on deficits and rather reworking that energy into optimising natural abilities (and possibly even enjoying the process) was a massive light bulb moment for me. One can know things without a deeper understanding of how to implement it into one's life, which was the case for me. However, hearing your story and feeling my own reflection in your words opened a door I didn't even know I had shut. Sorry for the gushiness, but I just want to sincerely say thank you, Chris.
This hits hard. Got diagnosed at 37 a month ago. After years having a diagnose of shizotypical personality disorder, people being scared of me because of the stigma on it. Now all of a sudden it makes more sense and no extreme negative stigma.. in my eyes at least. (i will always fight to get rid off the stigmas, whatever diagnoses). My mom always knew and fought for recognition. Also still have revisiting depressions wich dont make it much easier. Having an identity crisis. Thanks for this video, i feel a lot of it what you tell. Feel less alone, and I hope with me a lot of people in the same situations. Dont know if this comment makes sense but it does to me lol. Great work, thnx for all ur videos, you help so much, hope you know that!
Bad dreams are horrible. Sometimes mine were so bad they ruined my morning. But.....things can definitely get better if you work at it. Spend time thinking about something or someone special before you go to bed. I try to get as specific as I can and just force my brain to keep thinking about it.
I have had issues with these too, and I also get sleep paralysis at times, moreso when I'm chronically stressed so they kind of meld together. Gotten a lot better at setting up a good environment to help myself get good sleep though
Chris, thank you so much for sharing. I'm 68 and am on a waiting list to be diagnosed with autism. Started looking into this four months ago when I caught myself "flapping my hands" when I was excited about something. Then I remembered that a friend who has an autistic brother asked me some years ago if I was autistic. Of course, I had said, "No!" After all, autistic people are those boys who can't talk and who flap their hands, right? Wait... Flap their hands?? Took online tests, and they all put me in the "autistic" range. Started watching videos and reading articles. I sure do have SO MANY of the symptoms that people share! (I currently have over 400 websites bookmarked on various topics concerning autism.) Checked my baby book for clues of autism in childhood. I seemed to be a happy child, and there didn't seem to be any clues of autism, except that Mom had written that I turned my eyes away and made funny faces. Was that an autistic turning away of the eyes? There were other things that MIGHT HAVE BEEN clues of autism, but we'll never really know, I guess. I've shed tears over the possibility of being autistic. (Can't get myself to say that I definitely am until I get the diagnosis.) I don't want to be autistic, but I sure do want to keep my so-called "special abilities"! I haven't been able to socialize for three months, and by "socialize", I mean get together with someone one-on-one. I'm coming out of this phase. This isn't consuming my days like it was for three solid months. Have told some people that I might be autistic, and it turns out that everyone (but one person) either has ADHD themselves or else they have a relative who is autistic. It's the "other" people--the "allistics"--like my sisters, who I'm having trouble sharing this with. Am waiting to be diagnosed first before sharing with them. I did share it with my neurotypical boyfriend, and he doesn't understand it at all. I've had meltdowns with him but didn't know why. Now I have a name for it, can explain it, and can even recognize when a meltdown is coming and maybe know what to do about it, but he has backed off. I'm pretty sure the relationship is over. It's just hard reading the cues, but he isn't calling me like he used to. (He also has a cold right now and isn't feeling well, but I think I don't want to pursue this any more with him. I need someone who is willing to work with me on this.) Chris, I want to thank you for sharing this part of your life with us. It really is helpful. God bless you and Debby.
I'm in my 40s and recently have self identified as austistic. It explains a lot of my experiences and that I have been in autistic burnout for the past few years. When I came to the conclusion that I'm autistic after many hours of research and self testing, I thought it would get better. Instead, it's gotten more difficult just to get through each day. Thank you for your video. I will do my best to keep moving forward, even though it will be an excruciatingly slow process.
I don't have a diagnosis, but when I had my "aha moment" and realized I was most likely autistic, it was a similar experience. I have always loved playing in the symphony, because that's one place where they literally give you a detailed script of how to participate. In other areas of life, it was (is) like being in a rehearsal where everyone has the music except for me - I have to peek over other people's shoulders and try to wing it. And although I've gotten relatively good at this over the years, it takes a lot more effort that way, so *of course* I get overwhelmed or worn out easily. I really resonate with your experience of having to admit that you can't keep doing everything you had been, having to admit your limitations, and slowing things down. It sucks. But I finally decided that people would rather I do less and do it fully, enjoying my life, than do more and half-ass it while being constantly on the brink of collapse. Hopefully you have come to the same conclusion.
Hi Chris, I am going through my official diagnosis. Autism, OCD and Alexithymia. I am in the anger phase. Feels like my life was a lie. I was forced to mask for years. Until I really started to look at your videos and a few others, I connected the dots and went for my journey to a diagnosis. So much of what you say resonates with me. It brings comfort, especially in the phase I am in now.
Brilliant so relatable...I was only thinking the other day that I feel like I am living someone else's life when in fact I'm starting to learn what it is to be the real autistic me...
Ohhh Chris. So much of this resonates with me. I'm still in the long wait for the assessment, but it's definitely AuDHD, and holy cow have there been big emotions. And big emotions with emotional dysregulation and probably alexthymia is SO FUN (no. No it really sucks.) And the anger and relief and depression and fear and grasping for ANY return to normalcy... This entire year so far has been part of the process. It's exhausting and incredibly lonely and I know I won't ever fully be back to where I was, but I want my life back.
I have not been diagnosed and don't see the need at 64 years old but watching these and other videos, reading forums of women with autism has me convinced that this is me. A diagnosis would have benefited me when I was much younger maybe 20s or earlier but at that time I'm sure it wouldn't have happened. When I look back things fall into place. Ironically at age 40 I had gut problems and finally got help from a naturopathic doctor who specialized in autistic children, helping with gut issues. He liked that I was an adult that can give him different feedback that the kids had difficulty explaining. He was treating me and getting the same results that he did with his kids - ding! Of course we never thought of me as having autism. Now that I'm retired I've delved into this (my typical, nerdy, uber focused) research, I'm self diagnosing! My life would have been so different if I was born when diagnosing was even an option for me.
Thanks so much for your work! I just got diagnosed and I am super high masking. My brother is also autistic, but yet undiagnosed, and has a lot of sui*idal ideation. I am now trying to figure my problems out while communicating my wins to him to normalize the topic. He often has huge acute problems with emotion regulation , but I think we can manage to make his life worth living again in the long run. I love him and want him to survive the difficult times. Through supporting myself I can support him as well (as much as he allows me to - of course). He is not a burden and never will be. He is my precious brother and I want him to live his life on his terms as he enjoys it. ❤
He's lucky to have you to support him ❤️ Have you both learned about autistic burnout? You might need some professional support (if it's possible) but learning about autistic burnout would help you have a better idea of what he might be going through. Of course, we can't diagnose or guess at that, but when I was in my darkest times, I later learned it was autistic burnout. And it really feels completely awful... and hopeless. But he can get through it, especially with support. We have one video about burnout but we are working on a lot more coming in a few weeks
Here's the video about burnout: th-cam.com/video/Ih_vTZb8Tmw/w-d-xo.html Also just want to say - it's hard being in your role as a supporter to your brother, who sounds like he's really struggling. It makes it even more important you also take good care of yourself and get support for you too. But you can get through it together - and it's great you're learning more on how to do this too
Thanks! ❤ Yes, that's definitely a possibility. I've also been in burnout + depression for a few years a few years ago. Your video on burnout is so validating. Finally someone gets it. Yes, I will look after myself! 😊
Thank you for this. It sums up my experiences nicely. I was diagnosed at 50. Eleven years ago next month. I also have ADHD, and at the time CPTSD from lots of neglect and bullying as a kid. I wasn't able to understand and accept my autism diagnosis because the CPTSD was constantly poking the autism and ADHD in the ribs stirring things up. Fortunately, I have been able to work though the CPTSD which calmed things down a lot! This has allowed me to focus in on autism and ADHD so I can learn about myself and get to a place were I actually like myself and accept myself! I am so grateful for the online communities and videos like this. You are right. It is a journey full of ups and downs. I, too, have moments where the frustration about the past rise up, but it passes quickly and it doesn't happen nearly as often now. I can be proud of the accomplishments I did make despite having undiagnosed autism, ADHD and CPTSD. It's unfortunate that my physical health has suffered so much from decades of chronic, severe stress. There is so much I can't do anymore. I am having to learn new ways to express myself and new ways to make my way in the world. But slowly. So very slowly. I have to give myself lots of time and space to rest too. The funniest thing has been learning about all the stimming things I used to do (and some I still do) that I didn't even realize were odd or different from the NT experience. I wish I had started a list! LOL Thank you Chris and Debby!
My goodness... you are describing my experience word by word.... self diagnosed autistic at 65. I am in the process of giving up my career of teaching. Something I dearly loved but ... I realized I simply can't do it anymore. I have to find something else. And it hurts! TH-cam has helped me immensely. Just learning what it is all about. My partner clearly has ADHD.... that is a struggle too...adjusting. I keep reminding myself: No, we are not worse people than before (self) diagnosis. Being yourself more is a good thing. But this year sure is a struggle!
I got tears in my eyes watching this, got my autism diagnos almost a year ago now and I can relate to so much, the relef when I got the diagnos but then the falling apart...I dont think I have been so confused and lost before, but videos like this dose help me understand and put words to what Im experiencing and feeling 😊 Im right now trying to understand and accept my bodys limits and what it needs but its hard when you use to be able to do so much before
It’s a struggle because throughout this period you still try to convince yourself you can push push push and keep up a tempo that wasn’t working…. Living a lifestyle that wasn’t working. Relearning is a confusing process and a difficult one to work through, but you figure out a little bit each day and life gets better. 🤗
Very similar experience - a full year of feeling unmoored and disoriented as I had to re-think my entire life. I think it gets harder the older you are and the more you have become used to masking. I was identified (not diagnosed because it still could cost me my job) when my daughter was diagnosed, and I've watched both of us go through the adaptation cycle. Masking is a big part of the difference. For my generation, it wasn't a choice. If you wanted to function in society, you masked. After fifty years, the mask starts to become part of you. I developed a whole vocabulary of terms to describe it. My favorite was to say "I think in print, then have to translate into spoken words when I talk." This explained why I had to take time to think when talking, and why my speech was always very formal and structured. Glad my daughter has the freedom not to mask, though honestly every now and then things get tough for her and I can't help thinking "They're not going to get it. You might as well mask up until they go away." (I don't actually say it, of course).
I was diagnosed a few months ago at 51 and I am still on a rollercoaster of grief and self acceptance. I am processing through therapy, friends, and by making music to express all these emotions. Thank you so much for this video! It and the comments here really help me to not feel alone.
To me, it was the most liberating thing to realize what my otherness was. I became free and relaxed. I also hate my memories, but I'm glad to have gotten out of the closet. I told all my friends and family, and lately, even my colleagues, that I'm autistic. They now understand me better, and my colleagues are amazing with regard to my what looks like idiosyncrasies.
This feels like exactly where I am at. I’ve recently discovered that I am more than likely autistic via my doctor and a MH councillor who put me in touch with a local charity that works with neurodiverse people (NEST) but unfortunately I am from the UK where our waiting lists are capped for diagnosis unless I go private which I can’t currently afford. I’ve been lost in feeling like I wouldn’t be stuck if someone had noticed when I was younger and I’ve felt exactly as Chris was saying. I do have a very supportive family and partner but it’s when I’m sat alone on my break at work (like I am currently) or at night when the thoughts creep in telling me I don’t know who I am and I don’t have any form of closure and it’s so intimidating. I’m so thankful for this channel and how much you do and speak out for people like myself. You both are wonderful human beings and thank you for sharing your story and helping me try to navigate my own 💜
I was just diagnosed at 75. My first reaction was "if only I'd known earlier, how different my life could have been!" But it is what it is. And with supportive family and partner and online resources, you have the tools to start moving forward now. Self diagnosis is totally valid if you use all the free tests online, and it needs to suffice as closure for you for quite a while, so tell your doubts to bug off and start focusing instead on learning more about how you can adapt. After all, a neurotypical would never be caught up in wondering if they were really autistic, would they?? Diagnosis only affirmed my self-diagnosis, even though I was plagued with wondering if I could be wrong, which was all entirely wasted energy. "Plagued with self-doubt" should maybe be a criteria for it in the first place as the world has gaslit us for so long!
Diagnosed at 55 and still trying to accept....everything you mentioned is exactly how i feel , thank you for your relatable video's, they are a big help! .
I’m 51 late diagnosed ADHD inattentive and just finished my Psych eval today to test for Autism. I get the results on the 5th of December. Hopefully I’ll get clarity. Thank you for this channel. I love y’all ❤
M 64, clinically diagnosed 3 years ago, although I knew something was up for decades. I went, and still go through, everything in this video. I did go a bit extreme, though. I figured life's an adventure, and I didn't like the one I'd been living so I burned it down. In hindsight, the timing was stupid but I only mildly regret doing it. Don't try this at home. It's reckless unless you don't have social attachments. If I wrote that anywhere except on an ASD page people wouldn't get it at all. Take care, everyone, and do life the way it makes sense to you.
