Does anyone have someone who fully understands and accepts them as autistic?

It’s just something I have been personally struggling with, I’m starting to realise how alone I am. It’s great to have you lot to ask questions and chat to, but in my everyday life I’ve stopped even mentioning autism, this is mainly with family. 
Being autistic I can cope with, after all I coped for 54 years before I new there was a name for how I function. Now I sound like them.

I may act ‘robotic’ a lot of the time but I do feel hurt, I feel guilt for being fussy about food, not really trying hard enough with people or work.  It’s hard to explain that I don’t need masses of friends or want to go out socialising. 
I find even with my wife and I know I’m lucky to have a partner that I’m generally not believed or am behaving badly. I could never share how much energy I use in just holding back shutdowns when I’m overwhelmed or show on the outside that I am overwhelmed.

I then think it’s my fault for masking so heavily for so long, my non stop internal voice then rightly tells me that it’s not my fault, I had to mask heavily to survive, it then tells me I should go back to masking more. I now feel I’m oversharing, this could be an autistic thing so I will leave it there.

So back to my original question, does anyone have someone who fully tries to understand and accept them without question?

Parents
  • This is our place for over sharing. I’m also lucky, because I’m married and we love each other. My husband is supportive, but the only thing he understands about autism is sensitivity to noise (not every autistic person is sensitive to noise) but I don’t explain it to him. He has no idea how I feel when I’m overwhelmed people often think that I’m angry or sad. Usually then I ask him to give me some time alone. He is not pushing me to socialising, he is an introvert and I would say- HSP, he has many friends but does not need to socialise often, he is very good at picking social cues and small talk. 
    So we fit in many ways although we are quite different and I’m actually happy that he is not autistic, because where I struggle - he does easily. Like talking to someone, appointments, etc. 

    Unfortunately I have no one who would fully understand me, but I have someone who loves me and does their best to accept my quirks. 

Reply
  • This is our place for over sharing. I’m also lucky, because I’m married and we love each other. My husband is supportive, but the only thing he understands about autism is sensitivity to noise (not every autistic person is sensitive to noise) but I don’t explain it to him. He has no idea how I feel when I’m overwhelmed people often think that I’m angry or sad. Usually then I ask him to give me some time alone. He is not pushing me to socialising, he is an introvert and I would say- HSP, he has many friends but does not need to socialise often, he is very good at picking social cues and small talk. 
    So we fit in many ways although we are quite different and I’m actually happy that he is not autistic, because where I struggle - he does easily. Like talking to someone, appointments, etc. 

    Unfortunately I have no one who would fully understand me, but I have someone who loves me and does their best to accept my quirks. 

Children
No Data