People who target the “unusual” have basically not developed mentally at all since either they, or someone they creeped to, were the playground bully. Emotional age of maybe 12, if that. Masking is exhausting, and burnout is painful. I have no idea what will work best for you, but I find just sitting or wandering slowly outdoors amid some decent greenery helps me when things get bad.
Thank you for finding the courage to make this video. You’re amazing. There’s so little research in this area of adult burnout. This happened to me about five years ago. Like you, I was struggling harder and harder to function in my job and my life in general. I just blamed myself for not being able to do what everyone around me seemed to be able to do so effortlessly. I was finally diagnosed with asd and adhd a year ago. I was 56. I only found out i was autistic because one of my children was identified as being autistic and the assessing psychologist and paediatrician both suggested I get assessed as well. I thought I was really good at masking, but the truth is, everyone around me knew I was ‘different’. And a lot of people recognise that this makes you a ‘safe’ target for bullying and venting. For years I kept trying to get back to the equilibrium I thought I’d been managing before my burnout. But now I realise that this is neither possible, nor desirable. It is not a good idea to return to the masking strategies I employed before the burnout. This masking was a contributing factor to the burnout. It was just what seemed like the ‘most’ effective mask that I’d managed to construct in order to function in my job and as a parent. By the way, this whole process can literally kill you. All the anxiety and pressure actually caused so much damage to my heart that I needed a valve repair. My body literally gave up on life. There is not enough research done in this area. The majority of autism research is focused on children, because that is an area that is identified as being most important. But all of those kids will one day grow up and then they’ll be facing the same things that so many of us are dealing with, silently, alone and without any real understanding from the people living around us. So this is why your video is so important. This is the first time I’ve ever actually thought that I’m not the only person who has dealt with this situation.
I’m really glad you said that. Certainly not glad about what you went through. It does need to be said and explained and every story matters. I couldn’t really tell people or interact with people well for most of the tough parts.
Sharing our stories is so important. The comments on videos are equally important too because this is where you find solidarity. Be kind to yourself ✌️
"This is the first time I’ve ever actually thought that I’m not the only person who has dealt with this situation." I'm in the same situation at this very moment.
This makes sense as I see both my neurodivergent parents, ex doctors and very strong amazing compassionate people- very healthy but look old before their time- and I suspect it’s due to stress of living in this world and masking the WHOLE time!! Bless them 🙏
I am neurotypical but have friends who are neurodivergent. I have learned that to be a friend you have to be flexible and be able to take them on their terms. I just want you to know that there are people out there who do accept you as you are. Whether it’s a “good “ or “bad” day. I appreciate the content you post when you post it. No expectations of anything, just what you can or want to give. I appreciate you for you, not what you give or don’t give.
You’re an amazing person for watching videos like these even though you’re not directly affected; not many neurotypicals/allistics have that kind of curiosity and open mindedness unfortunately, or they comment things like “uh, you’re not autistic, you’re just [insert ableist slur]”. The neurodivergent people in your life are lucky to have you ❤
The single most freeing and empowering realization I came to in my journey is the understanding that *I* am the expert. Me. All the various professionals I had to deal with were not competent to deal with me because they didn’t simply didn’t and couldn’t understand my experience. They had narratives to follow. And those narratives were far more important than the person in front of them. I realized that I can’t expect them to understand until I explain to them what it is they don’t understand. And if they are unwilling to learn - you say thank you and move on to someone who can. I also learned to respect and appreciate my various panic attacks (meltdowns). Of which they were many different kinds. And each one of them was my wonderfully creative NONVERBAL subconscious trying to communicate with me about what it was having an issue with. When for example I lost my voice? That was my unconscious telling me that I’m upset about not being listened to. Some of them are that amusingly simple. Others are more complicated. And one can experience many different symptoms at the same time depending on all the things that are being thrown at one at a particular moment. You are wonderfully creative and I very much admire what you’ve accomplished and shared here. Knowing that all that beauty was incredibly expensive to bring into the world. Which makes it all the more beautiful and valuable. Because you had to work hard for it. Way harder other people who have a much simpler throughline.
Yesss happy to see you've shared this comment! So nice to empower people to finding and being comfortable with their true selves and not to disempower them with false labels as the system does. 💜💜💜. Thanks for sharing your story!
the "appearing really put together" is so painful...I remember trying to seek out help multiple times during my life, but it was one specific seeking out help that devastated me and made me not have any faith that someone would actually help me. It was a school counselor and I made an appointment with them cause I was struggling so so much and had no real support from anywhere and while we were talking he did seem understanding and wanting to help but then he said: "I don't really know how I can help you, you seem to have already figured out everything" it baffled me so much, considering I came there because I wasn't coping....it made me feel alone and it didn't help that one of my childhood related traumas was neglect. that happened during my teens, now I'm in my 30s and have completely burned out some years ago and only 2 years ago went into the whole rabbit hole of Adhd and autism (though i suspected autism earlier) I do not know how to get out of this burnout(if it can be called that, it seems to vary in intensity)...it has been 5 years of it (atleast 5 years since I pretty much collapsed under it and now can't do it to myself anymore to continue like before) I'm not sure I even can get out of it or if something got irrepairable broken...because truth is, I never was able to really cope but thanks to therapy I was made aware of it, that I actually started respecting myself enough to realize how much I was hurting and was hurting myself aswell, by constantly and persistently ignoring my limits to please whatever expectations I felt I had to fulfill from society, my family etc. now thinking about doing it again is feeling like someone telling me to jump into a pit of hot needles...(sorry for the graphic image) Knowing that I'm likely autistic and having adhd now, did help me though....I started accommodating for myself...to learn about what I need, to learn what I really can't handle(aka not able to function at all under certain conditions), learning to forgive myself for what is out of my control, learning how to allow myself to ask for help and be helped. Also learning that whatever "image" I had created of myself to strive towards, was never realistic and I'm still grieving about that. I'm also waiting for getting my evaluation....have been waiting for 2 years for that aswell, hoping somehow that it would be obvious to them that I have it, it would be a relief. Afraid that they can't or won't diagnose me for whatever reason...the medical system in many aspects is very flawed especially around autism and adhd diagnostics.... I know the diagnosis is not going to fix everything magically and it doesn't really provide me with much (if at all) relevant support...but just knowing that it's not just me seeing it....not just people from an echochamber believing it...not just my friends noticing it because i told them all about it, but someone who is largely unrelated to me with the power to turn it into an official statement which maybe could then help me to not always have to explain myself (it's honestly tiring)
Honey…you sound depressed. 5 years isn’t burnout. It’s a prolonged depression perhaps that started after a major flame out, and then calcified into a loss of hope. I say this because I feel like someone explaining it rationally and clearly might help….and having the label might help you better ask for help.
@@dstinnettmusic i have actually been recently going through my evaluation and they diagnosed me with mainly c-ptsd and the way I have been explained it, is that, the event from some years ago which was a major burnout for me brought on a major retriggering of all my trauma from my childhood. they noted some autistic traits and that there is some depression too which is very clearly linked to those traumas, am awaiting trauma focused therapy atm.
@@dstinnettmusicYou can definitely burn out for five years and if you have experienced trauma (can be anything from violence to panic attacks to bullying) your nervous system can get disregulated and its not always recovering fully. I still experience visual distortion (visual snow syndrome and dp/dr) after a period of bad anxiety that happened 14 years ago. I am not expecting to ever feel normal again. It severely affects how I function in society. No matter if I am happy or not the world still looks and feels weird as f*** and I still experience weird tingling in my body etc
Oh my goodness. Your burnout sounds exactly like where I am. I had my second child at the start of lockdown. I lived in a country with one of the strictest and longest lockdowns in the world. I was put on the pandemic beat as a journalist, after losing my job during parental leave. Then we left everything behind and moved to a different country. I lost everything all at once. 18 months later both young kids were diagnosed ND (one with a very rare genetic disorder) I have no resilience left. I cry all the time. Anxiety is killing me. I am failing everyone. I'm still the primary parent and it feels like I'm drowning. I've finally had a therapy intake session ( in a foreign language, yay me!) Everyone says, ' just rest and take care of yourself!' But how the heck do I do tha?! It feels like yet another thing I can't do. Sorry for the rant. Thank you for your vulnerability. I feel less 'other' and alone.