You have no idea how much I needed this video right now. I’m right where you were at the beginning of the video. I had complete misconceptions of autistic people’s struggles because I saw how severe my cousins that are non verbal are. I’m infuriated right now cause I have family members and an ex girlfriend I dated all through HS that work in therapy. I’ve always just been an asshole and have anger issues and depression according to them. No one believes me because I was smart enough enough as a kid to know that the ADHD medication that they had been giving my other family members were making them worse so I masked to pretend I was “normal” Now at 41 lost and broken, completely misunderstood and have zero friends. Without my dad‘s support (who happens to be the only one who actually believes autistic) and channels like yours and Orion Kelly I don’t think I’d be here. I was to the point of being ready to just drive my car off a cliff because nothing I ever did was ever good enough for anybody, and nobody likes me for who I am. I’m at the point where I don’t like myself and that’s because I don’t even know who I am and I’m trying to figure this out, I already deal with chronic pain stomach issues all the other things with no health insurance. Realizing I’m autistic and how hard it is to already get a diagnosis I feel completely fucking helpless my stomach bubbling just typing out this text. Thank you for being open and sharing your story because I don’t feel completely lost and alone anymore. You are an amazing soul Chris, I don’t have words enough to thank you for what you do. 💚🙏🏻
I had similar issues with anger and being treated badly. I am 49 and just in the middle of assessment and the last year has been a rollercoaster ride. I hope you find a way to get through this, joining the autistic community was a massive help for me, maybe it could help you too.
@@nozhki-busha thanks so much. The community has already made me feel more accepted and understood than I ever have in my whole life. I’m so blessed to finally have found my people!
You have such a gift for eloquently putting words to the autistic experience! I was diagnosed 7 months ago and this describes almost exactly what I have been experiencing. I think à lot of my feelings are associated with the deficit-based evaluation process. I had to take my entire life and look at it through a lens of "disability" and that really took a toll. But I had to look at my "deficits" in great detail just to get a diagnosis. That left me feeling really down on myself, incapable, profoundly disabled. I am learning, though, how great a difference small adjustments can make: allowing myself to take breaks, not committing myself to too many opposing tasks that require switching my brain (for lack of a better term), limiting social interactions, ignoring phone calls and replying by text... These have made a huge impact. I have also seen how my health is improving: far fewer headaches, better blood pressure readings, and greater patience and understanding from my providers. I feel like I'm finally being heard now that I feel like it's okay to ask for clarification! Thank you for all you do to make others feel understood and in good company. We are all still learning. And we were meant for so much more!
Just diagnosed yesterday at 21. I just feel so lost and alone. Thank you for all of your videos. They have been so supportive throughout my entire autism journey. 🙏
I thank you for this video. I just turned 40 and I am possibly on the cusp of my ADHD and ASD diagnosis. I already have a bunch of trauma from childhood and I’m trying to find mental health help for that too. I’m glad that I know that the road ahead may be tough. It is invaluable, thank you.
Even before my diagnosis, I accumulated over a dozen different hobbies which I exercise with a passion. And I still do. I think it keeps my brain from remembering the bad stuff as it's kept busy with cool and interesting topics. So I was quite able to just continue as before. Just with an additional explainer what my brain is doing and why some situations are awkward. Also my whole life I was privileged to have friends and family being very understanding. Even at the job. So the environment where and how you live gives a lot input to how you are going to feel after diagnosis.
Yes yes and yes ,this is so relatable and extremely helpful, im coming up to 63 and got my diagnosis in January because in the uk the waiting time is so long id somehow imagined that once i got a diagnosis suddenly life would get better, everyone would understand me and learn about autism, and in truth things feel worse, im learning to understand myself better, so i wouldn't change things but i really understand the feelings of anger and grief ,thank you for explaining it so eloquently, its good to know these feeling are normal and there is light at the end of the tunnel.
Thank you. This gave me chills because it's exactly how I am feeling. I am at the rage at every one in my past stage. knowing there is something past this point is very helpful.
Thank you. I am going through what I guess is the second part you described (the anger that I'm this way and wishing I wasn't). It's been two years since my diagnosis at age 33. It's been... Rough. Mostly because I still have this expectation of being better. Being fixed back to normal. Furthermore, I haven't found a great representation of my experience. Everything I've read about people getting diagnosed has been represented as positive. You are the first person I have encountered who has talked about the negative side. And honestly, you made me cry. It was like finding a mirror. So thank you.
You are very lucky you have met your wife Debbie, sounds like she is compassionate, accepting, and willing to gain understanding of someone as different to everybody else as we autistic turn out to be. I hope you tell her that she is great, the best. I was not as fortunate, and circle of people I knew, and spent time together now and then, some of them I even considered friends, began to shrink, shortly before I received my diagnosis (like you just autism diagnosis at 41, while I suspect to be an AuDHDer), starting with my 10 year together partner, then two of my ‘friends’ turned to be unwilling to accept the new me, because I would ask to meet in a park not in a pub for example, or ask to set a time, and date ahead, I had to let go many other acquaintances too, so now, 4 years after diagnosed, the circle is down to one friend, and 2 buddies, and I am OK with that, it is better for me I do not see anymore those toxic people. No more sponsoring ‘friends’. Healing continues. Never give up. Except slower now. I decided I will try to get a degree again, this time for real, with a purpose in mind, something I was talked out of doing when I was 20, becoming mathematics teacher, so I’m at second year of BSc Mathematics at OU now, piece a cake, but I am working only 25h a week now, just to pay my bills, I used to say through my life that profound truth about not giving up, except in a bit humorous way so as not to sound like I am trying to berate them or something. It went: “Never give up, never surrender, it is better to err, than do nothing, to err is still progress, except in a wrong direction :p but stagnancy is death, and it does not matter who pulls the trigger.” Sadly, some of us walk that path to the end.
🦋🦋🦋This came in the right moment. I was getting desperate and hopeless in the process of adjusting. You show me that it can be done and the pain is normal. Having been a caterpillar, coming out of our cocoon and unfolding our butterfly wings can be painful. But so worth it. 🦋🌞🦋🦋🦋
I learned a new term this week, ALEXISOMIA. Basically it's a lack of words for body sensations or an inability to understand a person's own body. Like not knowing when you are hungry, full, thirsty, sleepy, well rested, in pain, if you have a fever, if you are cold, if you are too warm (exception being texture issues with sweat), or any other body sensation. It's separate from Alexithymia since Thymia relates to emotions. So yeah, that was a fun discovery. I'm glad Chris is making these encouraging videos, but I'm hopeful he can have dedicated videos on some of the hypo and hyper sensitivity issue people have and how to relate it back to autism. Like Alexisomia likely has a hyperalexisomia which probably is just hypochondria. But having dedicated videos to isolated symptoms is a good idea. Would help people understand the conditions better.
Dude this is great!! I really appreciate you sharing this. I’d never heard of alexisomia before you mentioned it. I can’t wait to tell my wife (First time I’ll get to beat her to the punch baby!!) I’d love to do a video specifically on hypo and hyper sensitivity issues people with autism experience. I’ll add it to our list of topics. Thanks a bunch for being here and sharing 🙌
Thank you so much for this.I got my diagnosis a month ago at 67.You have been able to put into words how I have been feeling.The unmasking and trying to discover the authentic me is going to take time.Your videos are greatly appreciated
Thank you for such an honest video, I’m late diagnosed at 56, it brought so many answer yet so much to walk through, it’s hard but possible. Thank you I feel you have put your finger on so many things.
I was diagnosed at age 37, a dozen years ago, after 5 years of uncertainty. It's an experience that came and went quickly, literally in the middle of a work day, and the therapist (at a public agency) literally had me pegged as soon as I came in through the door. Life went on pretty much as usual, after this point, but now I had more certain info to put on forms & applications, and could confidently tell people that I had the condition. That would eventually lead me to landing a specific job, which I still have, but not for another half-dozen years.
Stupid work and meetings interfering with my personal life, again, so sadly I missed the live :) Looking forward to watching this. I dont have an official diagnosis (yet), but I know I've been going through a lot of identity crisis and looking at my memories with a new lens.
Your description of leaving work that you helped to build up is just *chefs kiss* Spot on for my ecperience as well. Im about to leave my longest tenured position at the end of this year. I got my dx about a year ago for autism. And the year before that, i got my adhd dx. I have learned so much. And since ive begun to learn how to sensitize to *my* needs, i just cant do this pace of anything. Its very hard to relearn everything about me. And how i want to relate to the world. Your channel is great. Thank you both! 🎉 🫶🏻 🛸
This is spot on, thank you and thank you to everyone's comments! 45 and diagnosed last month. Learning how to adjust to a lowered capacity is so difficult (which i was fighting and resisting that i hit burnout hard). Full time work and full time parent is torture.... you can't drop those!
It's been 13 months since I was diagnosed. I was happy with the diagnosis. For the first time in my life I felt like I was complete. All those weird things I experienced growing up, that I was always gaslit when I told people, finally made sense. I haven't felt any resentment towards my parents, or teachers. I always knew I was different, but I simply didn't have the words to communicate it. Now that I know why I feel different it's been rediscovering who I am, and finding better ways to deal with problems. The most challenging parts have been health care, and work. I have to advocate for myself a lot more with the doctors. Sometimes the standard treatments just don't work for me. I see a therapist every week to manage my autism, adhd, depression, and anxiety, as well as the ptsd from constantly being forced into situations that aren't healthy for me. It's been even more difficult with work. My management has been neutral, and usually makes things worse when I meltdown. HR gaslights, marginalizes, and invalidates me whenever I get involved. I have a union that makes sure I'm treated fairly, but at times it's also a struggle to convince them I need help. The push back leaves me second guessing and doubting myself. Despite trying to make things easier on me as well as those I interact with, I still am left feeling guilt and shame any time I have to put myself before their demands. I'm left throwing my hands in the air and doing what I need to for myself, despite any consequences. I also won't apologize for taking care of myself any more than they won't apologize to me when they demand too much. I'm still happy to be autistic, but sometimes the day to day battles are too much.
Fascinating. Our stories are so different. I was clueless that I was autistic and had a good friend (the one who raised my autistic son from age 16 onward) hint to me for several years that I was also autistic. I finally got the hint one day after a meltdown in Lowe's. Mind blown. Suddenly my entire life made sense and I was liberated. No mourning, no anger, no fear ..... nothing negative. Just freedom. I finally had answers and direction. (I did get officially diagnosed when I was 44 - ASD and ADHD.) I love your channel. I've been mostly commenting with a different YT channel name but I'm not sure I'm going to keep that one so I'm trying to shift my favorites over to my personal account.
Thank you for this. It's the most helpful thing I've read or seen so far. I'm 2 months in. I'm 47. I haven't been able to understand my feelings of anger and disappointment recently. Thank you.
I'm currently waiting for a call back to be able to schedule an official assessment, so I guess at the moment I'm self-diagnosed. And even if it comes back that I really do just have social anxiety, I think this story is still valid and I just have to tell someone. Overall I get why most of the people in my life would have missed the signs, not knowing what to look for. I am, however, even more salty than I already was with one of my ex's and his family, now that I suspect myself to be autistic. Even though this whole event happened over 10 years ago. I took a trip with my ex on spring break one year to meet all of his family and friends, in Portland Oregon (I'm from a rural community myself, so not so many people). They unintentionally set me up for failure from the get go because they thought it would be funny if his family and two best friends rushed past him and group hugged my already stressed out self, and of course I couldn't respond the way that I was feeling cause that would be a bad first impression. I spent the whole trip feeling on edge from all the socializing we did: meeting the family, going to a market (which I actually did enjoy, and still have some jewelry I bought there), going square dancing (which was a shared interest), having to borrow a skirt from one of his friends because I didn't know dancing was on the itinerary, plus having to learn how to put on a petticoat to go with it (I was not a fan, it was very uncomfortable) I was an overwhelmed nervous wreck the whole week. I thought I did a lot of good things on the trip that should have endeared me to at least the family, though. When Ex got sick on the trip I took care of him, cleaned the house while everyone else was gone, even cleaned the tin cans the way they said they did for recycling. I made them dinner one night, and even brought homemade banana bread. When we got home I managed to convince myself that "everyone is too busy focusing on themselves to notice you," and overall felt like the trip went well. Until, a few months later at the end of the school year, his parents called him to say that no one I met on that trip liked me. They all thought I was rude, and didn't show enough interest in his excitement over the IKEA storage (when really I just felt exhausted). I was emotionally scarred and questioning myself for years after he told me that. But the main reason I'm trying not to be extra angry with them for all that is because he and his dad were both autistic. If anyone should have been expected to give a girl a little leeway and recognize that some of us need some down time, I feel like it should have been them. I wish I could go back and be like "you see, I wasn't actually a terrible person." Also, I ended up getting super sick with whatever he had, and had to catch up on homework between bouts of throwing up. So all in all, not the best week of my life.
oh man im so sorry that happened. but tbh, from hearing that one of my instincts is that 'nobody liked you btw' is too much of a huge cop out to be completely true. they probably had other reasons or circumstances that they were too cowardly to just talk to you about - maybe they just didn't want you two together. i experienced something like this on a smaller scale when i studied a semester abroad at uni, and in the *last week* my house mates took a photo of some mess i'd accidentally left in the kitchen (undiagnosed audhd) and used it to say i was 'never cleaning up and we're sick of doing it for you'. logic dictates that if it was such a problem, they'd have come to me sooner than 7 weeks in. we generally got along before that, but we'd have had other reasons for them not liking me, such as our drastically different world-views and values, and that i wasn't really 'friends' with any of them despite us all being in the same cohort.
