IsabellaLinton wrote:
I was diagnosed Level 2 Autism in 2018, and Combined ADHD in 2020.
Despite being content with my Autism, I felt upset that my family and teachers hadn't been more active at seeking professional support or diagnosis when I was younger. They knew I was struggling and that I was very different from my peers, but I had no accommodations except for speech therapy.
MsJustice,
It's OK to feel how you do. Everyone processes their emotions differently and the path to total self-acceptance isn't always easy. I hope you're familiar with the many wonderful books written by and for women on the spectrum. They might help you to navigate the days when you feel a sense of loss. It will get easier, the more you connect with others and explore your unique style of Neurodiversity. Wrong Planet will certainly help. Welcome to the site!
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Thank you for the encouragement, IsabellaLinton. I have read some by Sarah Hendrickx which was wonderfully validating. I too am frustrated I was not diagnosed much younger, even though all of the warning signs, even by male standards were there for me. I think that contributes to my feelings of mourning; it was constantly reinforced that I wasn't trying hard enough and that if I just tried a little harder I would somehow be "normal". I definitely internalized that, and self-acceptance is tough with or without a diagnosis of anything to complicate it!
For everyone else: "NT-status" was just the easiest way to phrase my previous ill advised fantasy I could somehow be "normal" with enough effort. I do not mean it to sound like NT is better or that I regret being neurodiverse. I had an expectation for myself which I was constantly falling short of and I now know I cannot achieve. I hold myself to my standards very strictly, so this is a goal for all of my life I have to adjust to now. I am in mourning for that dream of fitting in, not for any social status. Just to be clear.
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Excellence, then, is not an act, but a habit. - Aristotle