Recent diagnosis, separating anxiety and autism

Hello Wave

I recently got a formal diagnosis for autism at 36. I also have had a lifetime of anxiety.  I am now trying to separate the two, and try to identify each from another. I'm trying to do this so I can learn better coping strategies, hopefully. 

Does anyone have any tips who may be autistic and struggle with anxiety too? In particular I have bad health anxieties - they only seem to arise if I am ill. 

Another thing I struggle with is if someone doesn't reply, I get really frustrated and over think and think about it to the point where I want to block the person so I can stop over thinking. I think this is anxiety, but since my recent diagnosis I am wondering if anyone can relate to this from an autism point of view. 

Thankyou

Parents
  • I'm hyper aware through noting anxiety triggers that were always there vs ones that developed over time and having specific non-autism related triggers that I have BOTH anxiety from trying and failing to fit into allist/neurotypical normative society as an autistic person AND anxiety that arose from abuse in childhood trauma, which an allist would also develop if they went through it. But the anxiety of those two separate categories do interact and exacerbate eachother.

    I feel uncomfortable when people say the two are innately or more specifically causally linked because that implies that allists shouldn't get anxiety or ptsd, or worse that I "only have cptsd because of the autism" (as if my mother didn't regularly beat me black and blue or call me worthless on a regular basis) (I've seen it even outright claimed before too, never mind implied) and that is unhelpful because it doesn't accept that being different is just different, not more or less than, and also it dismisses the abuse I had to endure for decades. So yh I have autistic trauma (+autism anxiety), but I also have autism and trauma (+anxiety) separate.

    As for helping strategies, I dunno if you get panic attacks but I've applied breathing exercises to both panic attacks and start-up meltdowns with some success. If you have asthma or long covid I also recomend the shorter versions eg. breathe in for count of 3 through nose, hold for count of one, then out through the mouth for the count of 4, and repeat for 30-60 seconds until youstart to feel calmer.
    Hope that helps.

Reply
  • I'm hyper aware through noting anxiety triggers that were always there vs ones that developed over time and having specific non-autism related triggers that I have BOTH anxiety from trying and failing to fit into allist/neurotypical normative society as an autistic person AND anxiety that arose from abuse in childhood trauma, which an allist would also develop if they went through it. But the anxiety of those two separate categories do interact and exacerbate eachother.

    I feel uncomfortable when people say the two are innately or more specifically causally linked because that implies that allists shouldn't get anxiety or ptsd, or worse that I "only have cptsd because of the autism" (as if my mother didn't regularly beat me black and blue or call me worthless on a regular basis) (I've seen it even outright claimed before too, never mind implied) and that is unhelpful because it doesn't accept that being different is just different, not more or less than, and also it dismisses the abuse I had to endure for decades. So yh I have autistic trauma (+autism anxiety), but I also have autism and trauma (+anxiety) separate.

    As for helping strategies, I dunno if you get panic attacks but I've applied breathing exercises to both panic attacks and start-up meltdowns with some success. If you have asthma or long covid I also recomend the shorter versions eg. breathe in for count of 3 through nose, hold for count of one, then out through the mouth for the count of 4, and repeat for 30-60 seconds until youstart to feel calmer.
    Hope that helps.

Children