Hi! My story and needing some advice

Hi everyone, I've joined this community out of being diagnosed about a month ago and needing to do some research. I'm an 18 year old female who also has OCD, has had an eating disorder, depression, anxiety and PTSD. Even though my family and friends have been supportive, I don't have anyone to who I can relate to, so I wanted to explain it here. 

When I was little I was always told to be very smart, shy and mature for my age. I succeeded academically. It's weird because I don't remember having much trouble with socializing either, in fact, I was lucky and very liked by my classmates, but my language with people was through teaching. I would always finish faster and help the ones who didn't understand the task. And the rest of the time I liked to observe a lot. It is true that I hated eye contact even if I forced it, wasn't much of a hugger, had difficulty understanding sarcasm, was hypersensitive and had big hyperfixations/obsessions and could spend endless hours talking about it without knowing when to stop. 

It wasn't until my last childhood years that my mental health started to get bad. After some years of psychological abuse my concept of family and life routine absolutely broke and PTSD kicked in. I was anxious, had constant nightmares and in need of stabilty. I got through it studying, working out and having time to dive into my special interests, among other things. But everything fell apart in the middle of my teenage years with the pandemic. 

The pandemic was the start of the second worst years of my life. So, losing routine again, fearing stepping outside and the possibility of dying from COVID-19, the stress from studying and not being able to exercise was very hard. It lead me to isolate in my room and only stepping outside to take food, as I was also dealing with binge eating. I was in a shutdown for months and when we got the "new normality" phase I wasn't able to mask my autistic traits as I did before.

My post-pandemic years got even worse. I was still succeeding academically at a very high cost of my mental health. I had hyperfixations/obsessions that occupied my day (obsessions with people, the eating disorder and, the good one, guitar) and stressed out because I hadn't studied so slept an average of three hours daily to study at midnight. I dind't understand why it was so hard to organize or prioritize tasks. My days were waking up, highschool, obsessions and isolation, late at night studying and repeat. The only thing that kept me alive was writing. In 2022 I had an injury that kept me away from my obsession. I was dealing with so many things and I skipped so much school I didn't know if I'd finish it, but it didn't matter to me as I had lost my will to live. Which lead me to my psychologist (I had other ones before but stopped going when I was fine, big mistake). 

After finishing my highschool years with honors and starting to work with my psychologist, I got help with the eating disorder and OCD, and had the first acceptable summer in years. But that, as I discovered during my post-compulsory education, wasn't enough. I thought I was doing great, but as fast as I got back into studying I felt the anxiety coming from not knowing how to organize, prioritize and losing track of time with my hyperfixations. I wanted to do it perfectly and put so much pressure on myself but if I gave everything one month, the next one I was in a complete shutdown unable to function in any aspect of my life. I started self-harming as a coping mechanism and somehow finished the first year of this course, but decided to drop out the next. I stopped studying and started working meanwhile I decided what I wanted to do. For a whole year that's the only thing I was able to do. (Apart from hobbies or special interests). 

And this september I finally decided to get back to finishing the second course, because it was short and wanted to finish it. This time I really thought was it, the perfect timing, and after giving everything for a month and a half and losing the ability to balance my responsabilities and hobbies, I shutdown completely, again. First I started having meltdowns and then I shutdown and spent almost two months in my room, unable to speak even. That lead me to miss lots of my exams and failing half the subjects. The burden, guilt, shame, fear and hopelessness I felt was the biggest I had felt. It felt like proving, once again, that I am a failure. As I have always felt, because I have been unable to be consistent with anything in my life, I don't have big achievements and I may not even finish this course. And now I have to study, in less than two weeks, five subjects and be able to function.

But after this, at least, I got diagnosed. And it felt like a relief and a curse at the same time. Not because being autistic is a bad thing, it isn't, in fact it is a superpower in lots of things that neurotypical people can't see, but it also means that I will struggle in certain things forever. And that really sucks. I want to be able to study because I love it, in spite of everything. But I don't know how to do it without pain and difficulties. I don't want my life to be a roallercoaster, I don't want to be in a total shutdown every two months. I want to be functional, I want to be consistent, I want to achieve things, I have lots of dreams. But right now the only thing I see is failure and darkness. I feel that the only energy I have goes to recovering from a shutdown instead of achieving things.  And I want to hope I can do many things in life, but I don't know if I believe I can do it. 

Writing helps me process, but I think I need tools to manage studying, processing being autistic and understanding it better so I can achieve things in the way that I need it.

Thank you for reading, I know it's a long story. Very much appreciated if anyone has advice. 

  • I'm in sixth-form too, now that I'm aware of what it is (where I live it is called different). And reading that you can relate this much has relieved a big part of me. Today I cried reading all your answers. Out of everthing, and the bad parts, it is amazing being part of a community. The sense of belonging and understanding. 

