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Anika's avatar

I was usually given "pleasure to have in the class" and something like "I encourage her to speak up more" from teachers. When a child is not disruptive, the adults think everything is perfect. I'm pretty sure I was that girl moving around the playground, not really a part of relationships, but appearing to be, which worked for me. I also enjoyed being the "ball monitor", which meant I could stay inside by myself and record when kids borrowed and returned sports equipment during recess.

I thought I experienced a lot of anxiety but I recently read an email from Dr. Megan Anna Neff (I recommend their emails) and they talked about social dread vs. anxiety, and how dread is about feeling overwhelmed for example, sensory overwhelm, and how treating dread vs. anxiety is different. Now I think I have experienced a lifetime of social dread, with a dash of anxiety on the side.

I feel like parenting is at least twice as hard for me as it is for allistic people. Sometimes that makes me feel bad, but I'd like to remind myself that it means I'm working so much harder to make it work. And relax my jaw a little. I think I was "adulting" ok before we had kids (not great, but I was surviving), and then parenting completely rocked my world. I haven't worked at a "real job" since having kids and I cannot image how that could work, I just can't do both, not even part time. I do work from home but I'm self-employed, so I set the boundaries. I felt completely unprepared for how much harder parenting would be than I was told. I think it's the conflicting sensory needs that is the hardest in our family.

I've taken some of the online autism assessments (several times over the last year or 2 to compare) and always scored with results that say something like "most likely autistic". I wish it wasn't so expensive to get diagnosed here, or I would have probably done it already. I would tell someone else that self diagnosis is valid but it would still feel better to have it official.

P.S. I think numbers 2 and 3 have 5 dashes each.

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Chuck Petch's avatar

Excellent, excellent, excellent coverage of female autism, Christine. As a boy raised by women, it does not surprise me at all that I largely fit your description of autistic girls, especially as you described the middle school and high school years. So much is familiar--loner, afraid of being noticed, strong emotions/prone to meltdowns, didn't understand social behavior and conversation, terrible lifelong social anxiety, lived in my imagination/dissociation, focused intensely (obsessed) on certain things, feelings of overwhelm and depression, codependent, always wanting to please and appease, weak sense of self, target of bullies as kids sensed I was different, etc. Yet, interestingly, just as I have never fit in as neurotypical, it seems like I also don't completely fit as an autistic person. I don't fit the male autistic stereotype and do mostly fit your female description, but I'm male. It's like I can't win, can't fit no matter which way I turn. I know I'm different, but I will continue to dwell in a neverland of uncertainty about what/who exactly I am. Thankfully, it doesn't really matter anymore at my present age and stage, and I've long since accepted myself and even found a meaningful path in life. But wouldn't we all like to understand why we were always so different from everybody else? Your explanation takes me a lot farther in that understanding.

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