It's freaky how similar our timelines are, and the emotions you express are very much what I am going through. The rage is real! Thank goodness that's one of the more useful emotions, I absolutely prefer it compared to that one when everything shuts down. No idea what this state is called, but I have spent years just operating on a blank brain that doesn't experience any feelings, no anger, no fear, no pain, no joy, no surprise, no nothing, it just makes sure you breathe and digest food basically. I have spent a lot of time thinking of something that comes up a lot talking about burnout, either someone else is asking you or you are asking yourself: "how long do you think it will take until you are back to normal?" or "you start to seem like your old self again!". This is one of the worst ones for me. Because there is no way back, a burnout changes your brain permanently, and even if it WAS possible, you should absolutely not return. Of course I miss my old self, but that person didn't know where the limits where, and that's what broke my brain. Now I'm on the scientific journey to map out The Limits for the rest of my life!
@@brooke_reiverrose2949do you have pain with it one now diagnosed auadhd after 26 years CFS 7 years fybromyalgia or is it autism burnout trying to find out I also have heds to
I feel like we've had similar experiences in life and you are so good at talking about how it feels. I'm 37 and I have two kids. I have been in a marriage for 15 years and all that time it felt like a couldn't find peace because of all the expectations women have. I was working and parenting and I was in in constant dysregulation and hyper vigilance. Now I realise I was in burnout and I don't think I have come out of it yet.
Telling our individual stories is incredibly important - it is essential. And that’s true for any marginalized community. Not just the neurodivergent. We learn from each other. We have to learn from each other because “the people in charge” generally aren’t the least bit competent to help us. Or are actively working against us. We all have coping mechanisms. And mostly we have no clue that the dances we do are in fact coping mechanisms. We just think that’s normal. It isn’t. But it is for us. And we are wonderfully creative. Far more than we imagine. We are pretty damn impressive actually.
Thank you for sharing. I'm a bit younger, but also hit my complete burnout/shutdown place during the pandemic due to AuDHD and the pressures that I couldn't navigate anymore. I felt seen in your descriptions of your experience, which was something I needed today.
Wow so much of this is exactly the same as what I've been through. Was diagnosed at 39, shortly after I hit burnout, which I've yet to come out of. That was 7 years ago, and my family went through pretty much the same reactions yours did. I don't have kids but my partner at this time was chronically ill and needed looking after. It's incredibly meaningful to hear someone else voice exactly what you are going through, when no one else understands. Thank you enormously, and I hope we can both find better community with understanding people. Isolation and loneliness has been a huge problem for me. I actually figured you might be in burnout because you hadn't been putting out content, and every now and again have sent you good luck and well wishes. Same with Cassiane.
Oh! Important distinction: loving people may not understand and it might take a while for them to understand, and that was the case for my husband. It was a lot of transitions all at once to create a life less likely to burn me out. But I’m happy to say we got there.
Thanks for sharing your pain. Yes, it feels like living out Sisyphus' punishment, without finding any "pleasure" in a neverending task; like being gaslighted by society and yourself, simultaneously. I'm 65, and only found a modicum of relief after receiving disability and living by myself, where I have total control over the environment. I was diagnosed with bipolar 2 by several psychiatrists, but it's really just repeated depression/burnout from a life of constant overstimulation. I married twice (2 kids) and was teacher, where stress and socializing was a daily constant. Nobody understands how strong we've had to be just to survive daily life. It gets a little easier after your kids grow up, and the financial burden to work, work, work goes away. Until then... But it sounds like you're on the right path. Love yourself:)
😭😭😭 I’m having so much trouble with this right now and have been for a while.. I feel so done 😭😭 I’m so sorry sweetie that you’re having a hard time too😭 I love you ❤️
First of all thanks for making this. I relate to you on so many levels. I just turned 39, I have 2 kids, the youngest in kindergarten. I've been their sole emotional support and care giver because my husband "works all day". Meanwhile I also work, but I work from home, so I guess that doesn't really count as work to anyone. I am so burnt out. I can barely do my duties. It's bare minimum over here. It's really hard. On-top of that I think I may be AuDHD. I've been deep diving into it and that is how I found you. I also think my oldest daughter has some kind of neurodivergence, but the doctors say she doesn't have autism or ADHD or anything accept for "generalized anxiety disorder". She's so different from my youngest and is very rigid, perfectionist, extremely sensitive, has lots of melt-downs, etc. She's also been suicidal at age 8. But that doesn't mean much to the doctors here. To them it's like she's going through a phase. Anyways, yeah I'm right there with you, sister. I don't want to be a woman who has to do all this crap I don't want to do and it's getting to the point where I can barely force myself to do it anymore. I've had similar talks with my husband about distributing the work. I posted online one day about how I can't do the mom things like other moms - And several people said maybe I have ADHD. So I went to a doctor and got tested for ADHD, but they said I didn't have it. Then I pretty much decided I was just a lazy shit human being. But it's really strange to me that I am slowly losing my capabilities, like I can barely clean, organize, complete my work etc. but I also have lost the ability to drive on the highway. I just can't do it anymore without freaking out. Also my blood pressure is getting high, so yeah, it sucks. But anyways, thank you for sharing your story. It has helped me feel less alone.
Thanks for sharing ❤ Very relatable, though most of my struggles are with gender dysphoria and never getting to be myself and always trying so hard to make it work anyways and to take care of everyone else's suffering because mine was without solution. What that brought me was chronic fatigue issues, mood disorders and getting stuck and stagnant in the lowest parts my own life without the resources left to do what needs to be done to make it better. Burnout sucks, especially when it feels like you kept running the motor for so long on empty that it broke completely, and you have to rebuild it to even start being able to recover. My compassion and wellwishes. Thanks for still showing up here, I appreciate it.
Thank you for making this video. I am also going through this. I was diagnosed with adhd 3 years ago. I also thing I am on the spectrum, but I haven't sot out a diagnosis. Last year I was diagnosed with depression. I honestly think burnout lead me to depression. I quit my job, because I just couldn't any more. Currently, I am resting and try to feel better. It's been really hard, so I am so grateful that you are naming things I have been realizing myself. Thank you!
Thank you for sharing this first part of your story. It is very relatable to me, so you are not alone. I also need to rely much on my partner for similar reason, more that I would wish. And still not coping well. Trying to figure out what works and what not. I really appreciate that you are so open to share your story, helping others in the process. Looking forward to the sequel.
The parts where you mentioned people thought you were mean hit close to home. When you've suppressed your needs for so long, to the point where you can't even identify them, it's a hell of a journey to get to a point of knowing how to ask for help. I've been called "bossy" or "demanding" my entire life bcs by the time I identified a need and how someone could help, I was doing so bad that I was struggling to find words to reach out. Words like "please" and "thank you" don't necessarily pop into your mind when you're in crisis mode. You just know you need help and you need it now, or bad things will happen. Not to mention struggling with tone. Either I was too intense and demanding help, or I was asking so casually that people don't take it seriously and don't know how much I'm struggling and don't think I really need the help. It's hard out here.
Sooo much of my experience is internal. I oftentimes don't express things outwardly. There are BOTH the phrases "well above average" and "well below average" on my psychological assessment, depending on which area of functioning. But people just take the above average areas and use that to reason that my struggles in my below average areas are because of me "not trying hard enough." I've been masking so hard for so long, I didn't even recognize my sensory sensitivities until recently because I am so used to putting my head down and just getting through uncomfortable and stressful situations, then wondering why I am so exhausted afterwards. That's been my approach to life TBH, put my head down and just get through it. But that's not a sustainable way to live. Now, halfway through my 20s and just graduated with my bachelor's, my dilemma is how to become independent from my parents and do the things I want to do (which includes going to grad school) while somehow building a slower, more manageable life for myself. Either I will figure out a way to do both, or the stress will slowly kill me. But I can't rely on my family forever, so I have to try.
Thank you - as always - for your honesty and courage in talking about these topics directly - and indeed for the enormous efforts it must have taken for creating the video, not just (hah, "just".... oufff...) what you say in it. Hearing about your experience and how you survived and are making your way towards thriving is assuredly helping me on my own version of that path - as it clearly does many others in this comment section! (I haven't the bandwidth to express this more coherently right now, but I hope my meaning is at least adequately clear.)
I emailed this to my therapist and my parents. You are describing my experience with AuDHD burnout. I'm still in the middle of it and figuring it out. Videos like yours help me fill in the missing pieces to understand. Even for myself. Thank you for making this video.
