Took the leap

so i done it, filled out ask my GP with my suspicions. 
kinda feel anxious as i dont want parents to know lol plus i click the "email me" on how to respond and they still usually ring me up which is pretty annoying.
that alone makes me feel anxious then the possible life changes that would come from it too. i dunno its like i want help but i dont at the same time.
id probably feel happier if they told me im daft and ignored it and life went on as usual, but then again thats not very good for the future as im just basically driving off a cliff.
logically i need a change, but now im so anxious i feel like i wanna poop, but i already pooped lol
which is kinda how you can see how someone in our position gets locked into inactivity and doing nothing. 

Parents
  • I have been recently diagnosed and I am scared of it. My life has always been a disaster but I hoped there would be pills for it. I can't say at loud that I am autistic even to the doctor who diagnosed me. I'm scared because it will never go away. I will always have it. I will always be weird and always have problems with other people. Now I realise I was fired from work because of it. Who would hire a person with social disability? I don't know how to live. 

  • I hear you both. Yes indeed there should be more help riding on the back of a diagnosis. The NHS doesn't offer a lot, but there are pockets of it out there if you dig. My GP referred me to MIND Adult Autism Services, which run some courses for people awaiting assessment or newly diagnosed.

    It does mean some things will always be hard. But whilst no one can ever or should ever change who they are, there are different strategies which can be tried to make life easier once you know what it is you are dealing with. It's just a question of finding out what works without compromising yourself.

    Don't forget, you do now have some protections under the law too, which might help.

Reply
  • I hear you both. Yes indeed there should be more help riding on the back of a diagnosis. The NHS doesn't offer a lot, but there are pockets of it out there if you dig. My GP referred me to MIND Adult Autism Services, which run some courses for people awaiting assessment or newly diagnosed.

    It does mean some things will always be hard. But whilst no one can ever or should ever change who they are, there are different strategies which can be tried to make life easier once you know what it is you are dealing with. It's just a question of finding out what works without compromising yourself.

    Don't forget, you do now have some protections under the law too, which might help.

Children
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