Depression and possible Autism/Aspergers

Hello, I'm new here but I've been researching and learning from this site and community for quite some time now and have come to the conclusion that my brother could be somewhere on the spectrum.

He's 31 and has always been a fairly lonely guy and never had many friends. Since reading these forums I have noticed he has a number of traits. Now, I could be completely wrong about this but it might be something worth exploring.

The problem is that he is currently suffering with quite severe depression. This all came to a head a few years ago when he came out and told us he's gay. I'm also gay and came out when I was about 18 but my mother didn't react well to the news so he's kept it to himself for about 10 years. I can't imagine what that's done to him and I feel so sorry for him.

He's being treated for the depression and has counselling but my question to you guys is whether the depression should be dealt with before bringing up the possibility of him being on the spectrum. On one hand, if he is on the spectrum, it may help him to understand how he's feeling. On the other, it could confuse things and make things worse.

I'd really appreciate any thoughts, ideas and suggestions on this and if you have any questions, please do ask.

Thanks for reading.

Parents
  • Hi Caretwo,

    Thanks for your story. It seems that getting your diagnosis was absolutely the right thing to do and that's the reason I feel that it's potentially the right way to go for my brother. But at the same time, if I'm wrong about him being on the spectrum and I bring up the possibility with him, it could confuse things or give him some false hope that there is an answer.

    Do you think that there could have been a negative effect on you and your mental health if you went through the diagnosis process to find out that Aspergers was not the underlying issue?

Reply
  • Hi Caretwo,

    Thanks for your story. It seems that getting your diagnosis was absolutely the right thing to do and that's the reason I feel that it's potentially the right way to go for my brother. But at the same time, if I'm wrong about him being on the spectrum and I bring up the possibility with him, it could confuse things or give him some false hope that there is an answer.

    Do you think that there could have been a negative effect on you and your mental health if you went through the diagnosis process to find out that Aspergers was not the underlying issue?

Children
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