Male, 52, most likely autistic. Please help

I'm 52, male, have lived in big cities in North America, and in various parts of Europe. I'm a dual citizen, USA and EU, but no, I am not MAGA; that entire side of the USA fills me with shame, dread and sadness. I have two teenaged children and have remarried once following a divorce. My ex-wife was extremely abusive and ruined me financially. 

For a variety of reasons---which I would explain if someone thought they were valuable---knowledgable people asked me if I had ever been assessed for autism, or they told me they suspected I had it. Two of these people were psychologists; one was a special education teacher, and the other was an accommodation specialist in my workplace. None of them know each other. They do not even live in the same place.

I took a series of online quizzes. This summer, 2025, I had a consultation and am scheduled for an assessment in November. The therapist said I have many traits, and the quizzes showed an extremely high likelihood. I have been educating myself, reading books, watching YouTube videos, and I have been noticing my behavior with much shock, awe, fear and fascination.

I suppose I should say that I was diagnosed with CPTSD in 2010, an experience that left me estranged from my entire extended family. I grew up in a family of WWII refugees living in a community of war refugees. My father was abusive, and both my parents were alcoholics. All that aside, I have worked the same job as a community college instructor for 23 years, and I have published multiple books. I also practice Zen, and I'm an avid cyclist. 

As a child, I was a gifted student, able to learn quickly, especially language. I can focus on small things for very long periods of time, and I don't feel I have ever been bored. I don't know what it feels like, though I'm fascinated by the possibility and wish I could visit this island. All that aside, in school, I was left alone to learn, and I spent most of my time reading. While I had a few "friends," they were mostly casual, and those boys moved away when I was very young. I was beaten up often. 

I feel it will be repetitive to present a laundry list of traits, but suffice it to say I show many, many signs of being high-masking.

I work a job that rewards my hyper-logic. I've been there for two decades. 

I naturally and immediately look past what someone is saying or communicating to notice the mechanics and structures of the communication. 

I listen best while looking at the floor or a wall. 

I talk to myself when I'm alone, usually to express some frustration or anger about a person I know, even by role-playing conversations that will never happen.

I run through scripts in my mind constantly, though I take issue with the idea that I'm the one scripting when it seems, especially in America, that most conversations are automated, with pre-fabricated questions and answers, or just blithe wish-wash about vague things.

I have special interests that do not attract attention: cooking, gardening and certain video games, though I'm also a student of world literature, and I can listen to Radiohead or The National for hours each day. I take photographs of walls and puddles, though it's not how it sounds; my photos look like abstract paintings. My books are complex, employing structure to provoke meaning, and I can get into flow-states while writing or cooking.

I shake and rub my hands, clench my teeth, the latter to the point that I required an appliance. 

I can bike for two hours or more without tiring. During those times, I do not feel time at all. 

I hear all sounds at once at about the same volume, thought sometimes they all merge into vibrating sludge, where I feel suspended. Sometimes, in public places, I can keep track of multiple conversations at once, though I have no interest in them. 

Sounds can cause me physical pain, nausea or confusion. At the same time, they can cause enormous delight. I loathe the sounds of automobiles, broken tailpipes or leaf blowers but love birds and falling rain. 

Scents can leave me reeling in revulsion, or send me back a step as I choke, though they also can soothe or refresh. I love the scent of coffee or fresh cut peaches, but the reek of a dirty toilet or a compost bin can leave me suffocating. 

I rock back and forth or shake my leg in waiting rooms. 

That's probably enough. This is not an exhaustive list, but it makes the point, I think.  

I am afraid of the assessment though I am also excited. If I learn this is something else, or nothing at all, I suppose I'll be heartbroken and confused, curious and shellshocked, hopeful (maybe) and lonely (definitely). If I do learn it is autism, I will more than likely weep and scream from pain as I jump and rock because, well, that's what I do. My fear is irrational but it is also sensible. It seems such a long time to wait. 

I welcome advice and information. If anything here is nonsensical or absurd, please understand that I am new, and that I did not ask for this. I am only trying to understand. 

Parents
  • Hi and welcome to the community. I'm female, in my sixties, retired and I live on the south coast of England. I enjoy reading (I'm hyperlexic) and playing video games. I'm self discovered, not formally diagnosed. Everyone is welcome here and hope you find this forum useful.

  • What does hyperlexia look like in adulthood, if you don't mind me asking? I only ever heard the term being used about precocious children. I read more than the average punter, so I wonder if I'd fall into a similar category.

  • Hi Damojo, of course I don't mind you asking about hyperlexia. I read very fast and notice incorrect spelling & grammar, but it's about more than that and ties in with autistic traits (many hyperlexics are also autistic)

    So what does it look like?

    Preference for written communication over verbal conversation

    Feel more confident expressing themselves in text

    Drawn to structured language, patterns & wordplay

    Reads voraciously - books, articles, signs, anything*

    Using quotes, scripts or song lyrics as a way to relate and express

    Using subtitles, not because of hearing problems but due to a love of clarity

    Finding deep satisfaction in language, structure & meaning

    Feeling anxious in fast verbal exchanges, but grounded with the written word

    Getting lost in a book and forgetting the world around them

    (* When I was a child reading the back of cereal packets, it was a family joke that if there were writing on toilet paper I would read that too. Not a joke though, I definitely would have!)

    https://www.sagebrushcounseling.com/blog/hyperlexia-in-adults

  • I could prove to my 2nd grade teacher that I was reading and understood the book version of "Star Wars," but she ignored my evidence, said I was using the film, even when I could demonstrate all the differences between the film and the book, including the book's accounts of characters' inner-thoughts. She just blew it off. I read the book by myself in my room and never told her about it again, and I never brought the books I liked to school. Many of them were about astronomy. I loved reading about it, and I had this strange idea that if I learned about the sky, I would learn some secret that explained who we are and what we're supposed to be doing. Those two questions were always on my mind. 

  • This describes me so accurately! It's shocking. I used to think I got used to subtitles just because I watched so many non-English films, but it was because they offered "clarity." (Though the auto-generated ones on YouTube can drive me to grit my teeth.)

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