• jeremyparker@programming.dev
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    2 hours ago

    I got diagnosed with adhd in 2009, and tried meds for a while (vyvanse ftl), but I couldn’t sleep, so I stopped. Then I got distracted and forgot I had it. Got re-diagnosed, along with autism, in like 2022 or something. I’m on adderall now and it’s fine I guess.

    I was 40 years old when the puzzle pieces of my life finally started to come together.

    (I know a lot of autistic people don’t love the old puzzle piece logo, but for me, it’s the most apt metaphor I’ve ever seen.)

  • TotalCourage007@lemmy.world
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    3 days ago

    I realized during my teenager years when everyone around me started drifting apart, they no longer found me interesting as an entertainment monkey. I got a diagnosis once I started struggling keeping jobs and wasn’t successful in college. It really makes me sad how normies talk about family who struggle with employment. Like I somehow chose this nightmare.

  • Ceph@lemmy.zip
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    3 days ago

    I was 37 when I was diagnosed as autistic after self identifying the previous year. I also suspect I am ADHD as well but I’ve never sought a professional diagnosis for it. I always felt different, like an alien observing another culture even as a little kid. All my closest friends growing up were either autistic or ADHD.

  • C8r9VwDUTeY3ZufQRYvq@sopuli.xyz
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    4 days ago

    Mid 30s, I was diagnosed with ADHD. Later realised I’ve probably also got some autistic traits too (all discovered after both kids were diagnosed with ADHD and autism).

    • harmbugler@piefed.social
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      2 hours ago

      Similar here. Mid thirties, my kid was diagnosed autistic so I started reading Neurotribes. Not very far into the book I was “oh… OHHH”

  • grammaticerror@lemmy.world
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    4 days ago

    Realized? Very young. Had the language to articulate my experience? Still working on it. From the outside looking in a lot of this must seem like an intentional choice to differ. It’s how my mom approached it, like I was just intentionally being difficult. It’s how people around me approached it, like I was just intentionally refusing to fit in. My only exposure to autism was in the form of a middle school classmate, and we were not similar, so I never expected that my condition was closer to his than to the allistic folks around me. Some weeks ago I filled out a questionnaire, the RAADS-R. Got a score above the autistic threshold, and things sort of just…became apparent. After ten minutes of reading about the actual autistic experience I was relieved and heartbroken to discover that what I was living through all along really did have a name, and was not in fact just me choosing to intentionally lead a more difficult life. So I was 33 when I learned that I am autistic.

  • Ergoplato@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    4 days ago

    Like most on here, I knew (and others wouldn’t let me forget as a kid) that I was different and didn’t understand most other people since the start. I didn’t realize it was autism (or even what that meant in internal experience) until I was in my mid-40s.

  • Drusas@fedia.io
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    4 days ago

    I think I was 22 when a therapist suggested it, I looked into it, and before long I was quite certain he was right. Really was a game-changer to finally know why most people and I couldn’t relate well to one another and gave me a starting to point to work on that.

  • nerv@fedinsfw.app
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    4 days ago

    As fun or sad the next may sound, I am currently - and very covertdly - being acessed for neurodivergency because I walked into a psychologist office saying I feel tired and can not relate with my coworkers.

    So… That is that.

  • Bo7a@piefed.ca
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    5 days ago

    I was 45 when I realized that the way my mind works differently than most people I know is not just me being a hard person to be around, it is a function of the wiring in my brain.

    I was always a super high performer in school so a lot of adults just put up with the many many signs that something was different.

    When I was young doctors didn’t really diagnose adhd or autism, forget that lovely blend of AuDHD that seems to be my personal flavour. And now that I am older my family doctor says ridiculous shit like ‘Adults don’t get adhd or autism so you are fine.’

    I’ve started using coping mechanisms from meeting other AuDHD folks and they are helping to a very small extent. I hope to continue learning about the ways people deal with their own wiring without access to meds.

  • Shellofbiomatter@lemmus.org
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    5 days ago

    ADHD was first diagnosed when i was around 8, pretty quickly as well based on old records. Mostly because it was rather stereotypical representation of it at that time. But it was completely ignored by my mother at the time as it can’t be and the therapist is wrong. So nothing came from it.

    I was rediagnosed around 28-29 and ASD added in as well, due to ADHD symptoms becoming less noticable or better managed/masked and ASD symptoms becoming more obvious.

    I really didn’t consider myself that out of place, from my perspective everyone else were the odd ones.

  • Mistress Remilia@lemmy.cyberia9.org
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    5 days ago

    I think I was 40 when it finally clicked, so two years ago? Maybe a year or two earlier. I was diagnosed with ADHD years before it clicked in my head what it entailed.

  • Malyca@lemmy.zip
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    5 days ago

    My first memories are of being misunderstood and being bullied, even by my parents. I knew I was different from my first formed memory.

  • P00ptart@lemmy.world
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    5 days ago

    Around 38ish? I never realized that there was something to explain why I am the way I am, I just internalized everything. But after my son was diagnosed with ADHD, I looked more into it and felt like in the matrix where Neo gets wooshed into the white room.

    • Stegget@lemmy.world
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      5 days ago

      Yep. My boy was initially non verbal and diagnosed ASD when he was 3 and I was 30. The process of understanding what he is going through as he grows and learns opened my eyes to my own lives experience as so many things just started clicking into place. It has been an enlightening journey.

      • P00ptart@lemmy.world
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        5 days ago

        Absolutely, it’s like wool has been pulled off your eyes. Or that moment you leave the vault in a fallout game, and your eyes adjust to seeing natural light for the first time.