62 and just diagnosed AuDHD myself. Menopause at 57 and the do in estrogen really made it almost impossible to mark anymore. I have lived my whole life in my head and then found my brain splitting and it was frightening. I thought I was going insane. Then had a huge family dysregulated event in April and had my first huge melt down. This video made me cry ugly tears but also find relief. I am so burned out but ever so slowly coming back. I hope you too find your peace and what works for you. Thanks for your comment makes me feel not so alone
I was diagnosed with ADHD about a year ago, at age 35. My spouse has ADHD as well, but he was diagnosed as a kid and got on medication that worked well for him a number of years ago (though not soon enough for it to help with school or uni since his parents didn't want to go the meds route when he was a kid). I've tried managing with coping skills and working with my therapist after the diagnosis, but it's not enough and this year has felt extremely overwhelming, as though half of my coping skills fell apart once I got diagnosed because I stopped masking internally. I'm in the middle of what I call "medication roulette" where my doctor has me trying out medications to see what might work. Pretty sure we've ruled out Ritalin as an option, but I'm not sure if the next one will be another stimulant or one of the non-stimulant options.
This is not an easy topic do discuss, thanks for being brave and willing to talk about the difficult topics. Masking is really difficult when you use that as a coping mechanism to deal with expected societal normality. I have loads childhood trauma too that had to be addressed in therapy. My diagnosis was anxiety, depression, and PTSD at this point. The psychiatrist that I am seeing does not diagnose ADHD or autism in her setting. So that is something that I am further exploring as an adult so I can have accommodations as needed for my job. I had jobs but yeah learned all the things and got bored. So I had one job for 5 years was the longest til my current one at 8 years.
I got my diagnosis in 2022 at 50 years old I have 3 adult children and all my life I’ve struggled with burnout I’m AuDHD also this video is great making me feel not so alone. Thank you 🙏🏼 ♥️I was also a single parent and felt like a failure I also have lots of other health issues.
Well done for sharing your difficult and painful story, and thank you for exposing the harshness of patriarchal marriage and the enormous burden it places on women. I’m so so proud of you. May you heal and continue to grow in courage and self-compassion.
You're one hell of woman. Strong, empathic and reflected. You should be proud of yourself. The hardships you have faced, you have wrestled with for years, is now broken and how easy would it be to just give up. Instead you gave in and channeled the pain.. And that takes an awful lot of courage. It's quite inspiring. You're on a really good path.
As a late diagnosed ADHD adult (and beginning to suspect ASD) I feel I never had the option to choose a life that I could handle. Now I have a family and a mortgage and many other adult responsibilities that just can’t be dropped. I did all the things that I was supposed to do to be happy and now I can’t keep up. It’s so hard. I wish I could’ve known sooner so I could have made a more informed choice.
@@JustinThorntonArt as a parent with a mortgage and 2 young kids, it’s not too late to look at the smaller parts of your life. My husband and I were able to make small adjustments that work with us rather than against us. It’s not a total overhaul, but small things can be significant when added together. But yeah, some stuff is just required by these toxic structures, and until those change, there will be difficulty. I just had to keep reminding myself that things like wearing headphones while I parent is totally ok. There was a lot of preconceived notions about living my life that I realized were not “required”.
As someone who has been going through an extraordinary hard period in my life, this video was so good and reassuring to hear. Thank you so much for sharing...I genuinely mean this, as I really felt like I was going crazy and I had no words to describe the experience I was going through. I am hoping to share this with my therapist moving forward, as I am still finding it difficult to unmask or speak outloud or assert my needs and feelings directly. Edit: Typo
I’m in chronic autistic burnout and was diagnosed in February of this year at the age of almost 27. It’s so hard and I often feel like giving up yet I have a support system and no kids to look after so I can’t imagine what you went through, going 39 years without a diagnosis, then finally getting diagnosed and facing a lack of support and having to take care of kids… sounds incredibly hard, I’m not sure I would have survived that honestly. You’re amazingly strong and brave and deserve all the comfort and peace you didn’t have for so long ❤
Oh! I forgot to mention: your breakdowns that were probably meltdowns (about 12:43) may be something called autistic "shutdowns." They are like meltdowns but quieter on the outside. Some people describe them as kind of like a temporary burnout, others like a meltdown, but as an implosion rather than an explosion.
Like you are totally correct, I just tend to go above the window of tolerance into overactive vs below it. Then exhaustion afterwards. Meltdowns can also be more internal due to masking, and there are many ways people react to overstimulation that goes into trauma response. I do think we tend to think there is only one way to have meltdown or a crash and that’s not true, after unmasking I’ve witnessed many many ways my body handles it.
Totally cool and everyone is valid! that's why I said "may be". It sounds a lot like what you are calling breakdowns are what I call shutdowns. I experience shutdowns as like a meltdown but masked. Like I turn it internally, they are much worse than the outward expression of them because they are harder on my psyche and are done when it is not safe to meltdown outwardly. I also experience autistic catatonia which is a whole other thing! Neither of these are responses to going below my window of tolerance. I'm not even sure what that means, to be honest.@@divergent.threads
In my experience, the burnout is a pile of accumulative experiences where I’m pushing myself to be what’s expected. But the last straw is always the rejection from people I thought would be there for me. I’m constantly giving a 75% on relationships and people a 25% and they get mad when you are not performing to not bother them with your problems.
whoo. similar path here in many ways. I want to seek diagnosis, burnt out, but also stuck being an island in a world that feels hostile, absolutely need to keep my job, fearing what might happen if my mask drops in the wrong venue
The classification isn’t always important. What is important is what you need now. What do you need now? It might take time know. But the more you explore being autistic and/or adhd, the more you can experiment with what works and know when other people or you are pushing you past your limits. Not just the limits society decided you should have, but the real ones.
Thank you for sharing your story. I can't imagine how much fear and discomfort had to be fought through to get it out there, but it was the right move. We all need to make our stories known. I'm 25 and haven't been diagnosed yet, but there's not a doubt in my mind I'm autistic. I saw another comment here that said we are the expert, and I couldn't agree more. Having been undiagnosed as long as I have has been a nightmare, so I truly thank you for toughing it out for more than 40 years for an indifferent world. I don't know how you did it, but it's inspiring, and I wish you a lifetime of peace. You do deserve to be comfortable and happy.
Thank you for sharing your story, so much of it resonates. I have been recovering from a huge burnout for three-and-a-half years now. The first 18 months were the worst. And it is not my first one either. Chronic fatigue has been a general sympton throughout my life. The frustration of people not understanding on top of everything. Indeed your nerve system and hormonal system are completely out of wack when you burn out. You get advice that might be helpfull with a depression or normal fatigue but do not necessarily work for the burned out body. I have the ADD diagnose but strongly suspect autism as well. I am just starting my journey concerning autism-although it had crossed my mind a couple of times throughout my life- but oh my gosh the stories of all the women that have this combination! We are of course unique individuals but also: their life is my life! Except for the part where they had children. There was a moment in time where I thought I wanted them, but when I finally ended up in a stable enough relationship five years ago (at 37) that came with a stepson every other long weekend I decided: I will never have the energy for it. I might even die. I am struggling enough as it is. This made me sad for a time but I am very okay with it now. People tried: “but it is different when they are your own kids (you really should have one!).” But when I see friends -typical and atypical- struggle with their little miracles I feel less and less regrets. When I ask them “How do you manage?” The answer often comes down to: “I don’t.” I am NOT saying neurodiverse person = not capable parent. The neurodiverse people I know love and care for their kids very much but they seem to pay a high price for it with their own health. Maybe they even feel more pressure to do right by their kids? I don’t know I am speculating here. What frustrates me is that high pressure-society isn’t exactly supportive and understanding when it comes to raising humans (complex and diverse creatures) in general but the message I get is that making more of them seems like a very normal and good idea. And when women (like me) choose to sit this one out they are being told that they are missing out on all the fun and/or are being accused of being selfish. I have felt guilt about enjoying all the me-time I claim for myself. I also have felt I don’t have the right to be burned out because I don’t have any kids. But I am getting off topic. Thank you again for your vulnerability and bravery to share. And for mentioning the RAGE, I feel you. I feel a lot of hindsight rage from the angry inner child that never got to express herself. Let’s hope the diversity of shared stories will enter the collective consciousness and someday help motivate the hive to transform society into a more emphatic and inclusive space.