Hooray for Debbie helping you out! ✨👍😊 I'm very grateful that you've made this channel and you're helping other people, and I'm grateful to have found your channel as well! Thank you all the way from northern Minnesota ☺
What you share with us and your wide-reaching perspective have helped me through this phase of adjustment. And how boy, it is an adjustment. Thank you for your insights and support. ✨💖✨
A few days ago, was given the suggestion on your channel, thanks YT. I was diagnosed officially 2 years ago Sept at 57 as autistic. My oldest sister (and also likely 2 others, I had 3 older sisters, yeah, the baby in the family) and a long time good friend suspected I might be autistic as far back as 18-19 years ago, but it took a long time, a PT/temporary job in IT to finally get the diagnosis through DVR, Dept of Vocational Rehab. After a 4 hour session, it came down to ASD, level 1 with a rule out for ADHD. I was in therapy and the first therapist began an ADHD test, but ended it after about 5 minutes saying it does not appear I have full blown ADHD. I am not just autistic, but have CRS (congenital rubella syndrome), from being exposed to rubella in the womb, thanks to Mom having caught it during the pregnancy in 1964 during an epidemic of Rubella at that time. Titter was the congenital cataract in my right eye and it marked when I was exposed, which meant Mom likely got it during the 4th week of the first trimester, which is when the fetus is most vulnerable. That is, it could be a deaf/mute, brain dead, or still born. I was obviously not any of those, but was born with total sight loss in my right eye, partial hearing loss (the nerves between inner ear and brain) in the left ear, total hearing loss, outside of bone conduction in my right ear. Was thought to be "retarded" back in the late 60's, now formally diagnosed as having also an intellectual disability (2 deviations lower than my peers). Now autistic, but also gay and have a fetish. Complex feller aint I? Anyway, as with some of us, I am engaged, can converse easily one on one. Even my primary doctor was surprised about that. I grew up with a friend who lived across the street from us who had an older brother (about 2 years older than us) who was severely autistic, and in those days, autism was only thought of as severe, can't speak, massive stimming, grunts and pointing to let his mother know what he wanted etc, white, male etc. Anyone else that did not fit that "mold" was left alone to fend for themselves. Now, obviously, we know more than we did then. Anyway, I have had to navigate through alot of this on my own in getting financial help as getting work is not my forte, and realizing that I may well be dealing with ageism at currently 59. Due to hearing difficulties, I read lips (thanks to the John Tracy Clinic, mail correspondence course back between 1968-1970) between ages 3-5, I can not only read lips but can be rather verbose. These days, I have through help gotten off of mortgage forbearance, pay my mortgage, most bills, and have EBT (SNAP) for food and do OK, for now. I can have productive days, then crash for 2 days and have had meltdowns (ask my washing machine as the side of the cabinet is bashed in, trying to get the cabinet to hook up along the bottom with inadequate room and now have a ratchet strap to hold it together)... I do feel at times I'm not really autistic, but the signs are definitely there so I must be. Fortunately, I was raised in a loving family that loves hugs, having my back tickled, and love the feel of some things (leather especially) but love digging through a pile of plastic buttons. it's the sensory feel I crave. but I have a hard time with perseverance issues, meaning to get away from YT and get onto projects some days, or even to shower. Anyway glad I stumbled onto this channel.
Ironically, this is very similar to my experience. I was originally diagnosed with ASPD though about ten years ago, I didn't know I was dyslexic until about two years ago, and I only learned I was autistic this year. Fortunately, as I've already been through this once before with ASPD. I initially rejected the idea that I was autistic, protesting that it was just the ASPD, but it became pretty apparent after a major burnout incident that everyone was probably right, so I went over their points, researched the topic, and finally agreed with my diagnosis. Ironically, it ended up as quite the relief as it explained quite a lot not already covered by the ASPD, and I'm doing much better with everything in life as a result now that I better understand the causes behind everything and I know how to accommodate myself now. For the first time ever, I actually feel like I fully understand myself, and the videos from you guys were a HUGE help at everything and proving that I'm not crazy, so thanks for everything and I look forward to see you two all the more going forward. :)
I was diagnosed a few weeks ago. I am 57. I am also in burnout. I was given a workbook to help me get out of burnout and that is what I am focusing on doing right now. My next step will be to try and learn how to unmask.
Thank you for the video. I am a 54-year-old male with ASD level 2, ADHD-I, GAD, and MDD. Diagnosed nearly two years ago, my situation has been similar to what you described in your video. As a Lead Server Engineer at a major bank for over 29 years, your video has helped me realize that I can't continue at this pace. I need to make career changes to find happiness again. I'm exhausted, but I won't just quit. For now, I plan to slow down as I consider my next steps, which is challenging after such a long tenure.
Thank you for this video. I was diagnosed just over a year ago and and feel like I am at a very low stage right now where I am struggling to accept how little I can do and feeling pretty useless. I seem to become overwhelmed so quickly these days. This video has given me hope.x
Thank you for this! Sometimes it is hard to be patient with myself and it all gets overwhelming. I like what you said about learning to play the cards you've been given so you can play the game better. I see this as a better strategy than focusing on how I can't figure out how to be "normal." :)
Chris, this is beautiful. Its been almost 5 years post dx for me, but I feel like there are some key themes that seem to be fairly universal. That whole finding out thats how you operate, and reanalyzing your past through that new lense... Its a wild ride. Ive still not quite figured out what to do going forward... And still taking it one day at a time, until then... I mean ive been punting for years, so whats new...😅
You nailed it! All of it. And the Autistic Survival Guide To Therapy book you kept holding up is literally beside my while I watch this video. For me the incessant ruminating that I do about whatever topic is top of mind in that moment is excruciating! You touched on that, but could you maybe devote a whole video on that issue?
Chris (and Debby!), I really love this video! I sensed such an impactful vulnerability in your voice in this one, Chris, that resonated in my spirit as well as with my experience ( I self-identified following the first instance of burnout I ever experienced, and I didn't have the language until months after leaving mt FTE role, back in July of this year and I am now meandering the challenging space-non-space that is Adult ASD support. It's been a similar emotional ride for me as you described in this video, and it is so helpful to see someone walk out the process and demonstrate "the other side" is alright. Love your content! Been watching along my own newly embarked on lifelong journey of learning and advocacy and learning a lot from your content. Thanks for what you do! I hope you always take care of yourself and each other!
I love these videos! My 11 year old was diagnosed 7 months ago as AUDHD after struggling for about a year with what we know now as meltdowns. We watch them together so we both have an understanding and it opens conversations so I’m able to better understand how his brain works. I work closely with foster youth who are diagnosed with autism and I’ve been suggested this channel to foster parents for a better understanding as well ❤
"Why dwell on what you can't do, especially if you've already tried" this is the thought that's been helping me accept myself the most. I know I've tried really really hard to be "normal", and while it has helped me improve my coping creation skills, constantly thinking of myself as "faulty" has been very difficult and damaging. Self-acceptance and self-kindness are key to a good life. Thank you for the video.
I'm currently five months post-diagnosis (ASD level 1 and inattentive ADHD). So far the biggest realisation I've had is that when I was diagnosed with social anxiety disorder back in 2007, it was likely a misdiagnosis. I know that it's possible to be diagnosed with both social anxiety and autism, but I've since figured out that nearly everything that could be explained by an anxiety disorder is better explained as autism. But because I'm AFAB and because autism is still largely seen as something only AMAB people can be diagnosed with, it was easier to diagnose/dismiss me as anxious. 😕
As you can guess, diagnosed autistic and ADHD earlier this year at 52. My eldest daughter started me on the journey - but I feel that while it explains many things and has helped me to be a bit healthier, I also feel that it hasn't fundamentally changed me (at least not yet - it has been 6 months). I am only "level 1" and very high masking (yes, full FCAS Actuary here (US)) - but I feel like I have always known myself well - if that makes sense. I do intend to start making my own content soon - with three daughters 13, 16, 19 it is kinda busy in the house. But I am thankful for the other autistic creators on youtube as I have learned alot from you guys. Anyway, gotta run to the food store. That all being said, I do wonder at times if I have masked for so long and so well if I know where the mask ends and I begin? Or is the mask also me? I go back to that Billi Joel song about "The Stranger" - and its references to masks and how much do you ever really know yourself. I will say that I am in an industry and company that is very supportive.
I just started on my diagnosis journey (had my first meeting this morning) and I am both nervous and excited. We'll see where things go from here. Thank you for your honest videos. They have helped in the past couple of months of waiting for this first meeting to know that I am not alone looking for a diagnosis later in life.
Thank you, Chris! Everything you share is how I feel. I have three kids with Autism they are adults now. ( 5 kids in all) I'm a 66 year old women newly diagnosed a few months ago. My husband is neuro-typical, but like Debbie is really supportive and learning all he can to help me along my journey! All the ways I'm unique is what attracted him to me in the first place. It's like, how did we miss? But it explains a lot of my struggles and why! Your video's and what you share are very relatable.
Chris, holy crow! Now, I often feel like you and Debby hit the nail on the head for me. But you just described something I have been desperately struggling with for months now. Feeling like I'm letting people down, caught in that limbo where nothing is working. A tempo I want to maintain but can't.... I love my job and the various hats I wear. In many ways it's an absolute dream job. However, I cannot 'keep up' with my colleagues in scaling my business for reasons I now believe are autism related. (For example...The amount of task-switching involved with servicing clients grows right along with the number of clients and this is increasingly difficult). This is one of the driving factors that lead to the autism discovery. I wonder if I could ask you HOW you were finally able to decide what you truly needed to back away from, business-wise? And, perhaps, what process(es) you went through to make the choices. I am constantly learning about autism, but it's a lot and I am so afraid I am going to walk away from something I can learn to manage. And whether that will be a full break or maybe just relinquishing certain 'hats' I wear in the agency. Like, I guess I don't know how to figure out what I can learn to do differently and what is simply outside what my autistic brain can manage and still maintain regulation. I want to figure it out.
Thank you, Chris, for candidly sharing this. It made me cry!❤️ And Debbie, being so supportive, also made me cry!❤️ I can relate to this through my self-discovery at 53. I love your positive thought exercise and can relate. I look forward to your videos every week! Thank you❤
Hey, congratulations on 50k subscribers! 🎉 This channel is amazing and people know it 😊 This video was really relatable. For me it's the different emotional stages between diagnosis (realization) and acceptance. But my personal timeline was/is different. Luckily I fast forwarded through the stages of grief and rage. After three, maybe four, it was done. Since then, I'm trying to figure out, who I am and what I am good in. So far, it's the best, scariest, most challenging and most exciting part of the journey. But if there was one thing, I could change about my autism, I'd like to have the skills back, that got lost, during the autistic burnouts.
What hit me with this video is the "You're either going to kill yourself or learn who you are". I'd love to know how you found out who you are. I'm 51 now, been diagnosed for the last 5yrs and am struggling more now than I did before my diagnosis. I have no idea who I am. Plus, I just lost my job. That was my identity and something I was good at. Without a clear sense of identity nor a perceived one, I am struggling to figure out what the use of being around even is. I've been married for over 25yrs now, my wife is amazing. But I can't shake the thought that she's better off alone or with someone else. That leaves me with no reason to be around. So how did you figure that out? I'd love to know.
Thank you so much for this. I'm in the middle of rediscovering myself after getting my diagnosis a couple of weeks ago. The anger over past traumas is really relatable and thanks for the tip on replacing bad images with some new, fun and inspiring ones.
I'm 29 and diagnosed for 2 months but have known for over a year. The hardest part before acknowledging I had autism was the job hopping or getting fired. The hardest part know is acknowledging I have autism while trying not to get fired. I was fired from a teaching postion for many reasons (like leaving my classroom and forgetting my whole class). Now, I can at least put into words why those things happened thanks to channels like yours that help me put into words ehat I haven't been able to my whole life. I walked away from my family because I couldn't take the overstimulation from weekly family get togethers, church and other events. Their criticisms and unwillingness to understand made me criticize myself and become a really good masker, which has ended up destroying me in the long run. At the time, autism hadn't come to mind at all, but even without knowing, I felt like I did the right thing. It's lonely, but it's so much better. Well, at home at least. Going to work is still very anxiety inducing because I make so many mistakes that I'm going to have to disclose my autism and advocate for myself without sounding like I'm using it as an excuse. I also have ADHD and am very forgetful (working memory) which can cause you to be liable when you work at a bank. To end on a positive note, learning about how my brain works have led to discovering strategies that have improved my life and that gives me some hope.
