What are the benefits of an adult diagnosis

I’m 53 and deep down have always known that my outlook is very different to others.

For as long as I can remember I’ve struggled with things that some find easy and even exciting, I have just developed strategies to cope with the demands of life, mainly ensuring I’m busy, I’m in control and things are on my terms. This obviously doesn’t always work and relationships have suffered.

I haven’t sought help or a diagnosis before as I always thought it was just me, but the more the world has changed and the more we are encouraged to accept and celebrate our differences the more I have realised I may not be on my own.

However, what will having a diagnosis change for me, I will still feel all the things I have felt for the last 40 plus years, the anxiety won’t go away when my husband suggests going somewhere different on holiday, I won’t suddenly be able to maintain friendships.

Parents
  • what we thought was depression, is actually meltdown/shutdown

    holy crapola, what a revelation!  i need to consider this too because i'm also diagnosed with MDD and PTSD, so i'm taking an anti-depressant.  still, i don't think my PTSD symptoms look like other people's.  maybe a big part of it is meltdowns/shutdowns. 

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  • what we thought was depression, is actually meltdown/shutdown

    holy crapola, what a revelation!  i need to consider this too because i'm also diagnosed with MDD and PTSD, so i'm taking an anti-depressant.  still, i don't think my PTSD symptoms look like other people's.  maybe a big part of it is meltdowns/shutdowns. 

Children
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