Thank you! I hope you're feeling better now. I'm so in it, but I don't have enough strength and words to describe it in English now (I'm not native). But I'm really grateful.
I really appreciate your videos and your honesty about your experiences! Also because I can very much relate to them and its been so difficult to even find people that I do relate to! I myself am 19 and just found out in therapy I could be an AuDHDer, and everything just started to make so much sense. The experience of so much discomfort over sensory and unpredictable stuff but also feeling like you need to hide it all on a daily basis. I am glad you can find the right accommodations now! I think society in general needs to be more understanding and open to those accommodations and possibilities that people they didn’t expect it from to need them :)
Thank you so much for making this video. You’re essentially explaining what is happening to me!!! It all makes sense! Only problem is how to get out of it now
I feel like you are speaking words to my experience so precisely! ☂️💜 Thank you for sharing yours, while still going through it. I’m finding encouragement in seeing “myself” in what you are expressing, even though this is so hard.
I relate to this so much. My heart goes out to you ❤️ I hope you’ve found a more nurturing path since you recorded this. It’s so hard being a mom, being a wife, being a unique and sensitive being. Peace
This is little bit off topic but somehow the way your not talking straight to camera makes me feel safe because it feels same as eye contact and I always worry how I look like if I don’t keep eye contact all the time. You look beautiful that way and maybe I look too
@@sofiatuhkanen9715 thanks. Looking straight into the camera makes it harder for me to recall what I’m saying. Hence the angle. I also wanted it to be mostly verbal so people could listen while doing other things. I know most of the time that’s what I do.
I don't have kids but I work with them and I'm in the middle of all you explained right now 😮💨 It's a very lonely battle to fight without a proper support system full of understanding people with emotional skills. Thanks for sharing this! It helps.
This is such a vulnerable video and I know that this will reach people who will be so grateful to hear that they're not alone. I received my diagnosis of ADHD two years ago at age 39, and while it explained so much and gave me a sense of relief, I also just kind of wallowed for a bit in this feeling of...what if?? What if the possibility of girls having ADHD hadn't been completely dismissed when I was a kid? My grades were fine, but there were a lot of sleepless nights and re-reading paragraphs ten times because I didn't actually take in what I was reading. What if I'd been able to get extensions on deadlines without penalty?? My grades would have been stellar.
Thank you for your story. I have also be there situation many times. And I have adhd, autism, ocd, rsd, maniac, depres, ptsd. And my family and friends dont believe me.
I want to give you the biggest hug❤ I’m a 24 year old audhd woman and this is so similar to what happened/is happening to me. I see you. I’m so so sorry. I want to validate the fact that what you’re experiencing is so real and it is completely impossible to just “push through” this. Burnout is something we have to surrender to, and rest, and listen to our bodies and needs as much as we can. A lot of people in my life simply didn’t want to understand what was happening to me, both my parents and my partner, which hurt like hell. But I put my foot down and radically decided to rest. I’m still not out of burnout yet, but I’m getting there. It’s a journey. It can feel so lonely at times, but I know that I’m so not alone in this neurodivergent struggle. And neither are you❤ I’m so proud of you for acknowledging your needs and advocating for yourself. That takes a lot of courage. There will be better days. Coming out of burnout is possible. And we learn how to live so that we can avoid overloading ourselves.
funny, that i make a similar face when I finish any sentence that could be described as "it is what it is", sort of like to express a dot to that sentence LOL
thanks for letting us see, im 47, and one of the few women diagnosed with adhd as a 7 year old. Unfortunately at that time they also believed you “grew” out of it so in 4th grade i was taking off my meds and by jr high i was “diagnosed” with bipolar and OCD. Now in current life I have been diagnosed back to a ADHD diagnosis and told i do not have bipolar disorder i just have adhd and cptsd. 🤦🏻♀️ My ocd is just cptsd from childhood sexual abuse so … now i am also looking at whether i may also have autism. I also since delving into all of this the past several years along with working full time am feeling so stretched thin. It doesn’t take much for me to feel depleted. And i need way more recovery time from literally everything- not sure if this is burnout
I’ve had this since 2019 and tried all to get out as well as stay in. I’m scared and wondering whether to go at up on psychotropic meds or go to an impatient center for neurodivergent a. Also feel like I have to figure out and make sense of the trauma of my past, as well as have an assistant and motivator- and start building or relearning life.
It’s really hard. You really do have to relearn to build your life around who you actually are and how you actually are. It’s tireless and thankless work. And we have the least energy to get out when we need it most. Most of the environments around us as late diagnosed are not supportive of what we need. Wishing you the most luck in navigating it.
I currently don’t have the energie to write any more, so just thank you! I feel so much more seen and less alone and wrong, because of videos like this.
For me it was the trauma releasing from the body. I would have random twitching in places and more tension than pain. I carry a lot of it in my back. I do know others who have had constant pain during burnout but I don’t know what they are doing about it. Not diagnosed with hEDS but probably.
@@divergent.threads so hard to get it in remission started the muscle.pain did after.my other half diagnosed breast cancer touch wood ok now though had CFS symptoms prior.and just lost my mum to severe ms heds asperger's albeit nwe only found out last year we have autism my son's now diagnosed to
No, it wasn't consistent the way chronic pain is. It was related to somatic release. I know many people do face chronic pain issues that arise from burnout or the masking prior to burnout.
@@divergent.threads thankyou trying to find information of folks with similar symptoms from burnout irnthe older.name.neurosthenia hoping to recover awaiting to try ADHD meds but can't until April do to shortage hope they suit me with the asperger's do you no anyone personally with burnout pain symptoms
It is hard to be weak among culture don't care about people! "O My servants, I have forbidden oppression for Myself and have made it forbidden amongst you, so do not oppress one another. O My servants, all of you are astray except for those I have guided, so seek guidance of Me and I shall guide you, O My servants, all of you are hungry except for those I have fed, so seek food of Me and I shall feed you. O My servants, all of you are naked except for those I have clothed, so seek clothing of Me and I shall clothe you. O My servants, you sin by night and by day, and I forgive all sins, so seek forgiveness of Me and I shall forgive you. O My servants, you will not attain harming Me so as to harm Me, and will not attain benefitting Me so as to benefit Me. O My servants, were the first of you and the last of you, the human of you and the jinn of you to be as pious as the most pious heart of any one man of you, that would not increase My kingdom in anything. O My servants, were the first of you and the last of you, the human of you and the jinn of you to be as wicked as the most wicked heart of any one man of you, that would not decrease My kingdom in anything. O My servants, were the first of you and the last of you, the human of you and the jinn of you to rise up in one place and make a request of Me, and were I to give everyone what he requested, that would not decrease what I have, any more that a needle decreases the sea if put into it. O My servants, it is but your deeds that I reckon up for you and then recompense you for, so let him who finds good, praise Allah, and let him who finds other than that, blame no one but himself."
People who target the “unusual” have basically not developed mentally at all since either they, or someone they creeped to, were the playground bully. Emotional age of maybe 12, if that. Masking is exhausting, and burnout is painful. I have no idea what will work best for you, but I find just sitting or wandering slowly outdoors amid some decent greenery helps me when things get bad.
Yes, I will definitely be mentioning a lot of what worked in the next part.
Thank you for finding the courage to make this video. You’re amazing. There’s so little research in this area of adult burnout. This happened to me about five years ago. Like you, I was struggling harder and harder to function in my job and my life in general. I just blamed myself for not being able to do what everyone around me seemed to be able to do so effortlessly. I was finally diagnosed with asd and adhd a year ago. I was 56. I only found out i was autistic because one of my children was identified as being autistic and the assessing psychologist and paediatrician both suggested I get assessed as well. I thought I was really good at masking, but the truth is, everyone around me knew I was ‘different’. And a lot of people recognise that this makes you a ‘safe’ target for bullying and venting. For years I kept trying to get back to the equilibrium I thought I’d been managing before my burnout. But now I realise that this is neither possible, nor desirable. It is not a good idea to return to the masking strategies I employed before the burnout. This masking was a contributing factor to the burnout. It was just what seemed like the ‘most’ effective mask that I’d managed to construct in order to function in my job and as a parent. By the way, this whole process can literally kill you. All the anxiety and pressure actually caused so much damage to my heart that I needed a valve repair. My body literally gave up on life. There is not enough research done in this area. The majority of autism research is focused on children, because that is an area that is identified as being most important. But all of those kids will one day grow up and then they’ll be facing the same things that so many of us are dealing with, silently, alone and without any real understanding from the people living around us. So this is why your video is so important. This is the first time I’ve ever actually thought that I’m not the only person who has dealt with this situation.