Another great video. While my lived experience has been different, this video still rings true. The things you describe I've seen over and over again, some I've personally experienced, while others are true of family members, friends, and so on. It often seems that experts and content creators focus exclusively on the deficit model of autism - or deny that there are any. It's all disability or all superpower. All famine or feast. To see creators such as yourself, and videos like this one, where we can see both sides, the whole picture, without erasing or dismissing the other half of the picture is a boon. Thank you for being so open, so real, and showing us the whole picture.
Diagnosis is just a beginning step. The true challenge is accepting who you are, who you truly are. I was officially diagnosed in 9th Grade and for years and years I ignored it. I would start a new job, be ostracized and feel angry/jealous/depressed and quit to try again. Obviously its still a work in progress but accepting that I am Autistic and have a disability has helped me come to terms that there is more to life than the ability to stand still looking into a persons eyes and small talking about mundane things for 20 minutes. Socialize with people you care about, people who care about you, and things you care about.
In your videos one can really see that you are a very talented teacher. And in this one it was really helpful to see the struggle and steps out of it. Now I would like to see Debby’s side of the story (maybe she needs her own channel). So many, maybe all late diagnosed go through that. Thank you for sharing your experience. It gives others hope. Keep up the good work.
I was diagnosed less than a week ago, and I'm feeling a mix of emotions. I'm 31 years old and have always been a very antisocial person. I don't have a social life and I don't really care to have one. Throughout my life, people have been very unpleasant to me, and my husband is everything I need (he's an angel to me). Sometimes I feel relieved to know why I've never fit in, but at the same time, I wonder if I might be faking autism (even though I've seen two professionals who confirmed the diagnosis). I've started respecting my limits and I'm trying to do everything to make myself more comfortable. I bought earbuds to help me minimize discomfort at work (I've been coming home with headaches and nausea every day). It's like I'm starting a new life. Thank you for sharing your experiences and tips 🙏🏼
I'm so much in the grieving phase still. Looking at my job the people I work with and what I do. The theoretical potential for the remaining twenty years of my career. Balanced against a realistic awareness that I maybe can't do that stuff. There is other options and I'm trying to reimagine a future that is sustainable for me. It's hard of course.
Thank you so much for your videos, diagnosed at the age of 42, it's been a journey and your videos have really helped, especially with having my experiences validated. I'm still learning about my Autistic self. I've had a life of mental health challenges and I'm finally getting some answers. Keep up the amazing work.
The mess of emotions, especially the anger and frustration, and suddenly beginning to understand the Autistic burnout, it's all overwhelming and interesting at the same time
I'm pretty sure I'm right in the middle of hopelessness. And I'm desparately trying to still fix things, live up to these standards that I've had for myself, and the desperation of not reaching those ideals. This is such an aptly time video. I just don't know how to get myself out of this. I'm feeling so burnt out.
If you're late diagnosed, recently diagnosed, or not yet diagnosed - what's your experience? What's worked for you? Share in the comments - it's so helpful for everyone here ⤵️
And here's Part 1: I'm Actually Autistic: My Diagnosis Journey (in case you haven't seen it):
th-cam.com/video/zerlIKPEgTU/w-d-xo.html
The biggest thing for me (46) is the realisation that I'm not a broken person faking it through the world, that it was autism all along.
But the frustration and anger that decades of struggle and suffering could've been avoided/mitigated by knowing I was autistic all along.
Although I also probably wouldn't have done half the crazy stuff I've done. Or maybe I still would've, some of the professional stuff probably not due to the prejudice against autistics.
But the cycles of overachieving and burnout have been amazing/crushing. Trying to move into something more sustainable now.
18 and overall I can say Switzerland has a failed healthcare system
I'm 41 and diagnosed with autism and AD(H)D for 3 years now and I've been going through this rollercoaster ever since. It helped a lot that I got this diagnose due to the knowledge that everything I was having issues with had a reason other then me being bad at things, but at the same time it's hard as hell to easing up to myself and accept that I am who I am and that this is oke. I am not Superman and can't do everything right, but I'm oke and should be mentally oke with what I do good. This is the part that I'm struggling the most with even though I did accept myself as I am, I'm still too hard on myself when I fail at things or need to take a step back
It has... allowed me to be kinder to myself - to no longer mask at all times; to actually invest in smoked glasses in order to help with my sensitivity to light - I am much less inclined to try and punish or chastise myself for not being normal. Even though I still have a lot of unlearning to do in that regard.
I’m in the sadness stage. Feeling hopeless.
"People were the biggest issue for me" - for real. And yet, people are the reason I stick around.
I am 68 years old and just got my diagnosis this week. I am so relieved because it explains what I have been feeling and experiencing for years. I have begun to forgive myself for not accomplishing what I was so perfectly educated to do. Your videos have helped me in my journey.
Good luck on your journey. Mine started officially at 64. Glad you discovered this channel. Hearing the experiences of others has been a great help to me.
I’m 71 and just realized my autism about 4 months ago, did all of the tests, researched everything I can find (my new special interest)…and have been journaling and reflecting on my experiences. I live in the US and I’m retired so not sure it makes sense financially for me to be officially diagnosed. Putting that off for now. I have 4 of my 6 children and their spouses currently diagnosed or working through the process, and I believe some of the grandchildren will be, too.. Maybe as they go through the process they can advise me as to what I would benefit from a formal diagnosis. At any rate, I’m just in the state of relief right now to understand who I am and why I have experienced the problems that I have.
@@BirdKat5324 I'm so sorry that all of you had to go through life for so long with this condition undiagnosed. You have my sympathies, for what little sympathies from a complete stranger online can give.
Diagnosed last year at 59! Ditto!
67 here just found out
As an entirely ASD individual, I almost feel as if Chris and some other AuDHD content creators are able to be interpreters and bridges between the ASD community and NTs, in much the same way that a hearing adult child of two deaf parents who is truly fluent in ASL, is able to fulfill that role between the deaf and hearing communities. They may not have the same experience of the world as their deaf parents, but do have far, far more genuine understanding of their “lived experience” than any other hearing person, and can effectively bridge the gap in a truly unique way.
Thank you, Chris and Debbie🥰
Thank you - this is so flattering! I agree that we can't speak for all autistic experiences, but our goal is definitely to help bridge that gap. It also helps me a lot to hear the experiences of other people in this community since my late diagnosis means I'm still learning what it means to be autistic too. I appreciate you being part of that 😍
This reply really resonates with me.
As the most high masking in my family growing up and now as a grownup I feel very often like the translator! This comment really resonated. And I agree. I'm so grateful there are people who can translate and put into words all of these experiences and explain them to both sides of the brain experience! Thank you!
Giving everybody here a heartfelt hug.
Hugs back!!! 🫂
My autism diagnosis at 39 has been aided in the last year by your videos. It was devastating for me to realize how little people cared about how hard my life is/was. Now I am calm, but mostly by myself because neurotypicals have caused me SO much harm and just don't care.
Thank you. It's nice to not feel alone. I am trying not to feel irrelevant in the world, but it is hard.
I relate so much. Family were the worst support. I am glad for this little community we can be ourselves in.
I’m sorry it’s been so tough for you. Hopefully knowing more can help you connect with some better people who can understand and support you for who you are - starting with our little community here. I get the frustration you’re describing too. It’s hard to look back and not feel frustrated or angry but it’s so good you’re accepting things for yourself first. One step at a time…
Yes, I find the lack of interest in my struggles and autism as a whole to be extremely deflating. I'm sorry you have been through so much hurt.
I understand how you feel. I was diagnosed at the age of 39 too in 2023. I’m still processing so much about my life.
I feel ya. I'm trying not to get angry about it, because I know it's ignorance that cause NTs to act towards me the way they have.
And I do find it odd, that many of those who were closest to me seem to have the biggest problem with my diagnosis, and surprisingly some who I thought would be the most rejectful, has been the most supportive, as I've started to let people know that I'm autistic. They have accepted my peculiarities, even accommodate for some of it, like light settings.
The other night one of these acquaintances stood up for me, backing me helping to explain that this is what Toby likes and do not like, he's not being rude. And the trouble stopped there, whilst before it would have lead to an argument, or physical fight even. It felt extremely nice to not only be understood, but defended.
And the ones that hasn't got it, or do not want to, I avoid as much as I can. Strangely, I suspect some of them to actually be non-diagnosed neurodivergent. Cognitive dissonance perhaps on their part. Bless.
Look after yourself. And don't forget you're not alone, not only are we here, but you'll find people like yourself - try to seek peers. It's really nice once it happens as there's no need for masking, just be yourself. I meet a Aut friend a few times a week. It's bl8ss. He puts up with my oddities, like walking away when I get bored, and I've had to adapt to him by be careful with touching him. It's a great learning process. And I think it's made us both happier. When we get socially tired of each other we're open about it. We've got rules about how to communicate, like no calls, and no stress of messaging back etc. It's not always a dialogue. We each take turns talking about what interest us individually. Sometimes it overlaps, sometimes not, but we both often ask questions to learn more. He's not good with math, I am. He's got a fantastic memory, I do not. He knows names, I know faces, which helps when other people talk to us. I guess it's a bit if a bromance lol
But I've also met anautistic women who loves music just like me. Sadly, she's not as social. But it's cool. We message about stuff. Sometimes it takes a few months for a reply, but that's cool.
Thank you. I'm AUDHD and was raised by a narcissist. A parent is supposed to learn who their child is. It's not the child's responsibility to tell them. And she never bothered. When I was having a meltdown, or even just an emotion, she'd just scream at me and mock me. She's incapable of realizing, "Whoa, my son is having trouble, there has to be something to help." Instead I was a problem that was just in her way. So thank you for the idea of creating good images. I'm going to try that. And...trying to find a therapist is so f*cking hard. So hard. I want one that has AUDHD, because they'll _know_ exactly where I'm coming from. If I find one that works for me, their schedule doesn't work with mine. Or they don't take my insurance. Or they only work with women. It's exhausting. Thanks again. I'm looking forward to the next one.
Jay, I'm 75 and just diagnosed AuDHD last month and I was raised by a very troubled parent, too. Watch out for the idea that someone needs to be in your exact shoes to understand. If they take your insurance, that's a near miracle in itself and a fine enough place to start. Its actually within support groups you might find someone with a somewhat similar background, not with therapists. After all, they don't need to perfectly understand you but only provide you the tools and put you on the path to understand yourself better.
I always feel like an elder here, at 74. First inkling -- hearing about Sensory Defensive Disorder in my mid-50s, for which I have compensated with sunglasses, loose comfortable clothes and bedding, etc. Then ~5 years ago, reading on Facebook about my nephew's struggles, I realized that he and I shared some autistic traits. That made me start researching (one of my special interests, and the talent that kept me employed at the same job for 20 years). About a year ago, I said something about autism to my trauma-specialist therapist of 20 years, and he already knew. I took all the on-line tests. So it was a slow burn for me to get to self-diagnosis, but reassessing my entire life, looking at my parents and siblings through a different lens, getting new realizations daily is a trip. Fortunately I didn't have any anger and not too much grief (so far), and acceptance wasn't too bad, but unmasking -- it's just happening, I have no control over it, and I feel like I don't know who I am anymore. My therapist keeps me grounded by reminding me that my basic values and my lifelong interests have not changed. That tidbit might be useful??
I always wondered about my own Audio Processing Disorder and why the fuck did I say "huh" so much. My God, even I got on my own nerves. I'm also audio hypersensitive and I've begun to use a unique earplug product called "loop". They;ve helped so much and my point is, until I knew what was the issue - my processing wires didn't touch - I just stood and dealt and so much angst and frustration could have been avoided for years. I experienced some anger and some grief for the years I felt I had lost. Especially academically. I knew I was "smart" but because I didn't learn traditionally, I had difficulty in school and then at 37, to discover that my "math stupidity" was actually dyscalculia, blew my mind. Like, this is a real thing!!! Math anxiety??? who knew. I'll tell who didn't..my teachers, counselors, parents and me. I felt broken forever. And the irony - to end up in a successful career in finance!!! I showed them. I mastered the calculator ;) us.loopearplugs.com/pages/homepage-lp1?gadid=647946549327&cq_src=google_ads&cq_cmp=19674497232&cq_con=145314081359&cq_term=loop%20earplugs&cq_med=&cq_plac=&cq_net=g&cq_plt=gp&gad_source=1&gclid=Cj0KCQiArby5BhCDARIsAIJvjITB7_cFU4UhBOhXLOK386wXt9GRCLGhYX_DSoij6OCywQegA_X22lAaAhHJEALw_wcB
same here, 56 years old
73 here and looking for a doctor who believes me + will help me. I'm ready for a change.
I'm a late-diagnosed therapist, and I'll be showing this video to my clients! I was diagnosed at 43 by a therapist I'd been seeing for years. It was 5 years after the DSM changed the definition of autism, but it wasn't work that gave me the final clue. My brother had been searching the internet for solutions to his social issues at work and found a book about Asperger's in the workplace that was actually helpful. Autism explained much about my brother, my father, my nephew, and myself. I spent a couple of years learning to understand and care for myself before I started diagnosing and treating others with autism. Now most of my clients are adults with autism and/or ADHD, and I love my work! I've learned that I need to take a break between each client, instead of seeing one right after the other and wondering why I was so exhausted and irritable. I'm careful to identify when I'm holding myself to neurotypical standards. I've learned to focus on what I do well and seek work that allows me to bring that out. Right now I'm creating a Psychology Today profile, so that others exploring their neurodiversity can find me and have a therapist who can really empathize with their journey!
