Late life diagnosis - autism imposter syndrome?

Hi,

I'm in my late 50s - have just had a diagnosis of autism confirmed.

Certainly, as an adult I'm very structured and have fixed routines (prefer to do the same thing each day, eat the same thing for days on end, really struggle with social anxiety which I think manage with 'scripting' but a lot of this has become second nature, I have a couple of artistic interests which I get very focused on to the exclusion of other things). I think I might be alexithymic in that I have a very poor sense of what my own emotional state is, but I'm pretty good at reading other people's states.

While the diagnosis has led me to a few "oh of course" moments, it's also been really confusing since as a child I don't think I exhibited any of the signs that are associated with autism. Similarly, I can make eye contact with people and feel as though I'm pretty empathetic and know what to do in social situations.

All of this has got me doubting my diagnosis and wondering if I'm autistic at all? In fact, rather than giving me answers I feel a bit like my identity up to now has been taken away?

Any advice in dealing with this would be really appreciated.

 

Parents
  • At age 53, having been diagnosed in 2021 (diagnosis carried out online via Zoom due to Covid) especially given this, I really do need an in-person post-diagnostic assessment to assess my level of autism and appropriate supports required going forward and this should be a basic legal entitlement and basic legal obligation on service providers both public and private - whether a jobcentre would pay for such a post-diagnostic assessment when claiming Universal Credit is another matter entirely 

Reply
  • At age 53, having been diagnosed in 2021 (diagnosis carried out online via Zoom due to Covid) especially given this, I really do need an in-person post-diagnostic assessment to assess my level of autism and appropriate supports required going forward and this should be a basic legal entitlement and basic legal obligation on service providers both public and private - whether a jobcentre would pay for such a post-diagnostic assessment when claiming Universal Credit is another matter entirely 

Children
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