ASPartOfMe wrote:
With the stress of being autistic in a neurotypical world, and how often autistics are un or underemployed it is not surprising a period of profound disappointment and questioning of one's life would occur earlier than typical.
Yes, and I do think that in many cases, it's not that we can't work up to our potential, it's that we are very unclear about what our potential is and sometimes it isn't at all what we expect. If I had known that I was autistic 20 years ago, I probably wouldn't have wound up teaching English in China. And I certainly wouldn't have been able to get a legitimate work visa to do it. (no regrets there, but it's a big burden to be the literal first and possibly only white person that those folks have ever seen and to be on best behavior pretty much constantly)
I do think that it probably is a bit easier if it's just autism, or just ADHD rather than having to find something that is OKish with multiple conditions. I was pretty much the entire pick up department at my store for a couple years, and the autism side of my head absolutely loved it. The social interactions were generally quite limited and repetitive, so I got the hang of it relatively quickly. And I could do most of the work for the entire department. But, the ADHD side got bored so when I was offered a cross promotion to assistant manager of a different department I accepted. Which became it's own thing that I won't get into.
The point is, that I never thought of pickup being something that I'd be good at even though logistics type jobs often times tap into things that autistic folks are more suited for. It was just a terrible job for ADHD apart from the time running around scrambling because I suddenly got flooded with stuff to do on short notice.