Could I be neurodivergent?

Hello all. I hope this is ok to post, I’m 47, female and at a point that I’m really trying to figure myself out properly. I’ve been looking into neurodivergence but have been put off my family members discounting it as “fashionable”. I’ve typed a (very long!) list of traits and wondered what you think? Does any of this resonate? Any advice would be appreciated.

  • Hyper focus on one thing and can’t rest until achieved, impatience, like an itch
  • Procrastination on big tasks
  • Very difficult to relax, brain on fire / fizzing
  • Research everything in huge detail
  • Detail focussed to the point of obsessive
  • Always tired. Have always fallen asleep in the afternoon since very young age, often on floor
  • High achiever at school
  • Often found myself sitting alone at school
  • Failed at uni, hated my time there, struggled to fit in, or to focus. Very few friends and even they didn’t become close
  • Tricky to make friends, very selective, hard work, tough at school/uni/work
  • Always called aloof or resting *** face
  • Cannot cope with fiction/imagination/visualisation
  • Never been a bridesmaid
  • Hide in bed, always have done, always exhausted, since very young/ afternoon naps
  • Untrusting of what people say to me, looking for nuance on what lies behind
  • Told that I “have to learn to take a joke”
  • “Lacks focus and direction”
  • Anxiety and depression diagnosed 2000 but was it really that?!
  • Addiction / teetotal since 2016
  • Dopamine seeking, impulse buys, snacking, scrolling
  • Feeling lost, haven’t found who I am but working on it now
  • Can’t concentrate on playing with kids /books etc have to be doing more than one thing
  • Rejection sensitive to the extreme
  • Like to stick to rules and get upset when others don’t, like queuing etc
  • Low self esteem
  • Horribly sensitive to loud noises, social settings, crowds, overwhelm
  • Can’t cope with people talking in class (either at school or as mature student)
  • Worry what others think of me constantly and adjust behaviour to suit
  • Converse with humour and charm to cover being shy/anxious - masking?
  • I appear very confident and outgoing
  • Can’t cope with changes in plans/christmas!
  • Emotional meltdown over seemingly small things
  • Repeat conversations over and over when alone, out loud or in head
  • Plan conversations, repeat out loud over and over
  • Not hyperactive at all
  • Don’t want anyone in my home - find this incredibly stressful
  • Perfectionism and perceived judgement if I’m not perfect
  • Blame myself for everything
  • Brain feels actually fizzing until I write something down, tick a box, achieve a task.
  • Used to cry constantly as a child, looked miserable in photos, became a family joke that I was grumpy
  • Felt choked up, like I couldn’t talk as a young child
  • Excitement from maths, countdown! New maths books
  • Capital cities and airport codes, almost thrilling
  • Would rather deep conversations than small talk.
  • Prefer one on one conversation to group
  • “Grumpy Bear” my childhood toy - given to me because I was always crying / grumpy - pigeon holed
  • I hate people making assumptions about me without even getting to know me
Parents
  • Hi LynnG, a lot of those certainly sound like autistic traits and some sound like ADHD. I am AuDHD myself and can relate to almost everything you said. Martin has recommended the tests at Embrace Autism and these are really good, plus there's loads of other useful stuff on there. I would recommend you do a few of the tests and see what they come up with.

    I can sympathise with family not taking neurodivergence seriously. I haven't bothered mentioning it to any of my family apart from my wife, as my parents are, I feel, very unlikely to take it seriously. There is a chance I could educate them and get them to understand it more but, to be quite frank, I can't be bothered! I am autistic and don't have any interest in proving it to anyone.

  • Thank you so much, appreciate your reply. 

    I’ve done the RAAD-R test today, result 174 and the AQ50 scored 42, both of which are seemingly pretty high. I’m unsure why I feel the need for formal diagnosis but I guess I doubt myself.

  • I am diagnosed with ASD and score between 37 and 40 on the AQ50, depending on how I treat ambiguous and situational questions. I score 167 on the RAADS-R. I was told that I would be getting an ASD diagnosis about 20 minutes into the assessment, so was fairly obviously autistic just from my questionnaire answers.

Reply
  • I am diagnosed with ASD and score between 37 and 40 on the AQ50, depending on how I treat ambiguous and situational questions. I score 167 on the RAADS-R. I was told that I would be getting an ASD diagnosis about 20 minutes into the assessment, so was fairly obviously autistic just from my questionnaire answers.

Children