Fear getting old as an autistic person?

I do.

I really do. My sensory stuff causes mayhem in medical contexts. There's more as you get older. My GP thinks I "suffer with autism" (God help me!). I fear all medical treatment. I fear all doctor's appointments. How the Hell do I even speak to them when something is wrong.

The only services that exist are for the intellectually impaired or children.

Where do I go? What do I do?

I fear every tiny twinge in my body.

I fear being locked up in an old peoples' home, forced to socialised in bingo games I do not want to participate in; forced to bang a tambereen while a school choir sings.

I fear being left to the mercy of under paid staff in a care home where the state robs you of a life time of struggle which should be left to your kid, while they squander that abusing you.

In the words of The Who: "Hope I die before I get old"

At 58 I am aware that I have already out lived autistic life expectancy. That's 54. I was 56 when diagnosed. I am happy I lived life as an autistic person (albeit I had no idea I was one), but how the Hell do you manage to grow old as an autistic person?

I'm scared. And I am still looking after elderly parents who depend on me and haven't even retired myself yet.

Everything about old age is scary. And I'm scared.

Parents
  • Yes getting old is not nice and our expectancy is not good, especially when something dreadful has happened to one.

    Somehow, learn to enjoy and not have regrets.

    I feel suicidal, but fight hard to avoid that outcome and am involved in setting up a major national research project to try and reduce early death in autism people

Reply
  • Yes getting old is not nice and our expectancy is not good, especially when something dreadful has happened to one.

    Somehow, learn to enjoy and not have regrets.

    I feel suicidal, but fight hard to avoid that outcome and am involved in setting up a major national research project to try and reduce early death in autism people

Children
  • Yes, I think I recall.

    Am I right in thinking you are a GP. I wish we could have a specialist practice in each town for the neurodivergent population, staffed by neurodivergent GPs, nurses etc.

    I was talking to our OH lady at work. ND herself and her kids are autistic, what a different conversation. No need to explain anything, cos she just got it. It took so much stress out of it.