Ageing and autistic traits

Has anyone found that as they’ve gotten older some or most of their traits become more apparent. I’ve spent a little time using Dr Google and there’s plenty saying this increase of traits isn’t due to ageing but due to increased pressures in life which would make sense. My mask started to crumble and fall apart when my mum passed away, I shutdown internally and swallowed the emotions till my nan passed away and I think was the straw that broke the autistics back, life was now completely out of my control and so were my emotions. Life experiences build up over time and create a clearer picture of one’s own identity, wants and needs and also opinions on existence. I’ve always pictured myself as a bottle that was once full but is slowly leaking with every hit life swings as it, each hit slowly draining my internal reserves and causing irreversible damage to the bottle itself. I find myself wanting to spend less and less time around others that I don’t need to, I get a lot more drained from unwanted company than I ever used to. I’m 37 and feel 97 grandad slippers already equipped, just missing the pipe and a Charles Dickens book. 

Parents
  • Has anyone found that as they’ve gotten older some or most of their traits become more apparent.

    My observation has been that we accumulate traumas as we move through life so by the time we hit our 40s and 50s we are struggling under the weight of accumulated pain.

    I found getting a really good therapist who knows a lot about autism was a great way to unburdon myself on previous traumas and it gave me the opportunity to reflect and decide to get out the rat race and retire in my mid 50s. I've been loving it ever since.

    I get to choose how I live, how much I interact with others, what hobbies I want to persue and all without needing to be a wage slave.

Reply
  • Has anyone found that as they’ve gotten older some or most of their traits become more apparent.

    My observation has been that we accumulate traumas as we move through life so by the time we hit our 40s and 50s we are struggling under the weight of accumulated pain.

    I found getting a really good therapist who knows a lot about autism was a great way to unburdon myself on previous traumas and it gave me the opportunity to reflect and decide to get out the rat race and retire in my mid 50s. I've been loving it ever since.

    I get to choose how I live, how much I interact with others, what hobbies I want to persue and all without needing to be a wage slave.

Children