EstimatedProphet
Rising up to Paradise
I'm a late-40s author, attorney, business consultant, and dad (and Deadhead!) diagnosed with Asperger's/ASD. My diagnosis indicated a near-genius IQ, which I think explains how I was able to get along okay in life. But eventually I reached a near-suicidal level of burnout/depression from giving more and more effort to get less and less results every day. Seemingly in the nick of time I discovered what autism is all about and found the answer that eluded me for 40 years.
I've been diagnosed with anxiety, depression, social anxiety, ADHD, PTSD, all of that stuff. When I came to understand and accept I was autistic, in a manner of a day or two I felt physically different, and better. I had no idea of the stress I carried around every day dealing with the incongruities of life in a high-pressure professional setting.
After being diagnosed, I had a bit of an identity crisis. How much of my behavior was consciously passing, and how much was intuitive, the real me? The few NTs I told and my psychologist had no answers. Then when I realized that I had to teach my also-autistic 3-year-old son how to hug me, it hit me. NONE of what I do is intuitive. I learned every single thing and somehow keep it all straight, most of the time.
I'm writing two books presently. One is on behavioral economics, and the other is a semi-memoir on autistic burnout. I'm hoping for a 'hard reset' of my working life so my job doesn't kill me, and I want to do whatever I can to keep others from going through life like I did.
All of that being said, I don't take myself too seriously and avoid people who do. For better or worse I would never wish I was NT or change anything about my past. I hope to make some friends here because I've never met an Aspie in person.
I've been diagnosed with anxiety, depression, social anxiety, ADHD, PTSD, all of that stuff. When I came to understand and accept I was autistic, in a manner of a day or two I felt physically different, and better. I had no idea of the stress I carried around every day dealing with the incongruities of life in a high-pressure professional setting.
After being diagnosed, I had a bit of an identity crisis. How much of my behavior was consciously passing, and how much was intuitive, the real me? The few NTs I told and my psychologist had no answers. Then when I realized that I had to teach my also-autistic 3-year-old son how to hug me, it hit me. NONE of what I do is intuitive. I learned every single thing and somehow keep it all straight, most of the time.
I'm writing two books presently. One is on behavioral economics, and the other is a semi-memoir on autistic burnout. I'm hoping for a 'hard reset' of my working life so my job doesn't kill me, and I want to do whatever I can to keep others from going through life like I did.
All of that being said, I don't take myself too seriously and avoid people who do. For better or worse I would never wish I was NT or change anything about my past. I hope to make some friends here because I've never met an Aspie in person.