I’m really glad you said that. Certainly not glad about what you went through. It does need to be said and explained and every story matters. I couldn’t really tell people or interact with people well for most of the tough parts.
Sharing our stories is so important. The comments on videos are equally important too because this is where you find solidarity. Be kind to yourself ✌️
"This is the first time I’ve ever actually thought that I’m not the only person who has dealt with this situation." I'm in the same situation at this very moment.
This makes sense as I see both my neurodivergent parents, ex doctors and very strong amazing compassionate people- very healthy but look old before their time- and I suspect it’s due to stress of living in this world and masking the WHOLE time!! Bless them 🙏
Everyone thinks I’m always complaining but ahoudl I be honest!
I am neurotypical but have friends who are neurodivergent. I have learned that to be a friend you have to be flexible and be able to take them on their terms. I just want you to know that there are people out there who do accept you as you are. Whether it’s a “good “ or “bad” day. I appreciate the content you post when you post it. No expectations of anything, just what you can or want to give. I appreciate you for you, not what you give or don’t give.
needed this hear this right now 🙏🏻
thanks for this❤
We sincerely appreciate the effort.
You’re an amazing person for watching videos like these even though you’re not directly affected; not many neurotypicals/allistics have that kind of curiosity and open mindedness unfortunately, or they comment things like “uh, you’re not autistic, you’re just [insert ableist slur]”. The neurodivergent people in your life are lucky to have you ❤
The single most freeing and empowering realization I came to in my journey is the understanding that *I* am the expert. Me. All the various professionals I had to deal with were not competent to deal with me because they didn’t simply didn’t and couldn’t understand my experience. They had narratives to follow. And those narratives were far more important than the person in front of them. I realized that I can’t expect them to understand until I explain to them what it is they don’t understand. And if they are unwilling to learn - you say thank you and move on to someone who can. I also learned to respect and appreciate my various panic attacks (meltdowns). Of which they were many different kinds. And each one of them was my wonderfully creative NONVERBAL subconscious trying to communicate with me about what it was having an issue with. When for example I lost my voice? That was my unconscious telling me that I’m upset about not being listened to. Some of them are that amusingly simple. Others are more complicated. And one can experience many different symptoms at the same time depending on all the things that are being thrown at one at a particular moment. You are wonderfully creative and I very much admire what you’ve accomplished and shared here. Knowing that all that beauty was incredibly expensive to bring into the world. Which makes it all the more beautiful and valuable. Because you had to work hard for it. Way harder other people who have a much simpler throughline.
Yesss happy to see you've shared this comment! So nice to empower people to finding and being comfortable with their true selves and not to disempower them with false labels as the system does. 💜💜💜. Thanks for sharing your story!
the "appearing really put together" is so painful...I remember trying to seek out help multiple times during my life, but it was one specific seeking out help that devastated me and made me not have any faith that someone would actually help me. It was a school counselor and I made an appointment with them cause I was struggling so so much and had no real support from anywhere and while we were talking he did seem understanding and wanting to help but then he said: "I don't really know how I can help you, you seem to have already figured out everything"
it baffled me so much, considering I came there because I wasn't coping....it made me feel alone and it didn't help that one of my childhood related traumas was neglect.
that happened during my teens, now I'm in my 30s and have completely burned out some years ago and only 2 years ago went into the whole rabbit hole of Adhd and autism (though i suspected autism earlier)
I do not know how to get out of this burnout(if it can be called that, it seems to vary in intensity)...it has been 5 years of it (atleast 5 years since I pretty much collapsed under it and now can't do it to myself anymore to continue like before)
I'm not sure I even can get out of it or if something got irrepairable broken...because truth is, I never was able to really cope but thanks to therapy I was made aware of it, that I actually started respecting myself enough to realize how much I was hurting and was hurting myself aswell, by constantly and persistently ignoring my limits to please whatever expectations I felt I had to fulfill from society, my family etc.
now thinking about doing it again is feeling like someone telling me to jump into a pit of hot needles...(sorry for the graphic image)
Knowing that I'm likely autistic and having adhd now, did help me though....I started accommodating for myself...to learn about what I need, to learn what I really can't handle(aka not able to function at all under certain conditions), learning to forgive myself for what is out of my control, learning how to allow myself to ask for help and be helped.
Also learning that whatever "image" I had created of myself to strive towards, was never realistic and I'm still grieving about that.
I'm also waiting for getting my evaluation....have been waiting for 2 years for that aswell, hoping somehow that it would be obvious to them that I have it, it would be a relief. Afraid that they can't or won't diagnose me for whatever reason...the medical system in many aspects is very flawed especially around autism and adhd diagnostics....
I know the diagnosis is not going to fix everything magically and it doesn't really provide me with much (if at all) relevant support...but just knowing that it's not just me seeing it....not just people from an echochamber believing it...not just my friends noticing it because i told them all about it, but someone who is largely unrelated to me with the power to turn it into an official statement which maybe could then help me to not always have to explain myself (it's honestly tiring)
Honey…you sound depressed.
5 years isn’t burnout. It’s a prolonged depression perhaps that started after a major flame out, and then calcified into a loss of hope.
I say this because I feel like someone explaining it rationally and clearly might help….and having the label might help you better ask for help.
@@dstinnettmusic i have actually been recently going through my evaluation and they diagnosed me with mainly c-ptsd and the way I have been explained it, is that, the event from some years ago which was a major burnout for me brought on a major retriggering of all my trauma from my childhood.
they noted some autistic traits and that there is some depression too which is very clearly linked to those traumas, am awaiting trauma focused therapy atm.
@@dstinnettmusicYou can definitely burn out for five years and if you have experienced trauma (can be anything from violence to panic attacks to bullying) your nervous system can get disregulated and its not always recovering fully.
I still experience visual distortion (visual snow syndrome and dp/dr) after a period of bad anxiety that happened 14 years ago. I am not expecting to ever feel normal again. It severely affects how I function in society. No matter if I am happy or not the world still looks and feels weird as f*** and I still experience weird tingling in my body etc
"I was constantly working against myself." Thanks for putting that into words... that is how I felt when I entered burnout.
Oh my goodness. Your burnout sounds exactly like where I am. I had my second child at the start of lockdown. I lived in a country with one of the strictest and longest lockdowns in the world. I was put on the pandemic beat as a journalist, after losing my job during parental leave. Then we left everything behind and moved to a different country. I lost everything all at once. 18 months later both young kids were diagnosed ND (one with a very rare genetic disorder) I have no resilience left. I cry all the time. Anxiety is killing me. I am failing everyone. I'm still the primary parent and it feels like I'm drowning. I've finally had a therapy intake session ( in a foreign language, yay me!) Everyone says, ' just rest and take care of yourself!' But how the heck do I do tha?! It feels like yet another thing I can't do. Sorry for the rant. Thank you for your vulnerability. I feel less 'other' and alone.
It's freaky how similar our timelines are, and the emotions you express are very much what I am going through. The rage is real! Thank goodness that's one of the more useful emotions, I absolutely prefer it compared to that one when everything shuts down. No idea what this state is called, but I have spent years just operating on a blank brain that doesn't experience any feelings, no anger, no fear, no pain, no joy, no surprise, no nothing, it just makes sure you breathe and digest food basically.
I have spent a lot of time thinking of something that comes up a lot talking about burnout, either someone else is asking you or you are asking yourself: "how long do you think it will take until you are back to normal?" or "you start to seem like your old self again!". This is one of the worst ones for me. Because there is no way back, a burnout changes your brain permanently, and even if it WAS possible, you should absolutely not return. Of course I miss my old self, but that person didn't know where the limits where, and that's what broke my brain. Now I'm on the scientific journey to map out The Limits for the rest of my life!
My therapist says it is possible to heal from it and find a better new normal. Fingers crossed they're right!
@@brooke_reiverrose2949do you have pain with it one now diagnosed auadhd after 26 years CFS 7 years fybromyalgia or is it autism burnout trying to find out I also have heds to
I feel like we've had similar experiences in life and you are so good at talking about how it feels. I'm 37 and I have two kids. I have been in a marriage for 15 years and all that time it felt like a couldn't find peace because of all the expectations women have. I was working and parenting and I was in in constant dysregulation and hyper vigilance. Now I realise I was in burnout and I don't think I have come out of it yet.