    Thank you for your message, maybe we are helping blind to blind, but I think exactly the same as you do. 

  • I'm also 18 and currently in sixth-form. I was diagnosed about two months ago, but for about 5 years I have struggled with depression, crippling anxiety, and my education (and consequently been held back a year), as well as staying social. I'm not able to go in to school a third of the time, so I suffer in catching up and staying on track like you. Maybe saying this is like the blind leading the blind, but I think what might help is to take some of the pressure off of yourself.

    My diagnosis has helped me reframe the way I think about what I previously considered failures, for example when I feel like I should be putting more effort in or achieving more at school. To me it has become that my autism isn't holding me back, but allowing me to excuse behaviours I would have previously beat myself up for. Like a get out of jail free card, I suppose. If I don't study until the last minute for a test and get a bad score one time, I forgive myself for that knowing that I struggle with keeping track of time and without proper stimulation and blocking out distraction it was practically impossible for me. Instead I plan my next move - do I have another exam coming up? Any pressing homework? And then I plan ways to convince my brain to do these things, like a reward chart or something. This helps me escape the doom and gloom of all the pressure and refocus on ways I can help myself. I also try to plan out times where I can complete tasks I set for myself bit by bit, to avoid burnout (although I'm still working on this). 

    Just remember, you're not alone! To be honest, reading your story felt a lot like someone had written about me. You just have to weather the difficult times, manage where you can, and be gentle with yourself right now. We're all on journeys like this together, and one day we'll both be thirty or something thinking 'that was rough! but I did my very best, and it all worked out.'

  • Thanks for your words and advice, I’m feeling very welcome here. Glad I decided to join!

  • You’ve described it even better. Thank you. 

  • Hey  welcome to the community! Slight smile

    First of all, I want to say that you’re not a failure. What you’ve been dealing with, academically, emotionally, and physically, is a massive load, and the fact that you’re still here, still trying, and still pursuing your goals shows incredible strength.

    It sounds like you’ve been through so much, and it’s no wonder you feel overwhelmed at times. The diagnosis might feel bittersweet right now, but it’s also the start of understanding yourself better and learning how to work with your brain. You’re right that being autistic comes with struggles, but it also comes with its own strengths. You’ve already shown so much resilience, creativity, and passion for learning.

    Maybe look into strategies for neurodivergent people, like breaking tasks into small, manageable steps, setting timers to stay on track, and prioritising taking breaks/resting to avoid burnout. It might also be worth finding a therapist who understands autism to help you look at sustainable routines and ways for managing shutdowns and meltdowns. Learning from other autistic people also helps, so being part of this forum is a great step!

    You’re not alone in this, and it’s okay to take things at your own pace. It’s not about being “perfect” or “consistent” all the time, it’s about finding what works for you and recognising that progress isn’t always linear. You’ve already achieved so much, even if it doesn’t feel like it right now, and there’s so much more ahead of you. Keep reaching out, and don’t hesitate to lean on this community. Slight smile

  • I'm a sixty year old man yet your super cogent and poignant post has just described my own lived experience very well.

    Not knowing I was Autistic meant I did not perceive many barriers,and the new knowledge seemingly brings with it a whole slew of "limitations" as you so point out.

    I found out very late in life, and find I devloped an abilty to do some some stuff easily now that Autisst traditionally find extremely difficult, and I believe I managed that only because I was convinced that I SHOULD be able to manage bright lights loud noises the demands of piloting a small aeroplane etc...

    OTOH the senseless arguments and silly things that I could have avoided if only I had known...  

  • Thank you so much, I will start working on it and look up what you've mentioned. I didn't think anyone would reply this fast! Very much appreciated :)

  • it also means that I will struggle in certain things forever. And that really sucks

    Hello odd, welcome to the site.

    Just a note on the point above - you now know you are autistic and you know your areas of weakness so I would recommend making it a problem solving task to find ways to work around the issues.

    Doing it this way uses your strengths of academinc poblem solving and will encourage you to read up on the autistic traits you exhibit that lead to these issues.

    Treat it more as a research paper and gather the information, formulate hypotheses of potential solutions and develop a plan of action with realistic steps and timescales.

    You were able to study OK before until your stress built up if I understand your post correctly. The added responsibilities etc were the stresser so you may want to consider ways to offload some responsibilities for periods of time while you study and do it in short, intense bursts with time to recharge yourself in between.

    I want to be functional, I want to be consistent, I want to achieve things, I have lots of dreams.

    These are all reasonable desires but to be able to achieve them you need to get a really good grip on your autism, study your own behaviours and patterns and use these to build realistic targets and expectations of timescales.

    My advice would be to get a therapist who is skilled in helping autists and develop an approach with them. Perhaps the uni will have a psychology dept where you can get access to the services - just make sure that whoever you work with understands autism very well or the chances of success are diminished.