Diagnosed yesterday….

How did you feel after receiving your confirmation of Autism?

I’m confused and feeling all jumbled up. I knew I was but the confirmation was affirmation for me and to here they agreed that my autism was layered by years of trauma and that mental health worker who insisted it was just trauma (and dumped me unceremoniously when I challenged him) caused me more. Thus I feel justified, seen and heard.

I was relieved but today I woke feeling unsettled as for me it’s a huge thing after 63 yrs of feeling like an alien on this mysterious planet. My enabler was stoked for me as she drove me to the last stage ADOS assessment and was told on the spot but reactions from others has been bland. I don’t know what I expected but having some sort of acknowledgement hasn’t arrived. Is this wrong? Or is this a standard way people react when you disclose what I see as a momentous life altering diagnosis? I don’t usually expect anything from anyone but this is an important factor that explains my behaviour, there’s a reason, there’s an explanation. For once I expected something, anything.

It’s early days but I’m trying not to freak out I should be use to this scenario but it’s the most important thing to ever happen to me but the family hasn’t called, talked to me about how I am, what does it mean…on and on….

it looks selfish when I see it in print but how did you handle it? Did you experience the same thoughts? Meet with same responses? Or non responses.

hellbellNerd

Parents
  • Hi Hellbell,

    I was diagnosed on Friday so I'm pretty new here.  I expected to feel validated and happy - but I didn't.  I was kinda numb for a while, then quickly quite sad for my younger self (I'm 45) who was failed so many times.  Today for the first time, I'm starting to feel more at home with it - all that it explains and I'm liking not having to feel wrong, failing, odd, etc etc.   This group helps.   Welcome!  

  • I found diagnosis led to an emotional rollercoaster that I'm still not fully off, two years down the line (I was thirty-seven when diagnosed). I also feel sad for my younger self. It takes time to come to terms with that. I still mourn missing so much of my twenties and thirties when I was burnt out and depressed. I'm trying to accept that there's nothing I can do about that now and move on, but it's hard.

  • Totally. My brother brought me a book called 'Letting Go'. I've been so offended by that flippant gesture that I can't bring myself to speak to him anymore.

    The diagnosis has definitely made me feel much more ostracized than before. Before I would feel like I just needed to move on or find new people go try to connect with. Now I know it wasn't just circumstancial, and is in fact that I am different to 99% of society, it's made me feel a lot more like 'whats the point, it'll never do so don't force it'.

    Worst part is, it's begun to eat away at the relationship in my life I count on. Been together for 16 years, but her level of understanding is diminishing and I can feel us drifting.

    Even though I know I'm a 'normal' ND individual now and should be accepted for who I am, she didn't meet and fall in love with a ND individual so I get the feeling she is thinking it is me that is changing, when in fact I'm just becoming more myself and letting the masks drop because I have to now.

    I'm exhausted tbh

  • Good man.  Delighted.  It is hard....many roles...and all on top of your own dastadly head to cope with.  You ALL have my sympathy and support.

Reply Children
No Data