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Farms
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02 Aug 2011, 11:01 am

Is the constant fatigue that I experience related to my ASD? I always get tired easily. In weekdays when I have to spend around 8 hours outside home taking classes, doing assignments and working as a TA, I feel as if all my body's strength is drained accompanied by throbbing head and sore back. I am unable do anything else but sleep when I get home. Does this have anything to do with the fact that I have to spend those 8 hours surrounded by people who are constantly, working in group activities and having to try to act normal (I still do stand out to be quite different).
People with aspergers usually have trouble going to sleep (insomnia), I on the other hand need at least 8 hours of undisturbed sleep to feel fresh again. Does anyone else have the same problem?



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02 Aug 2011, 11:18 am

I've been like this my whole life. Always fatigued. I tried changing my diet, my sleep habits, my exercise, etc., and nothing changed. I never got any more "energy". When I figured out about the ASD (I'm older, so wasn't diagnosed), I said, "Aha!" I have to spend hours every day in fight-or-flight mode just to interact at a "normal" level. Constant sensation bombardment. No wonder!

And sleep to me isn't refreshing. I wish it were. I need hours of awake alone-time to refresh properly.



EmmaUK12
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02 Aug 2011, 11:26 am

I'm the same, i didn't realise it had anything to do with ASD...



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02 Aug 2011, 11:56 am

It is like walking or hiking at your proper pace--you can go a really long way. But, if you have to walk or hike much faster pace, you tire easily. Because most Aspies need to work really hard in social situations, we tire easily--just like someone walking or hiking much too fast for comfort.



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02 Aug 2011, 12:15 pm

Same story here, with insomnia thrown in. Keep an eye out for depression as a cause for fatigue, too.



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02 Aug 2011, 12:47 pm

Yes, having to put in a lot of effort for a long time is common for Aspies trying to cope with the NT world, and of course that causes fatigue.

But there are so many other causes that are possible, and many of them are physical or non-AS psychological. You should really get checked out. For all you know, you might have anything from mono to inattentive ADD...


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02 Aug 2011, 1:44 pm

I never thought that there might be a link between the two, but it would make sense. I'm always tired. From the time I wake up in the morning to the time I go to bed, I'm just exhausted all day long.


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02 Aug 2011, 3:17 pm

I am always tired due to all the pills I am on. The only time I am not as tired is when I am manic or hypomanic.



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02 Aug 2011, 3:18 pm

I believe so. Brain works harder, uses more energy.


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02 Aug 2011, 4:33 pm

I always assumed I was just lazy, but this might not be the case.


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ooOoOoOAnaOoOoOoo
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02 Aug 2011, 6:32 pm

I have been exercising alone regularly and it helps with stress. I have more energy than I did when I hardly ever bothered with it. The ipod helps with this because I stay focused and move quicker when listening to it.

I also have trouble with hormonal backache and fatigue. When I get tired in the evening nowadays, it's due to a fluctuation in hormones. That kind of fatigue is very different from other kinds and I can tell the differences in types of fatigue.



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02 Aug 2011, 7:28 pm

I`m always tired!


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03 Aug 2011, 4:16 am

Meditation practice helps me a lot.


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03 Aug 2011, 12:13 pm

I also am very tired all day, no matter how much or how little sleep I get.

But I don't do anything to get tired. My days consist of sitting at the computer or laying in bed. But the smallest bit of physical effort drains me completely - I don't get out of breath, but I get achy and tired and my body feels so heavy and weak.

But myself and a few of my family members think I may have Fibromyalgia, and I also have ridiculously heavy breasts that caused a curved spine, so obviously carrying those around with me all day isn't going to be easy.

But even before I developed breasts large enough to cause a problem, or started getting joint pains, I was still always tired. I thought it was just school, but the other kids did the same hours as me, got as much, less in some cases, sleep than me, but I was still always exhausted by the time I got home, even if I took the bus home!



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03 Aug 2011, 12:57 pm

I think we all have to experiment to see what makes us tired. The sources of fatigue may not be immediately obvious.

For example--sitting at the computer.
Interacting with other folks on the web
Florescent lights
Hum of a noisy computer
Those awful moving ads!
Need glasses or a better prescription



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03 Aug 2011, 6:40 pm

Farms wrote:
Is the constant fatigue that I experience related to my ASD? I always get tired easily. In weekdays when I have to spend around 8 hours outside home taking classes, doing assignments and working as a TA, I feel as if all my body's strength is drained accompanied by throbbing head and sore back. I am unable do anything else but sleep when I get home. Does this have anything to do with the fact that I have to spend those 8 hours surrounded by people who are constantly, working in group activities and having to try to act normal (I still do stand out to be quite different).
People with aspergers usually have trouble going to sleep (insomnia), I on the other hand need at least 8 hours of undisturbed sleep to feel fresh again. Does anyone else have the same problem?


Yes it is related to Asperger's. I have always felt tired, even after a good sleep and I never have trouble going to sleep,
When I was being assessed for Asperger's I asked about it. I explained how I feel out of breath and physically drained and exhausted when I get home from work. The psychologist said it is because we are trying so hard to fit in and read and assess people and their actions, that our brains are working harder than most people's and it does physically drain you. She suggested I try to have small breaks, like a walk to the toilet or a walk to get a drink, just for the mental break.