Feeling like a failure

I’ve had a difficult few months and recently I’ve felt like such a failure. I’ve been thinking about my life and all the struggles I’ve had just to cope with normal life - stuff that so many other people seem to breeze through and cope really well with - and I’ve just had this awful overwhelming feeling today of feeling like such a failure. I know now that much of my struggle with day to day life is due to me being autistic (and also my childhood with parents who were very flawed and emotionally distant) and most of the time I try to be positive. But these last couple of weeks I’ve found myself experiencing a lot of self hatred and feeling like such a failure.

I realise this sounds like self pity - and maybe it is! I don’t want to be thinking like this and I know it’s self destructive. 
But how do other autistic people come to terms with the fact that they’ve spent their lives struggling so much with day to day life, and living with a lot of anxiety etc? When I was younger I think I felt better about myself - I enjoyed being different and unique. But now I find myself looking at other people who have had more conventionally ‘successful’ lives and friendships and feeling like a failure in comparison. I think being autistic has made life very difficult for me. 

How do other people come to terms with being accepting of these sorts of thoughts and feelings? And how do you keep positive about the way being autistic has impacted on your ability to really engage with life and achieve things? 

I want to be more positive but am struggling today. Does anyone else sometimes feel this way? And how do you deal with it? 

Parents
  • I have to say, I am pretty much where you are at the moment. I don’t have the capacity to expand my answer with advice, but wanted you to know you aren’t alone, it is normal, and it will pass.

Reply
  • I have to say, I am pretty much where you are at the moment. I don’t have the capacity to expand my answer with advice, but wanted you to know you aren’t alone, it is normal, and it will pass.

Children
  • Same. And I’m very grateful to Kate for raising the question, as I feel So anomalous at times in a way I seemed to care about much less in my more distant past. But there’s embarrassment in that too. Having waded through decades always feeling anxious but also somehow looking at all that effortless conventionality and life progression  in other people with a kind of abstracted ‘that’s for them, not me’ neutral and unquestioned understanding. And then one day(ish) I had a dark epiphany about it all and several breakdowns have followed. I suppose I had smaller ones in the past too, but had a little more (not much) energy to get through with less mental and emotional damage. But that thing of, why haven’t I thought about these comparisons adequately in the past, leaving the world to tilt in its axis now to catch up, and feel shame about being even less functional/normal than I realised. 

  • Thank you Pray

    It genuinely helps to know that I’m not alone in this way. I’m sorry you’re experiencing this too though.  

    I suppose it’s inevitable to feel like this sometimes, and I’m sure you’re right that it will pass. 

    Sending love and solidarity. x