How do you deal with a fellow Autistic Colleague?

Hi!

So, I have been diagnosed on the autism spectrum for about 5 years now. But since everyone on this forum are adults: I would love to hear your advice and experiences.

I work in service and have this colleague (let's call her Marianne) who is autistic and a nightmare.

Her behaviour is highly aggressive towards me and other staff members. Criticises everything we do and cannot tolerate when someone challenges her behaviour (aka me). Here is an example.

So for some context: the restaurant we work at is divided into "sections" and each section is handled by a single waitress. If you deal with a customer in a section, you must explain to the waitress in charge what you did at which table. Simple right? Once, a customer (who sat in Marianne's section) approached me and asked for the bill. Marianne was taking an order, so I handed it to him. He then explained he was in a hurry because he had a baby. And I see his tired-looking wife breastfeeding a baby with their young child beside him. Being a considerate human being, I skip waiting for Marianne and hand him the machine so he can pay and leave. I finally crossed Marianne and explained that the customer paid because he was in a hurry and she lost it. Lecturing me that it's not my place to take of someone else's section. If you paid attention, you know that's not true.


Situations like these continued until I no longer believed her until it turned into a shouting match. She said I was being "rude" while I responded I did not take her seriously because she is always wrong (as demonstrated in the story above). You can imagine my surprise when I found out from a colleague that she is also autistic. He figured out I was as well and to just deal with her behaviour because she still works the way they did two years ago. I said we are equally stubborn and I was relieved to hear she only works during holidays.


Now the winter holiday is coming very close, and I fear she is coming back, and my first reaction is going to be "Oh Jesus! Not you!" Outload. When I found out I was autistic, it guided me to change. But Marianne seems to have no mind talking the way she talks to our team (and she is not in charge). I know there are different people on the spectrum, but Marianne is the first autistic person I have met and worked with. I never actually thought that my first interaction with another autistic person would be like this. And I am not 100% convinced that her autism "excuses" everything. But please tell me what you think and if you have better experiences.

Parents
  • I don't have better experiences. No-one else at my last job was diagnosed but it was data analysis and I'd put money on 3 others being spectrumy enough to get one.

    You've got to remember it's not just the autism it's how that person has lived and all of us are different.an autistic person with other mental health conditions, who's lived a harder life for whatever reason it's going to have more difficulty fitting in than someone who doesn't have those life experiences. Maybe that person can't manage the changes that have happened in the last 2 years, maybe the managers bring her back every winter out of the goodness of their hearts. Marianne may not mean to speak to others in a tone you find grating. 

    I would suggest finding something else to focus on other than Marianne because of the way our brains work once we find something that annoys us it is very difficult to let it go. It may be that you want to find a different job entirely, it might mean that you ask for a different shift pattern. The trouble is once someone has got under your skin it is incredibly difficult to ignore the things that they do which annoy you. And then you become the one who gets in trouble because you complain too much about that one person for no valid reason. Been there, done that. 

  • Yes, that's pretty much it, and you are right I am trying to find a different job that suits more my ambition. And you are right about a lot of other things too. I have never complained to a manager or confronted her directly about it (I cannot imagine a conversation like this EVER going well) but the fact she deals with her autism her way and knows the way I used to be is the only reason I have not exploded yet. But you are right, it is difficult to let go once they get under your skin, I guess I could kill her with kindness that'd be fun.

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  • Yes, that's pretty much it, and you are right I am trying to find a different job that suits more my ambition. And you are right about a lot of other things too. I have never complained to a manager or confronted her directly about it (I cannot imagine a conversation like this EVER going well) but the fact she deals with her autism her way and knows the way I used to be is the only reason I have not exploded yet. But you are right, it is difficult to let go once they get under your skin, I guess I could kill her with kindness that'd be fun.

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