Where are you located?
This is amazing!! And thank you for sharing with your community - but even more so, for being a great advocate for this community AND being a great example of a therapist who cares and is supportive. The autistic community NEEDS more people like you! Also sounds like you’re learning great adjustments for yourself too - and really interesting to read your story. Similar to me not recognizing the similarities when I was working with neurodivergent students too - I think sometimes people who have adhd or autism struggle with self observing. So really helps to have access to supportive therapists who care about their clients 😊
@@kathleenoshea4286 I'm licensed in Arkansas
I’m 61 and at this point self diagnosed. My husband is supportive which is wonderful. I was surprised at the response a very close friend; when I shared my thoughts with her, she said that that was impossible because I’m too empathetic. I also shared my insight with my therapist, and she totally invalidated me without even asking any questions about why I felt that way. I’ve taken the surveys and made sure that I was utilizing the correct surveys. They all put me clearly on the spectrum. I would love to have a true diagnosis, but insurance has been horrible for me and I know it’s expensive to get a diagnosis anyway. I have stiff person syndrome and had to take LOA. It was during that time that I was able to take a breather and look into my situation and that’s when I realized that I am most likely autistic. It has been a roller coaster ride; at first I was very convinced, and then not so much after being invalidated. Whenever I researched autism, I felt like I had to do it in hiding. Some days I feel like “this is me” and other days I feel like I’m making it up. One thing that really helped was a nurse making a comment that maybe I was autistic and I had not brought up the topic to her at all. She was a nurse that sat with me throughout the day for five days while I had infusions for my stiff person syndrome. I was so surprised when she mentioned autism and my reaction startled her. She thought I was mad at her comment, but I was so glad that someone noticed something without prior knowledge of my history or personality. I feel like I’m rambling because there is just so much to get through. This video really helped me to see that the ups and downs are expected, even when you have a real diagnosis. Thank you for that insight.
I dropped one of my friends because she laughed at me. She said I was always diagnosing myself with something. Six months before I thought I had borderline personality disorder. Turns out psychologists are always making the misdiagnosis of autism as borderline. Like your therapist, she never asked why I thought that.
empathy is overrated. people confuse it with compassion, which is the actual act of being sympathetically kind. some of the most empathetic people couldn't care less about being kind. as for apparently being able to 'read' people's emotions, if you have to use logic instead of instinct, that's neurodivergent.
Wow, I cannot believe this video came out today. I am a mess!!!!!!!😩, I was diagnosed autistic at the end of September and am going through exactly what you have said in this video. I have totally lost my way after the initial relief and happiness at a diagnosis. I am seeing my doctor next week to get some anti-depressents. I have had a bad year, I lost my dad to cancer, one of my close friends died and now my diagnosis. I am burnt out, overwhelmed and struggling big time. I am so grateful to have watched this video as it explains so much of how I feel. Thank you so much. I do have support and am also doing a follow up course with the diagnostic team so just got to hang in there. 🙏🤞
I’m sorry that you’ve had a tough year. Geez… when it rains it pours. Sounds like you’re brave and doing what you have to do to inch forward. As big of a struggle as life is for you right now, it will get better. Sometimes it feels like a bit of a roller coaster ride at times, but it always smooths out long enough for us to catch our breath. I’m really glad that you have support through this time. That’s so important. Keep your head up and thanks for being here 🤗🤗
@@ChrisandDebby Thank you for your kind words.
Hang in there! That’s a lot for 1 year. 🙏
@@jangriffith7693 Thank you.🙏
@sarahb2652 I can almost promise you that you are going to come out the other side of this learning what YOU need to do that works for you and you're already here seeking tips and tools and encouragement. You won't BELIEVE the community of us that exist and it still makes me teary eyed after feeling alone for so long. Don't get me wrong, there are going to be sucky, sucky periods, but you're doing the work to understand what yours look like and how to navigate this NT world. You are not broken, you're not too sensitive, you're not a 'flake' (or, insert common adj here), you're not too little or too much of anything. You are YOU and that's the best you can do! (thanks Dr. Suess) but it's actually true. You are good enough and you have more support than you know. Figure out what works for you and do more of that :)
I needed this right now. I’ve been going through the frustration of accepting what I can realistically do vs what I used to do. It’s hard and it helps so much to know that I’m not alone in my feelings.
This has been my experience, too. So much grieving and resentment, and I found out I'm autistic in the midst of a very long burnout that I'm still not out of yet. It's so exhausting every day. I need a Debbie, too. 😭😭😭
I think everyone needs a Debbie! ❤
@@CricketGirrl I agree
I feel this video very strongly. Debbie is a saint compared to what I faced. If I had to place it, I'm at the 5 minutes past the honeymoon phase and wallowing in the bottom of the next curve at a new job, new living space, freshly separated from my wife (not a Debbie), and up against a wall for a cybersecurity exam in a few days. Work is worlds out of my comfort zone, and I'm distinctly unincluded by my coworkers. The anger about the past hit last night along with thoughts of self harm that I rode out and made it through . . . and I think that I'm currently in the position that you were in, where you realize that the work environment isn't sustainable anymore. Because of your video showing me that I don't have to force myself through that, I'm going to actively seek change instead of facing inevitable burn out and anguish.
Keep making content. You're saving lives.
I'm going through a divorce right now because of the same. The change is hard. But it also gives me hope. Instead of being my best friend as I thought we were, she turned out to be my worst bully, ever. Who needs bullies. Better of without her. X
And I've also had to rethink where I live, and my job. It's a lot of changes all at once. But one day at a time...
@21stcenturypirate18 amen
This is very helpful, getting a late diagnosis, 60 yo, amidst a wicked mother of all burnouts can be a very very lonely place. Thank you for alleviating this.
I'm 54 and diagnosed several years ago with the ADHD piece and later with the ASD. I am in a year long burnout but having trouble climbing out. Please understand that hormones play a large part in this also. In earlier years, I had hormone cycled migraines, anxiety PMSDD and this makes total sense to me, but the coping mechanisms are hard to find.
Good luck and I know you'll do you just fine.
I understand having multiple disabilities, I have seizures/epilepsy and ADHD. I also have to keep moving my hands around I just don't know why. My gf has been autistic since she was little. We've known each other since kindergarten. I don't know if I saying it right I've never been able to say stuff or explain stuff good so please don't get mad.
Good job explaining. Totally understand
I think you talk about flapping hands. It's used to regulate the nervous system.
I'm sending you ❤ from Spain.
Thanks for sharing this - and we can understand too. And you're always welcome to share your experiences here - we appreciate hearing and learning from everyone
@@consuelonavarrohidalgo5334 thank you
@@ChrisandDebby what's bad sometimes when I'm trying to explain stuff to my dad or answer him if I don't answer quick enough I get yelled at sometime my brain will just go blank or be like its going 100mph plus. He sometimes just doesn't give me enough time to think sometimes.
To the once with itchy skin: a therapist once bought me a good lotion and told me, that everytime my skin starts to itch, I should be aware of it and remember it. Then take the lotion (whenever it is possible but at the same day) and while applying it to the itchy spots I should ask myself: "where did someone or did I cross my boundarys?" because skin is the barrier of our body and problems with it can be signs of crossing our barriers/boundaries.
I loved that. She was the best.
Many of us also have food allergies or celiac or food sensitivities: those can make you itchy too! So remember it can be something that you ate.
This feels so much like what I'm going though (currently early 40's). I'm currently in the middle of the sort of crisis explained in the first 5 minutes or so. Everything is overwhelming and I don't really know what to make of it. And yeah, I'm reflecting a lot, and thinking back on all the awful things that happened growing up, and how my family never could handle me.
I tried therapy again just two days ago. I was so excited, armed with actual WORDS that I could use to finally articulate what's going on in my head. But it went spectacularly awful. I felt so uncomfortable with how little the therapist was interested in what *I* wanted to say, that I thanked them and left the tele-health 15 minutes in.
And I'm also uncertain. I've been diagnosed with ADHD for years, but always felt like a lot of ASD symptoms fit me. So I went for diagnostic testing. They confirmed the ADHD diagnosis, and said that I tested well into whatever range would qualify as ASD for that test, but he refused to issue a diagnosis, saying I had past family trauma that may be confusing me. So.. I would have had ASD, but because my mother is awful, I actually don't? This was a huge opportunity to feel validated, and understand why I feel like I do, and they couldn't give me that.
The perspective of not focusing on deficits and rather reworking that energy into optimising natural abilities (and possibly even enjoying the process) was a massive light bulb moment for me. One can know things without a deeper understanding of how to implement it into one's life, which was the case for me. However, hearing your story and feeling my own reflection in your words opened a door I didn't even know I had shut. Sorry for the gushiness, but I just want to sincerely say thank you, Chris.
This hits hard. Got diagnosed at 37 a month ago. After years having a diagnose of shizotypical personality disorder, people being scared of me because of the stigma on it. Now all of a sudden it makes more sense and no extreme negative stigma.. in my eyes at least. (i will always fight to get rid off the stigmas, whatever diagnoses). My mom always knew and fought for recognition. Also still have revisiting depressions wich dont make it much easier. Having an identity crisis. Thanks for this video, i feel a lot of it what you tell. Feel less alone, and I hope with me a lot of people in the same situations. Dont know if this comment makes sense but it does to me lol. Great work, thnx for all ur videos, you help so much, hope you know that!
Ngl, had a little cry watching this. I'm experiencing a lot of the bad shit rn, especially the bad dreams, and it's nice to know that it's not just me
Bad dreams are horrible. Sometimes mine were so bad they ruined my morning. But.....things can definitely get better if you work at it. Spend time thinking about something or someone special before you go to bed. I try to get as specific as I can and just force my brain to keep thinking about it.
@@ChrisandDebby Thank you
I have had issues with these too, and I also get sleep paralysis at times, moreso when I'm chronically stressed so they kind of meld together.
Gotten a lot better at setting up a good environment to help myself get good sleep though
I neeeeeed a Debbie!! ❤😢😊
Same. I was thinking how much I just want a Debbie, not have to be my own Debbie... dammit.
Me too!! 😂
Maybe sell them in your shop... for everybody here...just joking. 😅
Chris, thank you so much for sharing.
I'm 68 and am on a waiting list to be diagnosed with autism. Started looking into this four months ago when I caught myself "flapping my hands" when I was excited about something. Then I remembered that a friend who has an autistic brother asked me some years ago if I was autistic. Of course, I had said, "No!" After all, autistic people are those boys who can't talk and who flap their hands, right? Wait... Flap their hands??
Took online tests, and they all put me in the "autistic" range. Started watching videos and reading articles. I sure do have SO MANY of the symptoms that people share! (I currently have over 400 websites bookmarked on various topics concerning autism.)
Checked my baby book for clues of autism in childhood. I seemed to be a happy child, and there didn't seem to be any clues of autism, except that Mom had written that I turned my eyes away and made funny faces. Was that an autistic turning away of the eyes? There were other things that MIGHT HAVE BEEN clues of autism, but we'll never really know, I guess.
I've shed tears over the possibility of being autistic. (Can't get myself to say that I definitely am until I get the diagnosis.) I don't want to be autistic, but I sure do want to keep my so-called "special abilities"! I haven't been able to socialize for three months, and by "socialize", I mean get together with someone one-on-one.
I'm coming out of this phase. This isn't consuming my days like it was for three solid months. Have told some people that I might be autistic, and it turns out that everyone (but one person) either has ADHD themselves or else they have a relative who is autistic. It's the "other" people--the "allistics"--like my sisters, who I'm having trouble sharing this with. Am waiting to be diagnosed first before sharing with them.
I did share it with my neurotypical boyfriend, and he doesn't understand it at all. I've had meltdowns with him but didn't know why. Now I have a name for it, can explain it, and can even recognize when a meltdown is coming and maybe know what to do about it, but he has backed off. I'm pretty sure the relationship is over. It's just hard reading the cues, but he isn't calling me like he used to. (He also has a cold right now and isn't feeling well, but I think I don't want to pursue this any more with him. I need someone who is willing to work with me on this.)
Chris, I want to thank you for sharing this part of your life with us. It really is helpful. God bless you and Debby.
I'm in my 40s and recently have self identified as austistic. It explains a lot of my experiences and that I have been in autistic burnout for the past few years. When I came to the conclusion that I'm autistic after many hours of research and self testing, I thought it would get better. Instead, it's gotten more difficult just to get through each day. Thank you for your video. I will do my best to keep moving forward, even though it will be an excruciatingly slow process.
I don't have a diagnosis, but when I had my "aha moment" and realized I was most likely autistic, it was a similar experience.
