Diagnosis or Dismissal?

I’m a woman in my mid 40s, recently diagnosed with autism and ADHD. While the diagnosis gave some clarity, it hasn’t helped me much directly. What it has done is change how people respond to me - and not in a good way.

It doesn’t undo the years of being misread, sidelined, or criticised for being direct, logical, or unwilling to play along with incompetence. What I’ve found is that when people know I’m autistic, their behaviour shifts - not their words, their attitudes.

I’ll question something illogical, challenge bad decisions, or assert my rights, and instead of engaging with what I’m saying, they shift into a quiet, patronising mode. Like I’m a difficult child acting out. They don’t say, “It’s her autism,” but you can see it in how they humour rather than respect me. My reasoning gets reduced to “a processing issue,” and their egos stay protected.

When I don’t disclose, the dismissal still happens, but then it’s because I’m a woman. “She’s difficult,” “She thinks she knows better.” Same invalidation, different excuse. The label just gives them a new way to deflect accountability while appearing “understanding.”

It’s worst with people in authority, doctors, solicitors, employers, teachers. They’re far more comfortable pathologising me than considering I might be right.

So no, the label doesn’t empower me. It gives others a shortcut to dismiss my intelligence and keep their egos intact. That’s not support....it’s control in disguise.

If you’ve experienced this, especially after a late diagnosis, I’d like to know how you deal with it. Because right now, this version of “inclusion” feels like another form of erasure.

Parents
  • Hi and welcome to the community.

    I'm a woman in my sixties. I didn't discover that I was on the spectrum until I was in my fifties, but all my life I've had people behave like that towards me - dismissing my ideas and beliefs, being condescending, even sometimes acting like they know me better than I know myself and treating me like I'm misinformed or slightly deluded. So I understand completely what you are going through.

    Most people won't be able to admit to bad decisions and will not be able to take on new ideas. It's self protection and thinking in lockstep, that is common in non autistic people. Most don't deliberately try to make others feel bad, they just behave the way their minds are programmed.

    In my last job before I retired (which started just before I discovered that I was on the spectrum) I managed to develop better relationships with many of my colleagues. I think that part of this was me learning about the differences between how my brain works and how most other people's brains work, so that I could understand them better and not take things so personally, and part of it was that a few of the women there also had a sense of justice and didn't approve of incompetence.

    I've been lucky in having a partner who I've lived with since I was 18 who thinks very much like I do and we've supported each other when needed. (He's highly likely on the spectrum too) 

    I also found this forum a source of companionship and support when I was first working out what it means to be autistic. I hope it helps you too.

Reply
  • Hi and welcome to the community.

    I'm a woman in my sixties. I didn't discover that I was on the spectrum until I was in my fifties, but all my life I've had people behave like that towards me - dismissing my ideas and beliefs, being condescending, even sometimes acting like they know me better than I know myself and treating me like I'm misinformed or slightly deluded. So I understand completely what you are going through.

    Most people won't be able to admit to bad decisions and will not be able to take on new ideas. It's self protection and thinking in lockstep, that is common in non autistic people. Most don't deliberately try to make others feel bad, they just behave the way their minds are programmed.

    In my last job before I retired (which started just before I discovered that I was on the spectrum) I managed to develop better relationships with many of my colleagues. I think that part of this was me learning about the differences between how my brain works and how most other people's brains work, so that I could understand them better and not take things so personally, and part of it was that a few of the women there also had a sense of justice and didn't approve of incompetence.

    I've been lucky in having a partner who I've lived with since I was 18 who thinks very much like I do and we've supported each other when needed. (He's highly likely on the spectrum too) 

    I also found this forum a source of companionship and support when I was first working out what it means to be autistic. I hope it helps you too.

Children
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