Same here, 16 years. It’s a lot.
Telling our individual stories is incredibly important - it is essential. And that’s true for any marginalized community. Not just the neurodivergent. We learn from each other. We have to learn from each other because “the people in charge” generally aren’t the least bit competent to help us. Or are actively working against us. We all have coping mechanisms. And mostly we have no clue that the dances we do are in fact coping mechanisms. We just think that’s normal. It isn’t. But it is for us. And we are wonderfully creative. Far more than we imagine. We are pretty damn impressive actually.
Thank you for sharing. I'm a bit younger, but also hit my complete burnout/shutdown place during the pandemic due to AuDHD and the pressures that I couldn't navigate anymore. I felt seen in your descriptions of your experience, which was something I needed today.
Wow so much of this is exactly the same as what I've been through. Was diagnosed at 39, shortly after I hit burnout, which I've yet to come out of. That was 7 years ago, and my family went through pretty much the same reactions yours did. I don't have kids but my partner at this time was chronically ill and needed looking after. It's incredibly meaningful to hear someone else voice exactly what you are going through, when no one else understands. Thank you enormously, and I hope we can both find better community with understanding people. Isolation and loneliness has been a huge problem for me.
I actually figured you might be in burnout because you hadn't been putting out content, and every now and again have sent you good luck and well wishes. Same with Cassiane.
Fist-bump of solidarity! I’m sending you lots of empathy and support.
Oh! Important distinction: loving people may not understand and it might take a while for them to understand, and that was the case for my husband. It was a lot of transitions all at once to create a life less likely to burn me out. But I’m happy to say we got there.
Thanks for sharing your pain. Yes, it feels like living out Sisyphus' punishment, without finding any "pleasure" in a neverending task; like being gaslighted by society and yourself, simultaneously. I'm 65, and only found a modicum of relief after receiving disability and living by myself, where I have total control over the environment. I was diagnosed with bipolar 2 by several psychiatrists, but it's really just repeated depression/burnout from a life of constant overstimulation. I married twice (2 kids) and was teacher, where stress and socializing was a daily constant. Nobody understands how strong we've had to be just to survive daily life. It gets a little easier after your kids grow up, and the financial burden to work, work, work goes away. Until then... But it sounds like you're on the right path. Love yourself:)
😭😭😭 I’m having so much trouble with this right now and have been for a while.. I feel so done 😭😭 I’m so sorry sweetie that you’re having a hard time too😭 I love you ❤️
First of all thanks for making this. I relate to you on so many levels. I just turned 39, I have 2 kids, the youngest in kindergarten. I've been their sole emotional support and care giver because my husband "works all day". Meanwhile I also work, but I work from home, so I guess that doesn't really count as work to anyone. I am so burnt out. I can barely do my duties. It's bare minimum over here. It's really hard. On-top of that I think I may be AuDHD. I've been deep diving into it and that is how I found you. I also think my oldest daughter has some kind of neurodivergence, but the doctors say she doesn't have autism or ADHD or anything accept for "generalized anxiety disorder". She's so different from my youngest and is very rigid, perfectionist, extremely sensitive, has lots of melt-downs, etc. She's also been suicidal at age 8. But that doesn't mean much to the doctors here. To them it's like she's going through a phase.
Anyways, yeah I'm right there with you, sister. I don't want to be a woman who has to do all this crap I don't want to do and it's getting to the point where I can barely force myself to do it anymore. I've had similar talks with my husband about distributing the work. I posted online one day about how I can't do the mom things like other moms - And several people said maybe I have ADHD. So I went to a doctor and got tested for ADHD, but they said I didn't have it. Then I pretty much decided I was just a lazy shit human being. But it's really strange to me that I am slowly losing my capabilities, like I can barely clean, organize, complete my work etc. but I also have lost the ability to drive on the highway. I just can't do it anymore without freaking out. Also my blood pressure is getting high, so yeah, it sucks. But anyways, thank you for sharing your story. It has helped me feel less alone.
Thanks for sharing ❤
Very relatable, though most of my struggles are with gender dysphoria and never getting to be myself and always trying so hard to make it work anyways and to take care of everyone else's suffering because mine was without solution. What that brought me was chronic fatigue issues, mood disorders and getting stuck and stagnant in the lowest parts my own life without the resources left to do what needs to be done to make it better. Burnout sucks, especially when it feels like you kept running the motor for so long on empty that it broke completely, and you have to rebuild it to even start being able to recover.
My compassion and wellwishes. Thanks for still showing up here, I appreciate it.
It is so tough. We all navigate the difficulties in multiple ways, thank you for sharing yours. 💜
Thank you for making this video. I am also going through this. I was diagnosed with adhd 3 years ago. I also thing I am on the spectrum, but I haven't sot out a diagnosis.
Last year I was diagnosed with depression. I honestly think burnout lead me to depression. I quit my job, because I just couldn't any more. Currently, I am resting and try to feel better. It's been really hard, so I am so grateful that you are naming things I have been realizing myself. Thank you!
I've just seen this but unfortunately I have to go to bed it's 21:45 here in Wales. I'm good to watch this tomorrow morning. ❤
Thank you for sharing this first part of your story. It is very relatable to me, so you are not alone. I also need to rely much on my partner for similar reason, more that I would wish. And still not coping well. Trying to figure out what works and what not. I really appreciate that you are so open to share your story, helping others in the process. Looking forward to the sequel.
The parts where you mentioned people thought you were mean hit close to home. When you've suppressed your needs for so long, to the point where you can't even identify them, it's a hell of a journey to get to a point of knowing how to ask for help. I've been called "bossy" or "demanding" my entire life bcs by the time I identified a need and how someone could help, I was doing so bad that I was struggling to find words to reach out. Words like "please" and "thank you" don't necessarily pop into your mind when you're in crisis mode. You just know you need help and you need it now, or bad things will happen. Not to mention struggling with tone. Either I was too intense and demanding help, or I was asking so casually that people don't take it seriously and don't know how much I'm struggling and don't think I really need the help. It's hard out here.
We love and support you. Thank you for being honest and real.
Sooo much of my experience is internal. I oftentimes don't express things outwardly. There are BOTH the phrases "well above average" and "well below average" on my psychological assessment, depending on which area of functioning. But people just take the above average areas and use that to reason that my struggles in my below average areas are because of me "not trying hard enough." I've been masking so hard for so long, I didn't even recognize my sensory sensitivities until recently because I am so used to putting my head down and just getting through uncomfortable and stressful situations, then wondering why I am so exhausted afterwards. That's been my approach to life TBH, put my head down and just get through it. But that's not a sustainable way to live. Now, halfway through my 20s and just graduated with my bachelor's, my dilemma is how to become independent from my parents and do the things I want to do (which includes going to grad school) while somehow building a slower, more manageable life for myself. Either I will figure out a way to do both, or the stress will slowly kill me. But I can't rely on my family forever, so I have to try.
Thank you - as always - for your honesty and courage in talking about these topics directly - and indeed for the enormous efforts it must have taken for creating the video, not just (hah, "just".... oufff...) what you say in it. Hearing about your experience and how you survived and are making your way towards thriving is assuredly helping me on my own version of that path - as it clearly does many others in this comment section! (I haven't the bandwidth to express this more coherently right now, but I hope my meaning is at least adequately clear.)
I emailed this to my therapist and my parents. You are describing my experience with AuDHD burnout. I'm still in the middle of it and figuring it out. Videos like yours help me fill in the missing pieces to understand. Even for myself. Thank you for making this video.
Right with you sister. Self diagnosed at 60, the shit hit the fan in 2019 just before lockdown as I was heading into menopause. It wrecked me
62 and just diagnosed AuDHD myself. Menopause at 57 and the do in estrogen really made it almost impossible to mark anymore. I have lived my whole life in my head and then found my brain splitting and it was frightening. I thought I was going insane. Then had a huge family dysregulated event in April and had my first huge melt down. This video made me cry ugly tears but also find relief. I am so burned out but ever so slowly coming back. I hope you too find your peace and what works for you. Thanks for your comment makes me feel not so alone
I was diagnosed with ADHD about a year ago, at age 35. My spouse has ADHD as well, but he was diagnosed as a kid and got on medication that worked well for him a number of years ago (though not soon enough for it to help with school or uni since his parents didn't want to go the meds route when he was a kid). I've tried managing with coping skills and working with my therapist after the diagnosis, but it's not enough and this year has felt extremely overwhelming, as though half of my coping skills fell apart once I got diagnosed because I stopped masking internally. I'm in the middle of what I call "medication roulette" where my doctor has me trying out medications to see what might work. Pretty sure we've ruled out Ritalin as an option, but I'm not sure if the next one will be another stimulant or one of the non-stimulant options.
