59 year old and not assessed

Hi, yes, I'm 59 and I've never benn formally assessed for Autism, and nowadays I have learned to adjust and have coping strategies for social situations, and the avoidance of the same. I have a partner, and a 10 yo daughter, I have a good job and on th eoutside all looks rosy - but that's not the whole picture is it.

I have no "mates" - in my whole life I have never ever instigated a social meet-up with a friend, the ideas of having to meet 121 or in a group for a regular social chit-chat both scares and makes me feel trapped. People have tried in the past to form matey relationships, but I have always batted them away, or failed somehow.

That's ok - I ma not lonely - I have plenty of friends/associates at work and I can handle that as the relationships are defined by where we are and what we do and it never overlaps into out-of-work so it's all good.

My childood was . . . odd. So were my teens, and my 20's and right up into my mid 30's I was still struggling. When I was 23 I worked in a open plan office and several of my workmates took it upon themselves to role pay "sarcasm" for me as I just did not get it. Funny looking back, I was just cosidered eccentric and I have played on that all my life - making a joke out of it witghout ever knowing what "it" was.

I dropped out of school when I was 17 as it was all getting too much, found jobs where I worked on my own, then over the years moved into jobs where i worked around people. I used to apologise to people wh sat near me because I couldn't talk small talk like  everyone else, ha ha, I can now but it's taken a long long time.

Later I moved into freelance working because that meant that I could move on when I found myself socially floundering - as everywehere I went I found a small number of people who liked me for myself, an equal number of peoole who really disliked me for the same reasons, and a whole raft of people who I just confised, or whatever.  

My partner wants to get married, but I can't do that as it fills me with dread, she wants me to have a party for my 60th: no thanks, she wants me to go out with friends on my own - that will never happen. I not unsociable but anything that centres on my and might illustrate the gaping hole in my social network I have to avoid, and protect the illusions and barries i hae built around me.

I am considering applying for a diagnosis, not for myself, mostly for my partner (although she doesn't know) but I'm afraid of opening up to a GP for fear of being knocked-back, like I said I now how coping strategies so that is what they wil see - not the me inside or the historical me who almost 60 years of back story.

I dunno.

Someone tell me - what am I thinking?

Parents
  • Hi,

    To ease your fears of your Doctor, I would take the online AQ test and mention the results to him/her. Also worthwhile researching this forum, and find out the kind of things you relate to what others have described living on the spectrum.

    Personally, I would try and discuss it with your partner first so she has an understanding and can support you through the process. 

    I found the diagnosis very difficult, as it brought forward a lot of painful stuff I had buried inside myself from my childhood. That's not a typical response though, my diagnostic team said most people feel a sense of releif. I found the interviews and waiting time hard going.

    With me, they considered not just the likelyhood of me being on the spectrum, but how that would help me with things (based on how my aspergers was affecting me currently). That is a bit further down the line than discussing things with your GP. 

    I wish you all the best

    Random

Reply
  • Hi,

    To ease your fears of your Doctor, I would take the online AQ test and mention the results to him/her. Also worthwhile researching this forum, and find out the kind of things you relate to what others have described living on the spectrum.

    Personally, I would try and discuss it with your partner first so she has an understanding and can support you through the process. 

    I found the diagnosis very difficult, as it brought forward a lot of painful stuff I had buried inside myself from my childhood. That's not a typical response though, my diagnostic team said most people feel a sense of releif. I found the interviews and waiting time hard going.

    With me, they considered not just the likelyhood of me being on the spectrum, but how that would help me with things (based on how my aspergers was affecting me currently). That is a bit further down the line than discussing things with your GP. 

    I wish you all the best

    Random

Children
No Data