I have always loved playing in the symphony, because that's one place where they literally give you a detailed script of how to participate. In other areas of life, it was (is) like being in a rehearsal where everyone has the music except for me - I have to peek over other people's shoulders and try to wing it. And although I've gotten relatively good at this over the years, it takes a lot more effort that way, so *of course* I get overwhelmed or worn out easily.
I really resonate with your experience of having to admit that you can't keep doing everything you had been, having to admit your limitations, and slowing things down. It sucks. But I finally decided that people would rather I do less and do it fully, enjoying my life, than do more and half-ass it while being constantly on the brink of collapse. Hopefully you have come to the same conclusion.
Hi Chris, I am going through my official diagnosis. Autism, OCD and Alexithymia. I am in the anger phase. Feels like my life was a lie. I was forced to mask for years. Until I really started to look at your videos and a few others, I connected the dots and went for my journey to a diagnosis. So much of what you say resonates with me. It brings comfort, especially in the phase I am in now.
Brilliant so relatable...I was only thinking the other day that I feel like I am living someone else's life when in fact I'm starting to learn what it is to be the real autistic me...
Ohhh Chris. So much of this resonates with me. I'm still in the long wait for the assessment, but it's definitely AuDHD, and holy cow have there been big emotions. And big emotions with emotional dysregulation and probably alexthymia is SO FUN (no. No it really sucks.) And the anger and relief and depression and fear and grasping for ANY return to normalcy... This entire year so far has been part of the process. It's exhausting and incredibly lonely and I know I won't ever fully be back to where I was, but I want my life back.
I have not been diagnosed and don't see the need at 64 years old but watching these and other videos, reading forums of women with autism has me convinced that this is me. A diagnosis would have benefited me when I was much younger maybe 20s or earlier but at that time I'm sure it wouldn't have happened. When I look back things fall into place. Ironically at age 40 I had gut problems and finally got help from a naturopathic doctor who specialized in autistic children, helping with gut issues. He liked that I was an adult that can give him different feedback that the kids had difficulty explaining. He was treating me and getting the same results that he did with his kids - ding! Of course we never thought of me as having autism. Now that I'm retired I've delved into this (my typical, nerdy, uber focused) research, I'm self diagnosing! My life would have been so different if I was born when diagnosing was even an option for me.
Thanks so much for your work! I just got diagnosed and I am super high masking. My brother is also autistic, but yet undiagnosed, and has a lot of sui*idal ideation. I am now trying to figure my problems out while communicating my wins to him to normalize the topic. He often has huge acute problems with emotion regulation , but I think we can manage to make his life worth living again in the long run. I love him and want him to survive the difficult times. Through supporting myself I can support him as well (as much as he allows me to - of course). He is not a burden and never will be. He is my precious brother and I want him to live his life on his terms as he enjoys it. ❤
He's lucky to have you to support him ❤️
Have you both learned about autistic burnout? You might need some professional support (if it's possible) but learning about autistic burnout would help you have a better idea of what he might be going through. Of course, we can't diagnose or guess at that, but when I was in my darkest times, I later learned it was autistic burnout. And it really feels completely awful... and hopeless. But he can get through it, especially with support. We have one video about burnout but we are working on a lot more coming in a few weeks
Here's the video about burnout: th-cam.com/video/Ih_vTZb8Tmw/w-d-xo.html
Also just want to say - it's hard being in your role as a supporter to your brother, who sounds like he's really struggling. It makes it even more important you also take good care of yourself and get support for you too. But you can get through it together - and it's great you're learning more on how to do this too
Thanks! ❤ Yes, that's definitely a possibility. I've also been in burnout + depression for a few years a few years ago. Your video on burnout is so validating. Finally someone gets it.
Yes, I will look after myself! 😊
Thank you for this. It sums up my experiences nicely.
I was diagnosed at 50. Eleven years ago next month. I also have ADHD, and at the time CPTSD from lots of neglect and bullying as a kid. I wasn't able to understand and accept my autism diagnosis because the CPTSD was constantly poking the autism and ADHD in the ribs stirring things up.
Fortunately, I have been able to work though the CPTSD which calmed things down a lot! This has allowed me to focus in on autism and ADHD so I can learn about myself and get to a place were I actually like myself and accept myself! I am so grateful for the online communities and videos like this. You are right. It is a journey full of ups and downs. I, too, have moments where the frustration about the past rise up, but it passes quickly and it doesn't happen nearly as often now.
I can be proud of the accomplishments I did make despite having undiagnosed autism, ADHD and CPTSD. It's unfortunate that my physical health has suffered so much from decades of chronic, severe stress. There is so much I can't do anymore. I am having to learn new ways to express myself and new ways to make my way in the world. But slowly. So very slowly. I have to give myself lots of time and space to rest too.
The funniest thing has been learning about all the stimming things I used to do (and some I still do) that I didn't even realize were odd or different from the NT experience. I wish I had started a list! LOL
Thank you Chris and Debby!
I'm excited for another show from Chris and Deb! Chris is extremely relatable!
Thanks so much for this! Let me know what you think after watching and whether you can relate to any of this story today 🙂
My goodness... you are describing my experience word by word.... self diagnosed autistic at 65. I am in the process of giving up my career of teaching. Something I dearly loved but ... I realized I simply can't do it anymore. I have to find something else. And it hurts!
TH-cam has helped me immensely. Just learning what it is all about.
My partner clearly has ADHD.... that is a struggle too...adjusting.
I keep reminding myself: No, we are not worse people than before (self) diagnosis. Being yourself more is a good thing. But this year sure is a struggle!
I got tears in my eyes watching this, got my autism diagnos almost a year ago now and I can relate to so much, the relef when I got the diagnos but then the falling apart...I dont think I have been so confused and lost before, but videos like this dose help me understand and put words to what Im experiencing and feeling 😊
Im right now trying to understand and accept my bodys limits and what it needs but its hard when you use to be able to do so much before
It’s a struggle because throughout this period you still try to convince yourself you can push push push and keep up a tempo that wasn’t working…. Living a lifestyle that wasn’t working. Relearning is a confusing process and a difficult one to work through, but you figure out a little bit each day and life gets better. 🤗
I think my son is autistic and possibly my self. I am looking for a way to bring up the subject with him. He's thirty. Any suggestions?
These live conversations are so helpful! Thank you. Hello to all, we are getting there. Keep going on your journey. ❤
Thanks Pam - glad to have you join our live premiere! And yes - we're all getting there, together 🙂
Very similar experience - a full year of feeling unmoored and disoriented as I had to re-think my entire life. I think it gets harder the older you are and the more you have become used to masking. I was identified (not diagnosed because it still could cost me my job) when my daughter was diagnosed, and I've watched both of us go through the adaptation cycle. Masking is a big part of the difference. For my generation, it wasn't a choice. If you wanted to function in society, you masked. After fifty years, the mask starts to become part of you. I developed a whole vocabulary of terms to describe it. My favorite was to say "I think in print, then have to translate into spoken words when I talk." This explained why I had to take time to think when talking, and why my speech was always very formal and structured. Glad my daughter has the freedom not to mask, though honestly every now and then things get tough for her and I can't help thinking "They're not going to get it. You might as well mask up until they go away." (I don't actually say it, of course).
I was diagnosed a few months ago at 51 and I am still on a rollercoaster of grief and self acceptance. I am processing through therapy, friends, and by making music to express all these emotions. Thank you so much for this video! It and the comments here really help me to not feel alone.
To me, it was the most liberating thing to realize what my otherness was. I became free and relaxed. I also hate my memories, but I'm glad to have gotten out of the closet. I told all my friends and family, and lately, even my colleagues, that I'm autistic. They now understand me better, and my colleagues are amazing with regard to my what looks like idiosyncrasies.
This feels like exactly where I am at. I’ve recently discovered that I am more than likely autistic via my doctor and a MH councillor who put me in touch with a local charity that works with neurodiverse people (NEST) but unfortunately I am from the UK where our waiting lists are capped for diagnosis unless I go private which I can’t currently afford. I’ve been lost in feeling like I wouldn’t be stuck if someone had noticed when I was younger and I’ve felt exactly as Chris was saying. I do have a very supportive family and partner but it’s when I’m sat alone on my break at work (like I am currently) or at night when the thoughts creep in telling me I don’t know who I am and I don’t have any form of closure and it’s so intimidating. I’m so thankful for this channel and how much you do and speak out for people like myself. You both are wonderful human beings and thank you for sharing your story and helping me try to navigate my own 💜
I was just diagnosed at 75. My first reaction was "if only I'd known earlier, how different my life could have been!" But it is what it is. And with supportive family and partner and online resources, you have the tools to start moving forward now. Self diagnosis is totally valid if you use all the free tests online, and it needs to suffice as closure for you for quite a while, so tell your doubts to bug off and start focusing instead on learning more about how you can adapt. After all, a neurotypical would never be caught up in wondering if they were really autistic, would they?? Diagnosis only affirmed my self-diagnosis, even though I was plagued with wondering if I could be wrong, which was all entirely wasted energy. "Plagued with self-doubt" should maybe be a criteria for it in the first place as the world has gaslit us for so long!
As a late-diagnosed autistic person, I greatly value your videos.
Our lives are very different, but your experiences really resonate with me.
Diagnosed at 55 and still trying to accept....everything you mentioned is exactly how i feel , thank you for your relatable video's, they are a big help!
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I’m 51 late diagnosed ADHD inattentive and just finished my Psych eval today to test for Autism. I get the results on the 5th of December. Hopefully I’ll get clarity. Thank you for this channel. I love y’all ❤
M 64, clinically diagnosed 3 years ago, although I knew something was up for decades. I went, and still go through, everything in this video. I did go a bit extreme, though. I figured life's an adventure, and I didn't like the one I'd been living so I burned it down. In hindsight, the timing was stupid but I only mildly regret doing it. Don't try this at home. It's reckless unless you don't have social attachments. If I wrote that anywhere except on an ASD page people wouldn't get it at all. Take care, everyone, and do life the way it makes sense to you.
Diagnosed age 61.
Learning ‘hard’ was not the only way to do things.
A couple of years of reframing is refreshing my life.
You have no idea how much I needed this video right now. I’m right where you were at the beginning of the video. I had complete misconceptions of autistic people’s struggles because I saw how severe my cousins that are non verbal are. I’m infuriated right now cause I have family members and an ex girlfriend I dated all through HS that work in therapy. I’ve always just been an asshole and have anger issues and depression according to them. No one believes me because I was smart enough enough as a kid to know that the ADHD medication that they had been giving my other family members were making them worse so I masked to pretend I was “normal”
Now at 41 lost and broken, completely misunderstood and have zero friends. Without my dad‘s support (who happens to be the only one who actually believes autistic) and channels like yours and Orion Kelly I don’t think I’d be here. I was to the point of being ready to just drive my car off a cliff because nothing I ever did was ever good enough for anybody, and nobody likes me for who I am. I’m at the point where I don’t like myself and that’s because I don’t even know who I am and I’m trying to figure this out, I already deal with chronic pain stomach issues all the other things with no health insurance. Realizing I’m autistic and how hard it is to already get a diagnosis I feel completely fucking helpless my stomach bubbling just typing out this text. Thank you for being open and sharing your story because I don’t feel completely lost and alone anymore.
You are an amazing soul Chris, I don’t have words enough to thank you for what you do. 💚🙏🏻
I had similar issues with anger and being treated badly. I am 49 and just in the middle of assessment and the last year has been a rollercoaster ride. I hope you find a way to get through this, joining the autistic community was a massive help for me, maybe it could help you too.
@@nozhki-busha thanks so much. The community has already made me feel more accepted and understood than I ever have in my whole life. I’m so blessed to finally have found my people!
You have such a gift for eloquently putting words to the autistic experience! I was diagnosed 7 months ago and this describes almost exactly what I have been experiencing. I think à lot of my feelings are associated with the deficit-based evaluation process. I had to take my entire life and look at it through a lens of "disability" and that really took a toll. But I had to look at my "deficits" in great detail just to get a diagnosis. That left me feeling really down on myself, incapable, profoundly disabled.
I am learning, though, how great a difference small adjustments can make: allowing myself to take breaks, not committing myself to too many opposing tasks that require switching my brain (for lack of a better term), limiting social interactions, ignoring phone calls and replying by text... These have made a huge impact.
I have also seen how my health is improving: far fewer headaches, better blood pressure readings, and greater patience and understanding from my providers. I feel like I'm finally being heard now that I feel like it's okay to ask for clarification!
Thank you for all you do to make others feel understood and in good company. We are all still learning. And we were meant for so much more!
Just diagnosed yesterday at 21. I just feel so lost and alone. Thank you for all of your videos. They have been so supportive throughout my entire autism journey. 🙏
I thank you for this video. I just turned 40 and I am possibly on the cusp of my ADHD and ASD diagnosis. I already have a bunch of trauma from childhood and I’m trying to find mental health help for that too. I’m glad that I know that the road ahead may be tough. It is invaluable, thank you.
Even before my diagnosis, I accumulated over a dozen different hobbies which I exercise with a passion. And I still do. I think it keeps my brain from remembering the bad stuff as it's kept busy with cool and interesting topics. So I was quite able to just continue as before. Just with an additional explainer what my brain is doing and why some situations are awkward.
