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've just watched this ted talk and thought you'd like to see it (and other people would too).

    It doesnt give practical advice but has very positive messages https://youtu.be/A1AUdaH-EPM

  • Thank you - I’ve just watched it - it’s excellent isn’t it?! It’s a brilliant approach and I agree with her. There are some environments I’m really suited to things like deserted Moorlands and mountains even when it’s wet and cold and windy - environments that many people would struggle with. I can happily manage without much food for ages, or modern luxuries like hot water or dishwashers or fancy clothes. What I struggle with are things like parties and busy shops! It’s just difference - it’s not necessarily ‘less’ or worse. 
    Good heavens though that statistic about life expectancy she gave is horrendous. Just appalling. I can totally see why though - I feel worn out with stress and anxiety over decades, and I have a lot of difficulty accessing healthcare due to anxiety. So it sadly makes a lot of sense.

    Thank you for sending this to me - I feel her message is ultimately very positive and important. 

  • There are some environments I’m really suited to things like deserted Moorlands and mountains even when it’s wet and cold and windy

    A girl after my own heart. Give me rainy Scotland over a sunny beach any day of the year.

    I've said for a while that neuro divergence will eventually become part of the accepted differences of life like lgbtq+ has.

Reply
  • There are some environments I’m really suited to things like deserted Moorlands and mountains even when it’s wet and cold and windy

    A girl after my own heart. Give me rainy Scotland over a sunny beach any day of the year.

    I've said for a while that neuro divergence will eventually become part of the accepted differences of life like lgbtq+ has.

Children
  • I bet it's nice to have people around you who think and communicate in a similar way

  • Thank you Pray

    My children are such a blessing to me and I’m so lucky to have them. Our youngest still lives with us and I love his company - I know he’ll want to move out and get his own place one day - but I will miss him so much when he does! 

  • It's hard isn't it but it sounds like you were and still are doing your absolute best as a parent for your sons.  

  • Yes - although I love a quiet beach too :) 

    The key things for me are: beautiful nature, not many people, not too hot. I can’t stand really hot sweltering weather. 

    I agree about the comparison with lgbtq rights - it’s a good point to make. 
    Going to school actively damaged my son - we were cluelessly trying to make him ‘fit’ into it - when he was intrinsically unsuited to that environment. He deserved a learning environment that met his needs and did not traumatise him.