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I’m in the uncomfortable stage I never knew what uncomfortable meant until I was like this I always remember a bit from the Bible where becoming a Christian is likened to childbirth ,Apart from wanting to destroy my iPad and I’ve never given birth to a child ,from what I’ve seen of childbirth I fully agree ,some women say it’s like sitting on a keg of lit dynamite I think I finally got past the dynamite has blown stage ,i’m still in the sticking the pieces together that have been blown apart bit, I don’t like feeling the emotions that I feel,I’m a stuffer! but I never get away from the horrible feeling when they were stuffed down.Thanks for the reply, Free Diver! I have wondered about confounding data for my self-diagnosis - age, gender, depression, trauma. Maybe what I see in myself is the extreme consequence of male socialization, rather than ASD? Maybe I am enduring some midlife ennui, rather than ASD? My trauma has been this: my wife was diagnosed with a traumatizing, life-threatening illness that while survivable, will forever define our lives. It has been the trauma that seemingly has exposed me: in trying to understand and meet her needs, in trying to understand and meet my needs, I have left a destructive trail in my wake that has resulted in ruined relationships, and the consensus (amongst stakeholders, therapists, friends, and my wife) is that I “don’t get it” and I seem to have little social/emotional understanding. I have tried my best, but everything social/emotional that I have touched has resulted in ruin. It’s like I am living a separate reality from the people I care about, and we have no means of understanding each other or agreeing on a common reality. I feel terribly misunderstood without the vocabulary to make myself known, and pretty much everyone has given up on the idea that I am a reliable, trustworthy, empathetic person.
Thanks for sharing, Shenandoah. Different good? Or just different? There have been signs all my life (I experience a number of the symptoms, relational feedback reinforces a diagnosis, I ACE the questionnaires lol), but I have chosen to ignore/devalue them because I have been “comfortable?” Now that I am extremely uncomfortable, it no longer seems that I can avoid looking at myself in this way.
Your decision to pursue a diagnosis seems rational & valid, but be warned psychiatrists can be averse to diagnosing conditions they can't throw pills at, and then again the diagnostic process can be a bit of a farce (depends on the service you're relying upon to diagnose you, perhaps); the so-called specialist team who diagnosed me managed to miss more A.S.D. indications than they spotted, and it was a miracle they succeeded in diagnosing me at all—which my Community Psychiatric Nurse assured me was pretty typical...I am now pursuing an A.S.D. diagnosis. What I hope this might help me with is finding the right support so that I better understand myself and others, and to finally have an explanatory narrative for my life experience and challenges. I hope it may lead me to form healthier relationships. I really hope it allows me to tell myself “this is who you are and this is the work to do,” which would be an improvement on how I feel now: hopeless, defeated, selfish, hurtful, lost. So, I am cautiously approaching this diagnosis with optimism.