Hi everyone! :)

I'm not officially diagnosed yet (eventually, I want to get a diagnosis when I have the money for it—in my country, you can only get one from private practitioners), but I strongly suspect that I'm autistic.

The thing is, I also have bipolar disorder type 2, and since it's been treated and I've been feeling much better and more stable, my autistic traits have become more visible. There are also many things that bipolar disorder simply couldn't explain—things I remember being there from early childhood.

Recently, I stopped fighting against myself to appear "normal," and boom, everything surfaced. For example, stimming has become much more frequent, and I do it almost constantly now, but I no longer care about other people's opinions of it.

My whole life is starting to make sense now. I always knew something was "wrong" with me, and I'm still surprised by the possibility that maybe I'm not a failure. It's such a relief.

I thought I was a failure and somehow less than others for my whole life. Can anyone relate to this? I think those who were diagnosed later in life must have felt the same way.

  • Hi, welcome to the community! It's one of the most universal autistic experience- feeling different, not fitting in and somehow like a failure,  ot because of being different,  but because others tells us often, that we are wrong. I'm myself also not diagnosed yet,  awaiting my assessment autumn this year. Here on this site you don't need official diagnosis. I hope you find here support and enjoy being here.

  • Dear Kriszta,

    Welcome to the community! 

    I thought I would share our NAS advice and guidance page about Bipolar disorder -it has some comments from autistic people and their experiences of being autistic whilst diagnosed with Bipolar Disorder that may feel helpful for you.

    Best wishes,

    Olivia Mod

  • Hi and welcome to the community. I only discovered I was probably autistic in my fifties, I didn't think I was "less" or a failure, but I did feel different to others all my life.

    I'm now in my sixties and retired, and I enjoy reading and playing video games.