Just been diagnosed high functioning autistic (long post!)

Hi all,

This is my first post here and I'm just trying to get the thoughts off of my mind and out in to the world in the hope that life starts to make sense.

I'm a 34 year old male and a few weeks ago I was diagnosed with High Functioning Autism - it was actually a relief to be diagnosed as I have always suspected I was different that others and I couldn't figure out why. I just thought I was broken.

If you don't want to read through my journey just to go to the TL:DR (too long: didn't read) bit Slight smile

I was raised in a very masculine household by a father who only came to this country through marriage, he was stuck in a different culture, different time and different world to be honest. He raised me (and my brother) in the only method he knew of - emotional and physical abuse. He always compared me to my brother - and effectively made us competitors - who is academically better than me on paper. I struggled to get through my schooling as I was bullied and barely passed GCSEs, retaking English twice before I passed. I didn't do too well at college and uni, graduating with a 3rd in BSc Computing (which no one will touch with a bargepole) and have not found .

I stayed at home during uni to save money and because my confidence was so low, I didn't think I could cope on my own living away from home. During this time my parents argued and fought all the time (they have pretty much hated being with each other ever since they were arranged marriage) because they were trying to get my brother married off. Eventually the fights turned violent and my Mother had enough and decided to divorce my dad.

So without my controlling father around I felt a new sense of freedom but I had no idea what to do with it. He had always controlled every aspect of my life, I didn't have many friends, never been in a relationship with a girl and had never been on a holiday. Eventually as I started my employment, I was participating in all the things that came along with it, from there came friendships, and a social life, not a huge buzzing social calendar but one where I started to know what things like a strike in bowling meant, and what a game of pool was.

Unfortunately, I still hadn't figured out what an intimate relationship was and was always going for the wrong women, mainly through inexperience and not understanding social cues. It took me a while to realise someone at work fancied me, and took me a while longer to figure that she was using me to make herself feel better whilst she was addicted to anti depressants. Then a few years later I fell for someone else I worked with, a married woman, who did all the chasing. And once again, I didn't have any clue what she was doing until she made the first move. I fell for her hard, she understood me, my quirks, my foibles and never judged me but in the end she ended it with me. After another few quiet years, I started going to a quiz night, through someone at work, and met someone else. We dated for a few weeks, it was awkward, it was non eventful but I was paying for everything. As soon as I said let's go dutch, she wanted to be friends. That was a few years ago.

During all of this, as I had nothing else, I focussed on my job (teaching) so much that life passed me by. I love superheroes, video games and quirky tv shows, and because of my intense focus on the married chick, and work, I didn't have a clue what I had missed. My job changed, people who didn't know what teaching was about (or were even qualified to do it) started coming in and messing with the way I worked. The stress got so much I left.

TL:DR

When I started teacher training I noticed every time I was on a training course about autism, I had similar traits to those who were on the spectrum. Then the more time I spent with them in the classroom, the more I saw it in action. I asked the learning support people at my school if they knew of how an adult gets checked out for it and no one knew, eventually I figured it out and got assessed a few weeks ago.

So I'm now an official HFA - I know why I don't like socialising much (unless I'm in control of the situation), I know why I don't like loud bars/clubs and prefer quiet places as I can understand when people are talking, I know why friendships and relationships have been a struggle, I know why I didn't too well academically. I know not everything can be pinned down to Autism, some of it has been down to the abuse I experienced in life but I feel like I am owning my life now.

And it feels frickin great! Slight smile

  • High Functioning Autism

    Theres no such thing its just ASD. High functioning means you have an IQ above 70 or something and don't need as much support

  • I admit it - I jumped to TLDR but great stuff. My diagnosis was *the* turning point in my life. Something in how I saw myself, and the world, just shifted a little bit and everything started to have clarity, I think, for the first time. 

    So great to hear the stories of others on the same journey. 

  • WOW OH WOW

    just read your post and so much i could have written .... the first part well kinda did in my post (also my 1st post, also lost and broken)
    but im not even sure i am in the right place so i just wanted to say thank you for sharing

  • Hi all, thanks for the responses and supportive words.

  • Hi Bobcat

    Welcome to the forum! Your story is a powerful one, and I am glad to see that you have come through it and you are doing well!

    I got my diagnosis this year at 33, and like you, I agree it feels great to have some validation to many aspects of my life to date!

    Keep owning life Smiley (I am definately using that myself!)

  • Hi Bobcat and congratulations also!

    you've had a long journey so far....but hopefully a lot to look forward on this new path!

    all the best

    The Elephant

    (also a teacher)

  • You know it's great to hear you embracing your diagnosis. 

    It's great you are a teacher too because it's so important that there are people out there looking out for those going undiagnosed.

    When my 16 y/o step daughter was diagnosed, her Dad cried, she cheered and I thought "at long last we've got a piece of paper validating 6 years of concern being dismissed because she was female and articulate

  • Hi GloomyBobcat - and welcome!

    It was good to read your post.  I could have written so much of that myself!  Similar life experiences, similar attitudes.  And yes... when I got my diagnosis 2 years ago (aged 56), it did feel great!  Validation, at last.  Finally breaking the Enigma code of my life.

    You'll find a lot of kindred spirits here. 

    Take care and see you around Slight smileSlight smile

    Tom