Also my whole life I was privileged to have friends and family being very understanding. Even at the job.
So the environment where and how you live gives a lot input to how you are going to feel after diagnosis.
Yes yes and yes ,this is so relatable and extremely helpful, im coming up to 63 and got my diagnosis in January because in the uk the waiting time is so long id somehow imagined that once i got a diagnosis suddenly life would get better, everyone would understand me and learn about autism, and in truth things feel worse, im learning to understand myself better, so i wouldn't change things but i really understand the feelings of anger and grief ,thank you for explaining it so eloquently, its good to know these feeling are normal and there is light at the end of the tunnel.
Thank you. This gave me chills because it's exactly how I am feeling. I am at the rage at every one in my past stage. knowing there is something past this point is very helpful.
Thank you. I am going through what I guess is the second part you described (the anger that I'm this way and wishing I wasn't).
It's been two years since my diagnosis at age 33. It's been... Rough. Mostly because I still have this expectation of being better. Being fixed back to normal.
Furthermore, I haven't found a great representation of my experience. Everything I've read about people getting diagnosed has been represented as positive.
You are the first person I have encountered who has talked about the negative side. And honestly, you made me cry. It was like finding a mirror.
So thank you.
You are very lucky you have met your wife Debbie, sounds like she is compassionate, accepting, and willing to gain understanding of someone as different to everybody else as we autistic turn out to be. I hope you tell her that she is great, the best.
I was not as fortunate, and circle of people I knew, and spent time together now and then, some of them I even considered friends, began to shrink, shortly before I received my diagnosis (like you just autism diagnosis at 41, while I suspect to be an AuDHDer), starting with my 10 year together partner, then two of my ‘friends’ turned to be unwilling to accept the new me, because I would ask to meet in a park not in a pub for example, or ask to set a time, and date ahead, I had to let go many other acquaintances too, so now, 4 years after diagnosed, the circle is down to one friend, and 2 buddies, and I am OK with that, it is better for me I do not see anymore those toxic people. No more sponsoring ‘friends’.
Healing continues. Never give up. Except slower now. I decided I will try to get a degree again, this time for real, with a purpose in mind, something I was talked out of doing when I was 20, becoming mathematics teacher, so I’m at second year of BSc Mathematics at OU now, piece a cake, but I am working only 25h a week now, just to pay my bills,
I used to say through my life that profound truth about not giving up, except in a bit humorous way so as not to sound like I am trying to berate them or something. It went: “Never give up, never surrender, it is better to err, than do nothing, to err is still progress, except in a wrong direction :p but stagnancy is death, and it does not matter who pulls the trigger.” Sadly, some of us walk that path to the end.
🦋🦋🦋This came in the right moment. I was getting desperate and hopeless in the process of adjusting. You show me that it can be done and the pain is normal. Having been a caterpillar, coming out of our cocoon and unfolding our butterfly wings can be painful. But so worth it. 🦋🌞🦋🦋🦋
I learned a new term this week, ALEXISOMIA. Basically it's a lack of words for body sensations or an inability to understand a person's own body. Like not knowing when you are hungry, full, thirsty, sleepy, well rested, in pain, if you have a fever, if you are cold, if you are too warm (exception being texture issues with sweat), or any other body sensation. It's separate from Alexithymia since Thymia relates to emotions. So yeah, that was a fun discovery. I'm glad Chris is making these encouraging videos, but I'm hopeful he can have dedicated videos on some of the hypo and hyper sensitivity issue people have and how to relate it back to autism. Like Alexisomia likely has a hyperalexisomia which probably is just hypochondria. But having dedicated videos to isolated symptoms is a good idea. Would help people understand the conditions better.
Dude this is great!! I really appreciate you sharing this. I’d never heard of alexisomia before you mentioned it. I can’t wait to tell my wife (First time I’ll get to beat her to the punch baby!!) I’d love to do a video specifically on hypo and hyper sensitivity issues people with autism experience. I’ll add it to our list of topics.
Thanks a bunch for being here and sharing 🙌
Thank you so much for this.I got my diagnosis a month ago at 67.You have been able to put into words how I have been feeling.The unmasking and trying to discover the authentic me is going to take time.Your videos are greatly appreciated
Thanks for being so real and honest.
Keep moving forward a little bit at a time!!!!
I loved how honest you were about your diagnosis.
Thank you for such an honest video, I’m late diagnosed at 56, it brought so many answer yet so much to walk through, it’s hard but possible. Thank you I feel you have put your finger on so many things.
I was diagnosed at age 37, a dozen years ago, after 5 years of uncertainty. It's an experience that came and went quickly, literally in the middle of a work day, and the therapist (at a public agency) literally had me pegged as soon as I came in through the door. Life went on pretty much as usual, after this point, but now I had more certain info to put on forms & applications, and could confidently tell people that I had the condition. That would eventually lead me to landing a specific job, which I still have, but not for another half-dozen years.
Stupid work and meetings interfering with my personal life, again, so sadly I missed the live :) Looking forward to watching this. I dont have an official diagnosis (yet), but I know I've been going through a lot of identity crisis and looking at my memories with a new lens.
Your description of leaving work that you helped to build up is just *chefs kiss* Spot on for my ecperience as well. Im about to leave my longest tenured position at the end of this year. I got my dx about a year ago for autism. And the year before that, i got my adhd dx. I have learned so much. And since ive begun to learn how to sensitize to *my* needs, i just cant do this pace of anything. Its very hard to relearn everything about me. And how i want to relate to the world. Your channel is great. Thank you both! 🎉 🫶🏻 🛸
This is spot on, thank you and thank you to everyone's comments! 45 and diagnosed last month. Learning how to adjust to a lowered capacity is so difficult (which i was fighting and resisting that i hit burnout hard). Full time work and full time parent is torture.... you can't drop those!
It's been 13 months since I was diagnosed. I was happy with the diagnosis. For the first time in my life I felt like I was complete. All those weird things I experienced growing up, that I was always gaslit when I told people, finally made sense. I haven't felt any resentment towards my parents, or teachers. I always knew I was different, but I simply didn't have the words to communicate it. Now that I know why I feel different it's been rediscovering who I am, and finding better ways to deal with problems. The most challenging parts have been health care, and work. I have to advocate for myself a lot more with the doctors. Sometimes the standard treatments just don't work for me. I see a therapist every week to manage my autism, adhd, depression, and anxiety, as well as the ptsd from constantly being forced into situations that aren't healthy for me. It's been even more difficult with work. My management has been neutral, and usually makes things worse when I meltdown. HR gaslights, marginalizes, and invalidates me whenever I get involved. I have a union that makes sure I'm treated fairly, but at times it's also a struggle to convince them I need help. The push back leaves me second guessing and doubting myself. Despite trying to make things easier on me as well as those I interact with, I still am left feeling guilt and shame any time I have to put myself before their demands. I'm left throwing my hands in the air and doing what I need to for myself, despite any consequences. I also won't apologize for taking care of myself any more than they won't apologize to me when they demand too much. I'm still happy to be autistic, but sometimes the day to day battles are too much.
Fascinating. Our stories are so different. I was clueless that I was autistic and had a good friend (the one who raised my autistic son from age 16 onward) hint to me for several years that I was also autistic. I finally got the hint one day after a meltdown in Lowe's. Mind blown. Suddenly my entire life made sense and I was liberated. No mourning, no anger, no fear ..... nothing negative. Just freedom. I finally had answers and direction. (I did get officially diagnosed when I was 44 - ASD and ADHD.)
I love your channel. I've been mostly commenting with a different YT channel name but I'm not sure I'm going to keep that one so I'm trying to shift my favorites over to my personal account.
Thank you for this. It's the most helpful thing I've read or seen so far. I'm 2 months in. I'm 47. I haven't been able to understand my feelings of anger and disappointment recently. Thank you.
I'm currently waiting for a call back to be able to schedule an official assessment, so I guess at the moment I'm self-diagnosed. And even if it comes back that I really do just have social anxiety, I think this story is still valid and I just have to tell someone.
Overall I get why most of the people in my life would have missed the signs, not knowing what to look for.
I am, however, even more salty than I already was with one of my ex's and his family, now that I suspect myself to be autistic. Even though this whole event happened over 10 years ago.
I took a trip with my ex on spring break one year to meet all of his family and friends, in Portland Oregon (I'm from a rural community myself, so not so many people). They unintentionally set me up for failure from the get go because they thought it would be funny if his family and two best friends rushed past him and group hugged my already stressed out self, and of course I couldn't respond the way that I was feeling cause that would be a bad first impression.
I spent the whole trip feeling on edge from all the socializing we did: meeting the family, going to a market (which I actually did enjoy, and still have some jewelry I bought there), going square dancing (which was a shared interest), having to borrow a skirt from one of his friends because I didn't know dancing was on the itinerary, plus having to learn how to put on a petticoat to go with it (I was not a fan, it was very uncomfortable) I was an overwhelmed nervous wreck the whole week.
I thought I did a lot of good things on the trip that should have endeared me to at least the family, though. When Ex got sick on the trip I took care of him, cleaned the house while everyone else was gone, even cleaned the tin cans the way they said they did for recycling. I made them dinner one night, and even brought homemade banana bread.
When we got home I managed to convince myself that "everyone is too busy focusing on themselves to notice you," and overall felt like the trip went well.
Until, a few months later at the end of the school year, his parents called him to say that no one I met on that trip liked me. They all thought I was rude, and didn't show enough interest in his excitement over the IKEA storage (when really I just felt exhausted). I was emotionally scarred and questioning myself for years after he told me that.
But the main reason I'm trying not to be extra angry with them for all that is because he and his dad were both autistic. If anyone should have been expected to give a girl a little leeway and recognize that some of us need some down time, I feel like it should have been them.
I wish I could go back and be like "you see, I wasn't actually a terrible person."
Also, I ended up getting super sick with whatever he had, and had to catch up on homework between bouts of throwing up. So all in all, not the best week of my life.
oh man im so sorry that happened. but tbh, from hearing that one of my instincts is that 'nobody liked you btw' is too much of a huge cop out to be completely true. they probably had other reasons or circumstances that they were too cowardly to just talk to you about - maybe they just didn't want you two together. i experienced something like this on a smaller scale when i studied a semester abroad at uni, and in the *last week* my house mates took a photo of some mess i'd accidentally left in the kitchen (undiagnosed audhd) and used it to say i was 'never cleaning up and we're sick of doing it for you'. logic dictates that if it was such a problem, they'd have come to me sooner than 7 weeks in. we generally got along before that, but we'd have had other reasons for them not liking me, such as our drastically different world-views and values, and that i wasn't really 'friends' with any of them despite us all being in the same cohort.
Hooray for Debbie helping you out! ✨👍😊
I'm very grateful that you've made this channel and you're helping other people, and I'm grateful to have found your channel as well!
Thank you all the way from northern Minnesota ☺
What you share with us and your wide-reaching perspective have helped me through this phase of adjustment. And how boy, it is an adjustment. Thank you for your insights and support. ✨💖✨
A few days ago, was given the suggestion on your channel, thanks YT. I was diagnosed officially 2 years ago Sept at 57 as autistic. My oldest sister (and also likely 2 others, I had 3 older sisters, yeah, the baby in the family) and a long time good friend suspected I might be autistic as far back as 18-19 years ago, but it took a long time, a PT/temporary job in IT to finally get the diagnosis through DVR, Dept of Vocational Rehab.
After a 4 hour session, it came down to ASD, level 1 with a rule out for ADHD. I was in therapy and the first therapist began an ADHD test, but ended it after about 5 minutes saying it does not appear I have full blown ADHD.
I am not just autistic, but have CRS (congenital rubella syndrome), from being exposed to rubella in the womb, thanks to Mom having caught it during the pregnancy in 1964 during an epidemic of Rubella at that time. Titter was the congenital cataract in my right eye and it marked when I was exposed, which meant Mom likely got it during the 4th week of the first trimester, which is when the fetus is most vulnerable. That is, it could be a deaf/mute, brain dead, or still born. I was obviously not any of those, but was born with total sight loss in my right eye, partial hearing loss (the nerves between inner ear and brain) in the left ear, total hearing loss, outside of bone conduction in my right ear. Was thought to be "retarded" back in the late 60's, now formally diagnosed as having also an intellectual disability (2 deviations lower than my peers). Now autistic, but also gay and have a fetish. Complex feller aint I?
Anyway, as with some of us, I am engaged, can converse easily one on one. Even my primary doctor was surprised about that.
I grew up with a friend who lived across the street from us who had an older brother (about 2 years older than us) who was severely autistic, and in those days, autism was only thought of as severe, can't speak, massive stimming, grunts and pointing to let his mother know what he wanted etc, white, male etc. Anyone else that did not fit that "mold" was left alone to fend for themselves. Now, obviously, we know more than we did then.
Anyway, I have had to navigate through alot of this on my own in getting financial help as getting work is not my forte, and realizing that I may well be dealing with ageism at currently 59. Due to hearing difficulties, I read lips (thanks to the John Tracy Clinic, mail correspondence course back between 1968-1970) between ages 3-5, I can not only read lips but can be rather verbose.
