I don't know how to cope with employment

I haven't ever made a public post about my autism like this, I just know I want to say something... even if I'm not 100% sure what that something is.

I'm self-diagnosed, I started finally accepting that I'm autistic a few months ago now and I'm currently in training for my first job in 5 years. I'm 27 now and I have had a few jobs in the past, usually they lasted around 1 month and I managed to stick with one for about 6 months. For a long time, I thought I had just been so unlucky with the life I got (abusive parents, exposure to violence and drugs growing up, neglectful teachers, exploitative employers, and so on) that when I finally got a home I can live in alone through social housing and benefits that, mostly, got me enough money to stay alive. Hm, that sentence sure did get long.

Anyway, when I finally got this home I thought "Now I can recover from all those traumatic experiences at my own pace, and eventually I'll be able to cope with normal life as a normal person". But, if I'm right about how my autism has affected my experiences then maybe I've just been more susceptible to trauma than a neurotypical person would have been, maybe the idea of recovering and becoming normal is flawed. Maybe I'm just doomed to repeat the pattern and the job I have now is going to break me again.

Ah, this job. It's a call centre job and I work it from home on my PC. I have worked in 2 other call centres in the past, the first was temporary. Just a week long and it was bearable. The second was the most difficult time of my entire life, worse than growing up in my family, worse than the isolation and bullying in high school. Frankly, it made me suicidal and one of the two friends I had at the time become more resentful of me the more negative I became. Now, my current job I haven't officially started and maybe it'll be fine. After all, I found it through a "work and health programme" in the job centre after I specifically asked for minimum customer service and stress. But the training so far has been giving me flashbacks, I hear phrases like "rapport" and "soft skills" and I instantly clench up and feel nauseous and after just 3 days I've been crying and self-medicating with alcohol.

I just don't know what to do. I can take care of myself, I can cook and clean and maintain hygiene. I just haven't been able to survive in any job I've had and I don't even know what I can ask an employer to do to help me cope better. Will short shifts help? Will a less social job help? Are there even entry-level jobs I can do that aren't hospitality or customer service? It's not like I'm not capable of getting educated or learning skills, I got a microbiology degree and sure I don't know what I can do with it but I like to think it counts for something. I need money to live but all the ways I can find of getting money are harmful to me and it's not like Universal Credit is enough to keep living on if I ever want to pay off debts or to have a decent quality of life. I'm pretty sure I'm too "functioning" to get any other kinds of benefits.

So this is my life now. Trying whatever job I can get, inevitably more call centre work, and hoping it'll just happen to work out for me because I don't know what realistic adjustments I can hope for. "Hello, I see conversations as simple exchanges of information and trying to force myself to behave in the ways you want burn me out, can I please never have to talk to someone?" By the way, it's not like I *want* to avoid people, I'm actually quite a lonely person and I love interacting with people even if it is tiring. It's just the way employers demand I communicate that I can't deal with.

Finally, in an attempt to get some kind of question out of this so it's less of a pointless shout into the void, has anyone had similar experiences? Has anyone found ways to make work life more bearable? Are there any suggestions for work that might be suitable for me?

Parents
  • I've had two jobs - as a nursery assistant and then an admin apprentice. I much preferred being an apprentice to being a nursery nurse, because it was more like being a student with a handful of easy and predictable tasks (paid therapy hahaa). Apprenticeship wages are not great and apprentice hours made me want to scream sometimes. Fortunately I was entitled to a good amount of paid annual leave.

    I think working in a nursery was terrible because

    1. there was NO STRUCTURE AT ALL
    2. I was employed by an agency and was at a different nursery every other day, so I couldn't even get familiar with my surroundings and I was anxious every day
    3. sensory overload
    4. working so closely with different personalities all the time whilst having little authority in the job was confusing and emotionally disconcerting

    I lasted 3 months in that job (by way of force because I desperately wanted to move away from my dad who is emotionally abusive). 

    My dream job (apart from being a film writer and director of course) is one that is well structured, clear boundaries and good hours. Something like a receptionist maybe. I'm really hoping your employers will value and respect you this time, as no employee deserves to be pushed that far emotionally. I wish industries made vacancies especially for people on the spectrum, as working is really one of the hardest parts of life for me as well.

Reply
  • I've had two jobs - as a nursery assistant and then an admin apprentice. I much preferred being an apprentice to being a nursery nurse, because it was more like being a student with a handful of easy and predictable tasks (paid therapy hahaa). Apprenticeship wages are not great and apprentice hours made me want to scream sometimes. Fortunately I was entitled to a good amount of paid annual leave.

    I think working in a nursery was terrible because

    1. there was NO STRUCTURE AT ALL
    2. I was employed by an agency and was at a different nursery every other day, so I couldn't even get familiar with my surroundings and I was anxious every day
    3. sensory overload
    4. working so closely with different personalities all the time whilst having little authority in the job was confusing and emotionally disconcerting

    I lasted 3 months in that job (by way of force because I desperately wanted to move away from my dad who is emotionally abusive). 

    My dream job (apart from being a film writer and director of course) is one that is well structured, clear boundaries and good hours. Something like a receptionist maybe. I'm really hoping your employers will value and respect you this time, as no employee deserves to be pushed that far emotionally. I wish industries made vacancies especially for people on the spectrum, as working is really one of the hardest parts of life for me as well.

Children
  • Thank you for sharing. I wish work was more like being a student. That a job was just "do this list of maths problems"

    Asking for things like direct communication, flexible hours, and structure all sound so reasonable to me but I'm afraid that an employer would think it's too much and just fire me.