10 years in a public sector job and I'm being penalised year after year

Hey, I'm new here folks.

I was diagnosed with ASD when I was 38.  I've completed 2 honours degrees at university (Product Design Engineering and Mathematics and Statistics) not to try get a job, but because I love these subjects.

The company I work in I've started from the bottom as an advisor, then developing team leader, then practitioner specialist in government legislation (I can't say what the specific legislation is as I have to remain anonymous), and then finally I moved to front line IT support.  

Now the IT support, I absolutely LOVED, like the saying "If you enjoy your job, you'll never work a day in your life" kept going through my head.  But in early 2024 the manager created a quality checking process.  However, none of us were taught in a uniform fashion.  So although the outcome to the end user was the same, I kept getting 0% (rather than showing me how she wants it done and then if I do it again I get 0%) for not following a processes I wasn't trained in.

There's many examples of bullying, being picked on and my manager and her colleague in the team simply not understanding that I think differently, so I may have to ask odd questions.  

Since the age of 5 my Mum has said I've always talked about not wanting to be here.  This has never gone away, I don't want to live constantly depressed and belittled, I gave myself up to a certain age and if I had not achieved something in life I knew where, when and how I would do it (it made me feel better as i knew it didn't matter how bad life gets, it'll be over then).  But just before that specific birthday, my son was born and he means so much to me

I've been made to feel like and idiot and for the first time in 10 years in this new job my manager hasn't given me my bonus like the rest of the team.  The only thing keeping me here is my son.  

I took long term sick and stayed in bed for 3 weeks, eventually my parents talked me into going to a s*****e prevention psychiatrist who I will see every week.  She signposted me to this site.  It's making my parents unwell also.

I've never been around others like me, and I'm just wondering how you cope with it?  Or am I best trying to find a new employer and not tell them about the ASD, as I feel as soon as you say it they have a spotlight on you watching you like a hawk.

I can't find happiness, or enjoyment in anything, only when my son comes to visit (he's 8, and lives with his Mum, again she got annoyed with my ASD), and I try my best to be fun and happy, but underneath I'm struggling, and I few times I've broke down crying and my son is rubbing my shoulder saying "It's ok Dad, let it all out", an 8 year old child shouldn't have to see that.  This has all been since my manager doesn't seem to understand that people with ASD will ask questions, she said it takes up too much of her time (I counted between 30 to 35 questions over 3 months).

Has anyone else felt/been in this situation?  And have you got any tips on how to overcome the way I'm feeling to feel happy again?  I've always been a fitness person (MMA/boxing/Muay Thai) but moved in with my parents to save for a mortgage, and there are no fighting gyms near here.

Thanks 

Parents
  • If you want to keep the job the government as you probably know has some advice and steps how to proceed with discrimination at work. You could see an occupational therapist and you could tell them about how your autism affects you and the reasonable adjustments that you need. Talk to them if you need to disclose your autism to your boss.

    You could email your boss or write them a letter that you will be contacting an OT or putting in a complaint and they could respond to this. There are lawyers for rights at work.

    It is shame that nobody has showed you what to do. If they do you may wish to record it if you are allowed to.

    This is the link to the government website. 

    www.gov.uk/.../discrimination-at-work

Reply
  • If you want to keep the job the government as you probably know has some advice and steps how to proceed with discrimination at work. You could see an occupational therapist and you could tell them about how your autism affects you and the reasonable adjustments that you need. Talk to them if you need to disclose your autism to your boss.

    You could email your boss or write them a letter that you will be contacting an OT or putting in a complaint and they could respond to this. There are lawyers for rights at work.

    It is shame that nobody has showed you what to do. If they do you may wish to record it if you are allowed to.

    This is the link to the government website. 

    www.gov.uk/.../discrimination-at-work

Children
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