These days, I have through help gotten off of mortgage forbearance, pay my mortgage, most bills, and have EBT (SNAP) for food and do OK, for now.
I can have productive days, then crash for 2 days and have had meltdowns (ask my washing machine as the side of the cabinet is bashed in, trying to get the cabinet to hook up along the bottom with inadequate room and now have a ratchet strap to hold it together)...
I do feel at times I'm not really autistic, but the signs are definitely there so I must be. Fortunately, I was raised in a loving family that loves hugs, having my back tickled, and love the feel of some things (leather especially) but love digging through a pile of plastic buttons. it's the sensory feel I crave. but I have a hard time with perseverance issues, meaning to get away from YT and get onto projects some days, or even to shower.
Anyway glad I stumbled onto this channel.
Ironically, this is very similar to my experience. I was originally diagnosed with ASPD though about ten years ago, I didn't know I was dyslexic until about two years ago, and I only learned I was autistic this year. Fortunately, as I've already been through this once before with ASPD. I initially rejected the idea that I was autistic, protesting that it was just the ASPD, but it became pretty apparent after a major burnout incident that everyone was probably right, so I went over their points, researched the topic, and finally agreed with my diagnosis. Ironically, it ended up as quite the relief as it explained quite a lot not already covered by the ASPD, and I'm doing much better with everything in life as a result now that I better understand the causes behind everything and I know how to accommodate myself now. For the first time ever, I actually feel like I fully understand myself, and the videos from you guys were a HUGE help at everything and proving that I'm not crazy, so thanks for everything and I look forward to see you two all the more going forward. :)
I was diagnosed a few weeks ago. I am 57. I am also in burnout. I was given a workbook to help me get out of burnout and that is what I am focusing on doing right now. My next step will be to try and learn how to unmask.
Thank you for the video. I am a 54-year-old male with ASD level 2, ADHD-I, GAD, and MDD. Diagnosed nearly two years ago, my situation has been similar to what you described in your video. As a Lead Server Engineer at a major bank for over 29 years, your video has helped me realize that I can't continue at this pace. I need to make career changes to find happiness again. I'm exhausted, but I won't just quit. For now, I plan to slow down as I consider my next steps, which is challenging after such a long tenure.
Thank you for this video. I was diagnosed just over a year ago and and feel like I am at a very low stage right now where I am struggling to accept how little I can do and feeling pretty useless. I seem to become overwhelmed so quickly these days. This video has given me hope.x
Thank you for this! Sometimes it is hard to be patient with myself and it all gets overwhelming. I like what you said about learning to play the cards you've been given so you can play the game better. I see this as a better strategy than focusing on how I can't figure out how to be "normal." :)
Chris, this is beautiful. Its been almost 5 years post dx for me, but I feel like there are some key themes that seem to be fairly universal. That whole finding out thats how you operate, and reanalyzing your past through that new lense... Its a wild ride.
Ive still not quite figured out what to do going forward... And still taking it one day at a time, until then... I mean ive been punting for years, so whats new...😅
You nailed it! All of it. And the Autistic Survival Guide To Therapy book you kept holding up is literally beside my while I watch this video. For me the incessant ruminating that I do about whatever topic is top of mind in that moment is excruciating! You touched on that, but could you maybe devote a whole video on that issue?
Chris (and Debby!), I really love this video! I sensed such an impactful vulnerability in your voice in this one, Chris, that resonated in my spirit as well as with my experience ( I self-identified following the first instance of burnout I ever experienced, and I didn't have the language until months after leaving mt FTE role, back in July of this year and I am now meandering the challenging space-non-space that is Adult ASD support. It's been a similar emotional ride for me as you described in this video, and it is so helpful to see someone walk out the process and demonstrate "the other side" is alright. Love your content! Been watching along my own newly embarked on lifelong journey of learning and advocacy and learning a lot from your content. Thanks for what you do! I hope you always take care of yourself and each other!
I love these videos! My 11 year old was diagnosed 7 months ago as AUDHD after struggling for about a year with what we know now as meltdowns. We watch them together so we both have an understanding and it opens conversations so I’m able to better understand how his brain works.
I work closely with foster youth who are diagnosed with autism and I’ve been suggested this channel to foster parents for a better understanding as well ❤
"Why dwell on what you can't do, especially if you've already tried" this is the thought that's been helping me accept myself the most. I know I've tried really really hard to be "normal", and while it has helped me improve my coping creation skills, constantly thinking of myself as "faulty" has been very difficult and damaging. Self-acceptance and self-kindness are key to a good life. Thank you for the video.
I'm currently five months post-diagnosis (ASD level 1 and inattentive ADHD). So far the biggest realisation I've had is that when I was diagnosed with social anxiety disorder back in 2007, it was likely a misdiagnosis. I know that it's possible to be diagnosed with both social anxiety and autism, but I've since figured out that nearly everything that could be explained by an anxiety disorder is better explained as autism. But because I'm AFAB and because autism is still largely seen as something only AMAB people can be diagnosed with, it was easier to diagnose/dismiss me as anxious. 😕
Walking away from a 20 year career was really sad. But I got too burnt out to continue. This is a great summary video of the process, thanks
As you can guess, diagnosed autistic and ADHD earlier this year at 52. My eldest daughter started me on the journey - but I feel that while it explains many things and has helped me to be a bit healthier, I also feel that it hasn't fundamentally changed me (at least not yet - it has been 6 months). I am only "level 1" and very high masking (yes, full FCAS Actuary here (US)) - but I feel like I have always known myself well - if that makes sense. I do intend to start making my own content soon - with three daughters 13, 16, 19 it is kinda busy in the house. But I am thankful for the other autistic creators on youtube as I have learned alot from you guys. Anyway, gotta run to the food store.
That all being said, I do wonder at times if I have masked for so long and so well if I know where the mask ends and I begin? Or is the mask also me? I go back to that Billi Joel song about "The Stranger" - and its references to masks and how much do you ever really know yourself. I will say that I am in an industry and company that is very supportive.
I just started on my diagnosis journey (had my first meeting this morning) and I am both nervous and excited. We'll see where things go from here. Thank you for your honest videos. They have helped in the past couple of months of waiting for this first meeting to know that I am not alone looking for a diagnosis later in life.
Thank you, Chris! Everything you share is how I feel. I have three kids with Autism they are adults now. ( 5 kids in all) I'm a 66 year old women newly diagnosed a few months ago. My husband is neuro-typical, but like Debbie is really supportive and learning all he can to help me along my journey! All the ways I'm unique is what attracted him to me in the first place. It's like, how did we miss? But it explains a lot of my struggles and why! Your video's and what you share are very relatable.
Chris, holy crow! Now, I often feel like you and Debby hit the nail on the head for me. But you just described something I have been desperately struggling with for months now. Feeling like I'm letting people down, caught in that limbo where nothing is working. A tempo I want to maintain but can't.... I love my job and the various hats I wear. In many ways it's an absolute dream job. However, I cannot 'keep up' with my colleagues in scaling my business for reasons I now believe are autism related. (For example...The amount of task-switching involved with servicing clients grows right along with the number of clients and this is increasingly difficult). This is one of the driving factors that lead to the autism discovery. I wonder if I could ask you HOW you were finally able to decide what you truly needed to back away from, business-wise? And, perhaps, what process(es) you went through to make the choices. I am constantly learning about autism, but it's a lot and I am so afraid I am going to walk away from something I can learn to manage. And whether that will be a full break or maybe just relinquishing certain 'hats' I wear in the agency. Like, I guess I don't know how to figure out what I can learn to do differently and what is simply outside what my autistic brain can manage and still maintain regulation. I want to figure it out.
Thank you, Chris, for candidly sharing this. It made me cry!❤️ And Debbie, being so supportive, also made me cry!❤️ I can relate to this through my self-discovery at 53. I love your positive thought exercise and can relate. I look forward to your videos every week! Thank you❤
We’re really happy you’re here. The world feels less overwhelming when we share and help each other 🥰
@@ChrisandDebby❤
Hey, congratulations on 50k subscribers! 🎉 This channel is amazing and people know it 😊
This video was really relatable. For me it's the different emotional stages between diagnosis (realization) and acceptance. But my personal timeline was/is different. Luckily I fast forwarded through the stages of grief and rage. After three, maybe four, it was done.
Since then, I'm trying to figure out, who I am and what I am good in. So far, it's the best, scariest, most challenging and most exciting part of the journey.
But if there was one thing, I could change about my autism, I'd like to have the skills back, that got lost, during the autistic burnouts.
What hit me with this video is the "You're either going to kill yourself or learn who you are". I'd love to know how you found out who you are. I'm 51 now, been diagnosed for the last 5yrs and am struggling more now than I did before my diagnosis. I have no idea who I am. Plus, I just lost my job. That was my identity and something I was good at. Without a clear sense of identity nor a perceived one, I am struggling to figure out what the use of being around even is. I've been married for over 25yrs now, my wife is amazing. But I can't shake the thought that she's better off alone or with someone else. That leaves me with no reason to be around. So how did you figure that out? I'd love to know.
Thank you so much for this. I'm in the middle of rediscovering myself after getting my diagnosis a couple of weeks ago. The anger over past traumas is really relatable and thanks for the tip on replacing bad images with some new, fun and inspiring ones.
I'm 29 and diagnosed for 2 months but have known for over a year. The hardest part before acknowledging I had autism was the job hopping or getting fired. The hardest part know is acknowledging I have autism while trying not to get fired.
I was fired from a teaching postion for many reasons (like leaving my classroom and forgetting my whole class). Now, I can at least put into words why those things happened thanks to channels like yours that help me put into words ehat I haven't been able to my whole life.
I walked away from my family because I couldn't take the overstimulation from weekly family get togethers, church and other events. Their criticisms and unwillingness to understand made me criticize myself and become a really good masker, which has ended up destroying me in the long run. At the time, autism hadn't come to mind at all, but even without knowing, I felt like I did the right thing. It's lonely, but it's so much better. Well, at home at least.
Going to work is still very anxiety inducing because I make so many mistakes that I'm going to have to disclose my autism and advocate for myself without sounding like I'm using it as an excuse. I also have ADHD and am very forgetful (working memory) which can cause you to be liable when you work at a bank.
To end on a positive note, learning about how my brain works have led to discovering strategies that have improved my life and that gives me some hope.
Another great video. While my lived experience has been different, this video still rings true. The things you describe I've seen over and over again, some I've personally experienced, while others are true of family members, friends, and so on.
It often seems that experts and content creators focus exclusively on the deficit model of autism - or deny that there are any. It's all disability or all superpower. All famine or feast. To see creators such as yourself, and videos like this one, where we can see both sides, the whole picture, without erasing or dismissing the other half of the picture is a boon. Thank you for being so open, so real, and showing us the whole picture.
Diagnosis is just a beginning step. The true challenge is accepting who you are, who you truly are. I was officially diagnosed in 9th Grade and for years and years I ignored it. I would start a new job, be ostracized and feel angry/jealous/depressed and quit to try again. Obviously its still a work in progress but accepting that I am Autistic and have a disability has helped me come to terms that there is more to life than the ability to stand still looking into a persons eyes and small talking about mundane things for 20 minutes. Socialize with people you care about, people who care about you, and things you care about.
In your videos one can really see that you are a very talented teacher. And in this one it was really helpful to see the struggle and steps out of it. Now I would like to see Debby’s side of the story (maybe she needs her own channel). So many, maybe all late diagnosed go through that. Thank you for sharing your experience. It gives others hope. Keep up the good work.
I was diagnosed less than a week ago, and I'm feeling a mix of emotions. I'm 31 years old and have always been a very antisocial person. I don't have a social life and I don't really care to have one. Throughout my life, people have been very unpleasant to me, and my husband is everything I need (he's an angel to me). Sometimes I feel relieved to know why I've never fit in, but at the same time, I wonder if I might be faking autism (even though I've seen two professionals who confirmed the diagnosis). I've started respecting my limits and I'm trying to do everything to make myself more comfortable. I bought earbuds to help me minimize discomfort at work (I've been coming home with headaches and nausea every day). It's like I'm starting a new life. Thank you for sharing your experiences and tips 🙏🏼
I'm so much in the grieving phase still. Looking at my job the people I work with and what I do. The theoretical potential for the remaining twenty years of my career. Balanced against a realistic awareness that I maybe can't do that stuff. There is other options and I'm trying to reimagine a future that is sustainable for me. It's hard of course.
I need a Debby! I resonate with this video SO MUCH!!!
Thank you so much for your videos, diagnosed at the age of 42, it's been a journey and your videos have really helped, especially with having my experiences validated. I'm still learning about my Autistic self. I've had a life of mental health challenges and I'm finally getting some answers. Keep up the amazing work.
The mess of emotions, especially the anger and frustration, and suddenly beginning to understand the Autistic burnout, it's all overwhelming and interesting at the same time
I'm pretty sure I'm right in the middle of hopelessness. And I'm desparately trying to still fix things, live up to these standards that I've had for myself, and the desperation of not reaching those ideals. This is such an aptly time video. I just don't know how to get myself out of this. I'm feeling so burnt out.