What helped you while waiting for an assessment?

Hello,

I was just wondering if anyone can relate to the following things and if so, what helped you?


I'm currently waiting to hear whether my GP can refer me to the Lorna Wing Centre for an adult assessment.  If/when I confirm funding, the waiting list will be at least 5 or 6 months.  I'm a 38 year old woman.  I introduced myself recently on this forum and was overwhelmed by how kind and supportive the people on this forum are.  I feel glad to have found this community.

Because I'm relatively 'high functioning', I didn't suspect that I had autism until a few years ago, even though I knew something was wrong, and it's only now that I've plucked up the courage to have an assessment. Since finding out about autism, I'm becoming more and more sure that I am, and I have a friend who has an autistic son and they say that they are 100% sure that I am.

Did anyone else find the waiting period and the uncertainty difficult?  If so, what helped you?
I have some days where I feel sure that I'm autistic, and I feel relieved to have found the root of my problems and to know that they're not my fault.  I feel more accepting of myself than ever, because I know the reasons why I get anxious and struggle to talk around people.

Other times though, I find myself feeling like a fraud because I can function relatively well.  I wonder if I'm actually neurotypical and if so, I'm back to square one and I don't know the cause of my issues.   Does that make any sense?  Please don't get me wrong, I am grateful that although I have several difficulties, my problem isn't as debilitating as it could be, and I know many people struggle with day to day life much more.  But because I'm on the borderline, it makes it difficult to feel sure about whether I am autistic, and I feel that I can't accept myself and get used to who I am until I know for sure.

Can anyone relate to this and if so, what helped you?

Parents
  • I've not long been diagnosed (ASD, high functioning) very, very late in life (nearing retirement age) and I was very unsure whilst I waited. I had done so much research and I was positive I was on the spectrum but I still kept thinking, "I've been married, I have children, I have grandchildren, I've run my own business, how could I possibly be autistic!?". I had taken the AQ50 and scored 45, which is not borderline, but I felt I coped better than that score would indicate. I took others too and they all came out around the same level, which belies how i see myself. So that was a worry. But then I'd have to remind myself of my social problems, my sensory issues, my obsessions and need for routines etc, not to mention a (finally) failed marriage, and several failed relationships thereafter. Looking back, they failed mostly because of me and my 'issues'. How my husband put up with my regular meltdowns and anger eruptions for 13 years, I don't know. At the time I blamed it on bad PMS, even though it was EVERY week of the month, not just one. Hey ho. Plus, I was very self centered, without realising what I was doing, so focused on having things how 'I' needed them to be that I ignored everyone else.

    So, my way of coping whilst I waited was just to remind myself, whenever I started to feel doubt, of all my traits, and how they presented. I wrote a very long list to take with me to see the doctor for the referral, and an even longer one, more like an essay, to take to my assessment. Because of my age, I had no one that knew me as a child so I spent a lot of time remembering my childhood, as painful as that was, and documenting all the problems I had when young, all my little oddities and strange habits, and how they continued, or not, into adulthood. I was obviously wrong to feel a fraud because I was given a very definite diagnosis. 

Reply
  • I've not long been diagnosed (ASD, high functioning) very, very late in life (nearing retirement age) and I was very unsure whilst I waited. I had done so much research and I was positive I was on the spectrum but I still kept thinking, "I've been married, I have children, I have grandchildren, I've run my own business, how could I possibly be autistic!?". I had taken the AQ50 and scored 45, which is not borderline, but I felt I coped better than that score would indicate. I took others too and they all came out around the same level, which belies how i see myself. So that was a worry. But then I'd have to remind myself of my social problems, my sensory issues, my obsessions and need for routines etc, not to mention a (finally) failed marriage, and several failed relationships thereafter. Looking back, they failed mostly because of me and my 'issues'. How my husband put up with my regular meltdowns and anger eruptions for 13 years, I don't know. At the time I blamed it on bad PMS, even though it was EVERY week of the month, not just one. Hey ho. Plus, I was very self centered, without realising what I was doing, so focused on having things how 'I' needed them to be that I ignored everyone else.

    So, my way of coping whilst I waited was just to remind myself, whenever I started to feel doubt, of all my traits, and how they presented. I wrote a very long list to take with me to see the doctor for the referral, and an even longer one, more like an essay, to take to my assessment. Because of my age, I had no one that knew me as a child so I spent a lot of time remembering my childhood, as painful as that was, and documenting all the problems I had when young, all my little oddities and strange habits, and how they continued, or not, into adulthood. I was obviously wrong to feel a fraud because I was given a very definite diagnosis. 

Children
  • Hi JustMe,

    Thanks for your reply and sharing your experiences.  
    I'm confused about the various tests for autism.  I took some online tests and my scores were above the thresholds, but not very high, and on some tests I was below the threshold.  But when I observed my behaviour and looked back over my life, I did see lots of indications that I could well be autistic.  What also helped me was talking with a friend whose son is autistic.  When I started thinking that I might be on the spectrum, I contacted him.  I was expecting him to say 'don't be silly, of course you're not autistic', but to my surprise he said he had always thought that I was.  I asked him why nobody else had said anything to me, and he said that many people don't know much about autism, so they wouldn't recognise the signs.  I've been for therapy on many occasions during my life, and none of the therapists identified that I could be autistic. 

    I'm hoping to be assessed at the Lorna Wing Centre, and they do a diagnostic interview (the DISCO) rather than specific tests, as far as I understand.  Like you did, I've been writing a long list of reasons I think I'm autistic.  It is very long, and I wonder if it's too much and they won't want to read it, but it sounds like they want as much detailed information as possible.

    I'm glad to hear that you got the answers and the clarity that you wanted.