I actually started the lowest dose of guanfacine and it’s helping a little
This is not an easy topic do discuss, thanks for being brave and willing to talk about the difficult topics.
Masking is really difficult when you use that as a coping mechanism to deal with expected societal normality. I have loads childhood trauma too that had to be addressed in therapy. My diagnosis was anxiety, depression, and PTSD at this point. The psychiatrist that I am seeing does not diagnose ADHD or autism in her setting. So that is something that I am further exploring as an adult so I can have accommodations as needed for my job.
I had jobs but yeah learned all the things and got bored. So I had one job for 5 years was the longest til my current one at 8 years.
I got my diagnosis in 2022 at 50 years old I have 3 adult children and all my life I’ve struggled with burnout I’m AuDHD also this video is great making me feel not so alone. Thank you 🙏🏼 ♥️I was also a single parent and felt like a failure I also have lots of other health issues.
Well done for sharing your difficult and painful story, and thank you for exposing the harshness of patriarchal marriage and the enormous burden it places on women. I’m so so proud of you. May you heal and continue to grow in courage and self-compassion.
You're one hell of woman. Strong, empathic and reflected. You should be proud of yourself. The hardships you have faced, you have wrestled with for years, is now broken and how easy would it be to just give up. Instead you gave in and channeled the pain.. And that takes an awful lot of courage. It's quite inspiring. You're on a really good path.
As a late diagnosed ADHD adult (and beginning to suspect ASD) I feel I never had the option to choose a life that I could handle. Now I have a family and a mortgage and many other adult responsibilities that just can’t be dropped. I did all the things that I was supposed to do to be happy and now I can’t keep up. It’s so hard. I wish I could’ve known sooner so I could have made a more informed choice.
@@JustinThorntonArt as a parent with a mortgage and 2 young kids, it’s not too late to look at the smaller parts of your life. My husband and I were able to make small adjustments that work with us rather than against us. It’s not a total overhaul, but small things can be significant when added together. But yeah, some stuff is just required by these toxic structures, and until those change, there will be difficulty. I just had to keep reminding myself that things like wearing headphones while I parent is totally ok. There was a lot of preconceived notions about living my life that I realized were not “required”.
As someone who has been going through an extraordinary hard period in my life, this video was so good and reassuring to hear. Thank you so much for sharing...I genuinely mean this, as I really felt like I was going crazy and I had no words to describe the experience I was going through. I am hoping to share this with my therapist moving forward, as I am still finding it difficult to unmask or speak outloud or assert my needs and feelings directly.
Edit: Typo
I’m in chronic autistic burnout and was diagnosed in February of this year at the age of almost 27. It’s so hard and I often feel like giving up yet I have a support system and no kids to look after so I can’t imagine what you went through, going 39 years without a diagnosis, then finally getting diagnosed and facing a lack of support and having to take care of kids… sounds incredibly hard, I’m not sure I would have survived that honestly. You’re amazingly strong and brave and deserve all the comfort and peace you didn’t have for so long ❤
Oh! I forgot to mention: your breakdowns that were probably meltdowns (about 12:43) may be something called autistic "shutdowns." They are like meltdowns but quieter on the outside. Some people describe them as kind of like a temporary burnout, others like a meltdown, but as an implosion rather than an explosion.
I have those too. That’s not what they were. There are many many responses and they are all hard.
Like you are totally correct, I just tend to go above the window of tolerance into overactive vs below it. Then exhaustion afterwards. Meltdowns can also be more internal due to masking, and there are many ways people react to overstimulation that goes into trauma response. I do think we tend to think there is only one way to have meltdown or a crash and that’s not true, after unmasking I’ve witnessed many many ways my body handles it.
Totally cool and everyone is valid! that's why I said "may be". It sounds a lot like what you are calling breakdowns are what I call shutdowns. I experience shutdowns as like a meltdown but masked. Like I turn it internally, they are much worse than the outward expression of them because they are harder on my psyche and are done when it is not safe to meltdown outwardly. I also experience autistic catatonia which is a whole other thing! Neither of these are responses to going below my window of tolerance. I'm not even sure what that means, to be honest.@@divergent.threads
In my experience, the burnout is a pile of accumulative experiences where I’m pushing myself to be what’s expected. But the last straw is always the rejection from people I thought would be there for me. I’m constantly giving a 75% on relationships and people a 25% and they get mad when you are not performing to not bother them with your problems.
@@luciabertinat274 on point.
whoo. similar path here in many ways. I want to seek diagnosis, burnt out, but also stuck being an island in a world that feels hostile, absolutely need to keep my job, fearing what might happen if my mask drops in the wrong venue
I really commend you for doing your best
I'm having a hard time differentiating between burnout from masking or excessive people-pleasing with lack of boundaries from childhood trauma.
May I ask why they aren’t related?
The classification isn’t always important. What is important is what you need now. What do you need now? It might take time know. But the more you explore being autistic and/or adhd, the more you can experiment with what works and know when other people or you are pushing you past your limits. Not just the limits society decided you should have, but the real ones.
Your video has explained what I am going through currently thank you for being courageous enough to share this. It is needed
How appropriate that your battery was dying during a video on burnout 😂 I relate so much to your experience. I hope you are doing better!
Thank you for sharing your story. I can't imagine how much fear and discomfort had to be fought through to get it out there, but it was the right move. We all need to make our stories known. I'm 25 and haven't been diagnosed yet, but there's not a doubt in my mind I'm autistic. I saw another comment here that said we are the expert, and I couldn't agree more. Having been undiagnosed as long as I have has been a nightmare, so I truly thank you for toughing it out for more than 40 years for an indifferent world. I don't know how you did it, but it's inspiring, and I wish you a lifetime of peace. You do deserve to be comfortable and happy.
“We are aloud to be flawed humans; working through things.” ❤ 10:24
Thank you for sharing your story, so much of it resonates. I have been recovering from a huge burnout for three-and-a-half years now. The first 18 months were the worst. And it is not my first one either. Chronic fatigue has been a general sympton throughout my life. The frustration of people not understanding on top of everything. Indeed your nerve system and hormonal system are completely out of wack when you burn out. You get advice that might be helpfull with a depression or normal fatigue but do not necessarily work for the burned out body. I have the ADD diagnose but strongly suspect autism as well. I am just starting my journey concerning autism-although it had crossed my mind a couple of times throughout my life- but oh my gosh the stories of all the women that have this combination! We are of course unique individuals but also: their life is my life! Except for the part where they had children. There was a moment in time where I thought I wanted them, but when I finally ended up in a stable enough relationship five years ago (at 37) that came with a stepson every other long weekend I decided: I will never have the energy for it. I might even die. I am struggling enough as it is. This made me sad for a time but I am very okay with it now. People tried: “but it is different when they are your own kids (you really should have one!).” But when I see friends -typical and atypical- struggle with their little miracles I feel less and less regrets. When I ask them “How do you manage?” The answer often comes down to: “I don’t.” I am NOT saying neurodiverse person = not capable parent. The neurodiverse people I know love and care for their kids very much but they seem to pay a high price for it with their own health. Maybe they even feel more pressure to do right by their kids? I don’t know I am speculating here. What frustrates me is that high pressure-society isn’t exactly supportive and understanding when it comes to raising humans (complex and diverse creatures) in general but the message I get is that making more of them seems like a very normal and good idea. And when women (like me) choose to sit this one out they are being told that they are missing out on all the fun and/or are being accused of being selfish. I have felt guilt about enjoying all the me-time I claim for myself. I also have felt I don’t have the right to be burned out because I don’t have any kids. But I am getting off topic. Thank you again for your vulnerability and bravery to share. And for mentioning the RAGE, I feel you. I feel a lot of hindsight rage from the angry inner child that never got to express herself. Let’s hope the diversity of shared stories will enter the collective consciousness and someday help motivate the hive to transform society into a more emphatic and inclusive space.
Thank you! I hope you're feeling better now.
