I'm autistic in an unsupportive house. Now I'm gay and it's worse.

My parents deliberately hid my diagnosis from me. I found out in quite a traumatic and shocking way - through my medical notes showing throughout my whole childhood and teenage years, my autism was picked up by teachers and health professionals, but my parents refused diagnosis every time it was offered. At 4 years old I was given an appointment with a clinical psychologist for autism assessment. Twice. It's recorded my parents wouldn't accept any intervention at all. As a child, when I asked them if I had autism, they lied and told me I wasn't autistic. I only found out because my siblings told me directly I'm autistic. I learned my parents had never planned to tell me I'm autistic.

To this day even with my NHS diagnosis my parents continue to deny and invalidate my autism. It makes going home to them really hard because a part of me that's so important and has changed my life for a dazzlingly more colourful and bright future, which has given me so much confidence and which has helped me celebrate my talents and special interests has to be hidden. "Disabled me who needs support" is not welcome. "Disabled me" has to be explained away by "everyone gets that too, you're not special" or "of course you can't get help, adjustments are for people with physical disabilities" (not literally said that way but the inference is obvious). With so much ableism in society today, it's lonely going through that without parental support.

Now going home is even harder because I've discovered I'm gay. My parents are really anti LGBT. They stopped supporting a family member because they came out as LGBT. That family member came out 10 years ago and my parents are still really anti LGBT. If I come out, they will withdraw their financial support.

It's really really hard for me to hold two spheres in my head of my parents "loving parents who love me and raised me well and are still a source of support" and "parents who don't have my best interests at heart. Who view me as inferior, who lied to me because they feel insecure about my diagnosis. Who will stop supporting me at uni if they find out I'm gay, like they did with another family member. Which all don't look like love."

Can anyone relate? Offer advice? It's a really lonely position to be in. 

Parents
  • To offer a bit of a counterpoint to the good advice some of the other side will give you as a paid up member of your parents point of view, it is not as simple as the LGBT "you're either with us or against us" mentaliity would suggest.

    Your sexuality, although important IS NOT ALL THAT YOU ARE. Remember that, it's important to know.

    Your parents however, may be the sort of people who will experience great disappointment to learn that you won't be producing them any grandchildren, if they have the whole hetero sexual mentality thing going on.

    They may also have made an adult decision based on the copious evidence that exists, that the LGBT "lifestyle" as it is currently being presented in the mainstream is a hazardous kind of existence that they simply don't want for their kid any more than some parents don't want their kids to ride motorcycles. 

    In my case when as a young person I threw my Yamaha 250 into the side of a mini my parents even paid for "Conversion therapy" I.E. driving lessons and supplied me with a car, (bless 'em!) but it didn't take...

    Sexual stuff is generally more satisfying if treated gently and kept "on the down low" anyway, so why not just keep it under your hat, and save your parents the moment of reckoning for as long as possible? But TRY and do it by using discretion and being careful, not by outright lying to your parents. Lying to people destroys their trust, and corrodes your relationships like you would not believe.

    A rule of life I try to live by, is whenever I find myself in the "minority" then it's going to be ME who has to make the most adjustments and MANAGE the situation. The majority will consider me to be "wrong" when I am holding a minority point of view, and there are more of them than there are of me...

    Diplomacy is cheaper than combat.

Reply
  • To offer a bit of a counterpoint to the good advice some of the other side will give you as a paid up member of your parents point of view, it is not as simple as the LGBT "you're either with us or against us" mentaliity would suggest.

    Your sexuality, although important IS NOT ALL THAT YOU ARE. Remember that, it's important to know.

    Your parents however, may be the sort of people who will experience great disappointment to learn that you won't be producing them any grandchildren, if they have the whole hetero sexual mentality thing going on.

    They may also have made an adult decision based on the copious evidence that exists, that the LGBT "lifestyle" as it is currently being presented in the mainstream is a hazardous kind of existence that they simply don't want for their kid any more than some parents don't want their kids to ride motorcycles. 

    In my case when as a young person I threw my Yamaha 250 into the side of a mini my parents even paid for "Conversion therapy" I.E. driving lessons and supplied me with a car, (bless 'em!) but it didn't take...

    Sexual stuff is generally more satisfying if treated gently and kept "on the down low" anyway, so why not just keep it under your hat, and save your parents the moment of reckoning for as long as possible? But TRY and do it by using discretion and being careful, not by outright lying to your parents. Lying to people destroys their trust, and corrodes your relationships like you would not believe.

    A rule of life I try to live by, is whenever I find myself in the "minority" then it's going to be ME who has to make the most adjustments and MANAGE the situation. The majority will consider me to be "wrong" when I am holding a minority point of view, and there are more of them than there are of me...

    Diplomacy is cheaper than combat.

Children
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