I've always been different.

This my first post. I feel a little strange writing this because I don't have a diagnoses. I guess Im looking to make contacts with people that were diagnosed as adults (Im 32) and what their path was like. I always felt different and out of place. I had a lot of emotional trauma in childhood and always thought I was this way because of it. Have been diagnosed with depression and anxiety but was never able to get proper treatment. However not everything adds up. Because I never knew who I was in order to function I became a master of adapting, meaning I could "fit" anywhere by just mimicking people around me. I can be friends with anyone because of it and I've been part of every tribe. But all I really wanted was to be left alone, people and social interactions overwhelm me, so all my "friendships" were always very superficial. I live in my own head and interacting with people is really just a pain. Im most happy when Im by myself. I lose friends because I don't contact them, even if I love them dearly. I have no problems reading facial expressions, in fact I am very good at reading people, but I don't understand emotion very well unless I rationalise it. I've been called cold a lot and I can't understand people that act out of emotion alone. Everything I do needs to be planned and structured before I do it, from planning a trip, to house cleaning and daily routine. It's a lot of spreadsheet. However, executing the plan is a whole other story, all I want to do is obsess over things in my head, I feel like Im in a constant hypnotic state and now that I am a mum it's a real struggle. I don't think I had the "well known" symptoms of being in the spectrum when I was a toddler, and if I did my mother wouldn't be able to tell anyway. From what I remember, I was an odd child, quiet, often called sad or strange and was way ahead of other children my age in terms of cognitive development. I remember people saying I spoke like an adult, not a child. Im not expecting a diagnoses here, I just had to put some of this in writing, its the first time i do it, even though I didn't put everything down or I could definitely write a few pages, and maybe someone will relate to it? Not sure. If you have been diagnosed in the spectrum as an adult you can contact me, I would love to hear your story. Please don't be offended if I don't reply straight away, call it social anxiety or symptoms of being autistic, my brain has its own timing when it comes to engaging in a conversation with others. But I would still really appreciate it if you contact me. 

Thank you for taking the time to read it. 

Parents
  • Hello! and welcome. Im new too. Not sure if i am allowed to reply but figured it might help you out a little. I never knew I was autistic, nor did my parents. As a baby i was non stop crying. As a toddler/pre school age i was very shy and quiet. Reserved, but also emotional. When i started school i was still quiet but i did enjoy joining in with activities. In secondary school i was bullied :( badly. and that really knocked me down. I was waking up and just thinking to myself why does everyone at school hate me? They didnt hate me, they just didnt understand that i was different. At the end of secondary school, going up to college age 16, I was hyper all the time. Running, shouting, swearing, laughing, cracking jokes. My favourite thing to do was pop my crisp packet in the corridor because it echoed all the way down. The amount of times i had to walk past stern faced teachers look at me as i tried to hide a smirk and a crumped crisp packet in my jacket pocket, those were the days. I was diagnosed 28th November 2018, I remember breaking down in tears with my mum because i had finally got a "label" to my personality. I like my label now come to think of it. I try to keep it on the down low, but if i have a break down at work I tell my colleages straight away that im not just some insecure lad who cant cant hold back tears... yeah im 18 and still cry like a baby over the smallest things. Where was i, oh yeah in 2014 my best friend passed away from a brain tumour :( that hit my like a rock. It rocked me. I had to get over that some how. i took councilling which was terrible to put it honestly. All i did was play dominos/cards. What good is that?

    Fast forward to a day after my diagnosis, the 29th November 2019, i asked my now girlfriend out :) As you can guess she said yes. 9months after beginning the relationship me, Yna (shes filipino) and her mother are jetting off to the Philippines for the holiday of a lifetime. It was amazing, like nothing ive ever seen before. The climate, the people, the thunderstorms (ENORMOUS) and the malls, the malls are supersize.

    My girlfriend is so great, she makes me laugh many times a day and is always there when i'm having a breakdown. Dont get me wrong, this lockdown is taking its toll on a lot of people and the same is true for me and Yna.

    For the most part I do what i love (fly virtual planes around the sky on my PC) and listen to rap music (eminem)

    I guess you could class me as a less developed adult but hey ho, heres my tale.

Reply
  • Hello! and welcome. Im new too. Not sure if i am allowed to reply but figured it might help you out a little. I never knew I was autistic, nor did my parents. As a baby i was non stop crying. As a toddler/pre school age i was very shy and quiet. Reserved, but also emotional. When i started school i was still quiet but i did enjoy joining in with activities. In secondary school i was bullied :( badly. and that really knocked me down. I was waking up and just thinking to myself why does everyone at school hate me? They didnt hate me, they just didnt understand that i was different. At the end of secondary school, going up to college age 16, I was hyper all the time. Running, shouting, swearing, laughing, cracking jokes. My favourite thing to do was pop my crisp packet in the corridor because it echoed all the way down. The amount of times i had to walk past stern faced teachers look at me as i tried to hide a smirk and a crumped crisp packet in my jacket pocket, those were the days. I was diagnosed 28th November 2018, I remember breaking down in tears with my mum because i had finally got a "label" to my personality. I like my label now come to think of it. I try to keep it on the down low, but if i have a break down at work I tell my colleages straight away that im not just some insecure lad who cant cant hold back tears... yeah im 18 and still cry like a baby over the smallest things. Where was i, oh yeah in 2014 my best friend passed away from a brain tumour :( that hit my like a rock. It rocked me. I had to get over that some how. i took councilling which was terrible to put it honestly. All i did was play dominos/cards. What good is that?

    Fast forward to a day after my diagnosis, the 29th November 2019, i asked my now girlfriend out :) As you can guess she said yes. 9months after beginning the relationship me, Yna (shes filipino) and her mother are jetting off to the Philippines for the holiday of a lifetime. It was amazing, like nothing ive ever seen before. The climate, the people, the thunderstorms (ENORMOUS) and the malls, the malls are supersize.

    My girlfriend is so great, she makes me laugh many times a day and is always there when i'm having a breakdown. Dont get me wrong, this lockdown is taking its toll on a lot of people and the same is true for me and Yna.

    For the most part I do what i love (fly virtual planes around the sky on my PC) and listen to rap music (eminem)

    I guess you could class me as a less developed adult but hey ho, heres my tale.

Children
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