I'm so in it, but I don't have enough strength and words to describe it in English now (I'm not native). But I'm really grateful.
sending virtual hugs.
I really appreciate your videos and your honesty about your experiences! Also because I can very much relate to them and its been so difficult to even find people that I do relate to! I myself am 19 and just found out in therapy I could be an AuDHDer, and everything just started to make so much sense. The experience of so much discomfort over sensory and unpredictable stuff but also feeling like you need to hide it all on a daily basis. I am glad you can find the right accommodations now! I think society in general needs to be more understanding and open to those accommodations and possibilities that people they didn’t expect it from to need them :)
@@Sarah-pk3wl absolutely there’s an added struggle with people who pass as neuronormative. People don’t believe them.
Huge appreciation for the honesty and identification on this video. Thank you for sharing.
Thank you so much for making this video. You’re essentially explaining what is happening to me!!!
It all makes sense! Only problem is how to get out of it now
Good luck!
I feel like I'm looking at myself.
Great video! Your video is going to help me explain my side of life to my loved ones.
I really appreciate this share, thank you!
I feel like you are speaking words to my experience so precisely! ☂️💜 Thank you for sharing yours, while still going through it. I’m finding encouragement in seeing “myself” in what you are expressing, even though this is so hard.
I relate to this so much. My heart goes out to you ❤️ I hope you’ve found a more nurturing path since you recorded this. It’s so hard being a mom, being a wife, being a unique and sensitive being. Peace
@@ThomiBMcIntyre thank you.
god, it’s like I could’ve said this all myself. thankyou for this video - it’s like being seen for the first time.
Thank you. Your experiences reflected mine almost to a t. I feel less alone now. Take care
This is little bit off topic but somehow the way your not talking straight to camera makes me feel safe because it feels same as eye contact and I always worry how I look like if I don’t keep eye contact all the time. You look beautiful that way and maybe I look too
@@sofiatuhkanen9715 thanks. Looking straight into the camera makes it harder for me to recall what I’m saying. Hence the angle. I also wanted it to be mostly verbal so people could listen while doing other things. I know most of the time that’s what I do.
I don't have kids but I work with them and I'm in the middle of all you explained right now 😮💨 It's a very lonely battle to fight without a proper support system full of understanding people with emotional skills.
Thanks for sharing this! It helps.
thank you for sharing
This is such a vulnerable video and I know that this will reach people who will be so grateful to hear that they're not alone. I received my diagnosis of ADHD two years ago at age 39, and while it explained so much and gave me a sense of relief, I also just kind of wallowed for a bit in this feeling of...what if?? What if the possibility of girls having ADHD hadn't been completely dismissed when I was a kid? My grades were fine, but there were a lot of sleepless nights and re-reading paragraphs ten times because I didn't actually take in what I was reading. What if I'd been able to get extensions on deadlines without penalty?? My grades would have been stellar.
Grieving the self we thought we could have been is a big part of the process, for sure.
Thank you for your story. I have also be there situation many times. And I have adhd, autism, ocd, rsd, maniac, depres, ptsd.
And my family and friends dont believe me.
I want to give you the biggest hug❤ I’m a 24 year old audhd woman and this is so similar to what happened/is happening to me. I see you. I’m so so sorry. I want to validate the fact that what you’re experiencing is so real and it is completely impossible to just “push through” this. Burnout is something we have to surrender to, and rest, and listen to our bodies and needs as much as we can. A lot of people in my life simply didn’t want to understand what was happening to me, both my parents and my partner, which hurt like hell. But I put my foot down and radically decided to rest. I’m still not out of burnout yet, but I’m getting there. It’s a journey. It can feel so lonely at times, but I know that I’m so not alone in this neurodivergent struggle. And neither are you❤ I’m so proud of you for acknowledging your needs and advocating for yourself. That takes a lot of courage. There will be better days. Coming out of burnout is possible. And we learn how to live so that we can avoid overloading ourselves.
This is where I am 33 recently diagnosed after I quit my job. How did you navigate this is meditation helping?
funny, that i make a similar face when I finish any sentence that could be described as "it is what it is", sort of like to express a dot to that sentence LOL
thanks for letting us see, im 47, and one of the few women diagnosed with adhd as a 7 year old. Unfortunately at that time they also believed you “grew” out of it so in 4th grade i was taking off my meds and by jr high i was “diagnosed” with bipolar and OCD. Now in current life I have been diagnosed back to a ADHD diagnosis and told i do not have bipolar disorder i just have adhd and cptsd. 🤦🏻♀️ My ocd is just cptsd from childhood sexual abuse so … now i am also looking at whether i may also have autism. I also since delving into all of this the past several years along with working full time am feeling so stretched thin. It doesn’t take much for me to feel depleted. And i need way more recovery time from literally everything- not sure if this is burnout
I eat 10mg edibles about twice a week, and it helps me a lot.
I’ve had this since 2019 and tried all to get out as well as stay in. I’m scared and wondering whether to go at up on psychotropic meds or go to an impatient center for neurodivergent a. Also feel like I have to figure out and make sense of the trauma of my past, as well as have an assistant and motivator- and start building or relearning life.
It’s really hard. You really do have to relearn to build your life around who you actually are and how you actually are. It’s tireless and thankless work. And we have the least energy to get out when we need it most. Most of the environments around us as late diagnosed are not supportive of what we need. Wishing you the most luck in navigating it.
thanks for this
Off topic question but where did you get the cardigan/jacket? It looks so comfy and the perfect thickness for indoors.
@@briepierce6744 stitch fix, actually
I have to know what headphones you're wearing in this video.
They are Bose quiet comfort. I wear them every day most of the time.
@@divergent.threads Thank you.
Sony XM4 are better. Don't bother with the XM5. I sleep in mine.
It's crazy yo.
❤
I currently don’t have the energie to write any more, so just thank you! I feel so much more seen and less alone and wrong, because of videos like this.
You're older than 39? Girl drop the skincare/health routine!
I don’t have one besides being in the house most of the time. :)
So how didnthe pain go had fybromyalgia symptoms 6 years everyday sure itsautism burnout niw diagnosed do you have hypomobility heds
For me it was the trauma releasing from the body. I would have random twitching in places and more tension than pain. I carry a lot of it in my back. I do know others who have had constant pain during burnout but I don’t know what they are doing about it. Not diagnosed with hEDS but probably.
@@divergent.threads so hard to get it in remission started the muscle.pain did after.my other half diagnosed breast cancer touch wood ok now though had CFS symptoms prior.and just lost my mum to severe ms heds asperger's albeit nwe only found out last year we have autism my son's now diagnosed to
@@divergent.threads do you no.anyone who has got better even Florence.nightingale had it on believe
Un burnout did you have muscle pain everyday
No, it wasn't consistent the way chronic pain is. It was related to somatic release. I know many people do face chronic pain issues that arise from burnout or the masking prior to burnout.
@@divergent.threads thankyou trying to find information of folks with similar symptoms from burnout irnthe older.name.neurosthenia hoping to recover awaiting to try ADHD meds but can't until April do to shortage hope they suit me with the asperger's do you no anyone personally with burnout pain symptoms
It is hard to be weak among culture don't care about people!
"O My servants, I have forbidden oppression for Myself and have made it forbidden amongst you, so do not oppress one another. O My servants, all of you are astray except for those I have guided, so seek guidance of Me and I shall guide you, O My servants, all of you are hungry except for those I have fed, so seek food of Me and I shall feed you. O My servants, all of you are naked except for those I have clothed, so seek clothing of Me and I shall clothe you. O My servants, you sin by night and by day, and I forgive all sins, so seek forgiveness of Me and I shall forgive you. O My servants, you will not attain harming Me so as to harm Me, and will not attain benefitting Me so as to benefit Me. O My servants, were the first of you and the last of you, the human of you and the jinn of you to be as pious as the most pious heart of any one man of you, that would not increase My kingdom in anything. O My servants, were the first of you and the last of you, the human of you and the jinn of you to be as wicked as the most wicked heart of any one man of you, that would not decrease My kingdom in anything. O My servants, were the first of you and the last of you, the human of you and the jinn of you to rise up in one place and make a request of Me, and were I to give everyone what he requested, that would not decrease what I have, any more that a needle decreases the sea if put into it. O My servants, it is but your deeds that I reckon up for you and then recompense you for, so let him who finds good, praise Allah, and let him who finds other than that, blame no one but himself."