5 Secrets High-Masking Autistics Will Never Tell You: No Music Edition

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  • Опубліковано 30 вер 2024

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  • @breadfan_85
    @breadfan_85 5 місяців тому +210

    When I get an unexpected knock on the door, it's like a shock to my nervous system. My heart skips a beat, I get shaky, and feel like I'm going to jump out of my skin. Unexpected phone calls are better but not by much.

    • @Tiffany-Rose
      @Tiffany-Rose 5 місяців тому +8

      full blown panic mode 😫😫😅😅

    • @BrickNewton
      @BrickNewton 5 місяців тому

      Front door or phone (I don't get many of either).
      Also I like to lock the gate sometimes just so I know I'm safe from disturbance.

    • @MamaDisco1313
      @MamaDisco1313 5 місяців тому +6

      I haven’t answered my door to an unexpected visitor in 10 years. It’s just easier for me to NOT answer

    • @SharkSandwichTornado
      @SharkSandwichTornado 4 місяці тому +5

      My dad who is also an audhder often forgets how much it scares the crap out of me when he knocks my door too hard so we both get a little bit of a spook when he knocks because I often make a noise of some indescribable creature 😂

  • @kevinwhite6176
    @kevinwhite6176 10 місяців тому +361

    Geez, the people coming to the house thing. I feel like my house is an extension of myself, and someone coming up to the door is like a complete stranger manifesting themselves right in my face without prior warning.

    • @ryanmackenzie6109
      @ryanmackenzie6109 10 місяців тому +22

      Holy shit this phrasing is immaculate

    • @lovisaricks9168
      @lovisaricks9168 5 місяців тому +14

      I agree with most of these. I do like people coming by, not as much unannounced.

    • @angelasanchez4413
      @angelasanchez4413 5 місяців тому +10

      I get furious

    • @batintheattic7293
      @batintheattic7293 5 місяців тому +7

      Another really good reason for sleeping through the beast's breakfast time (it seems to be the mornings when peak grifting manifests) and for wearing noise cancelling headphones when not asleep. If it can't get me it can't grift me. Unless the beast is riving at the door between tracks - it goes unremarked.
      I apologise to those cousins and friends that I may actually enjoy the society of - but if I haven't been awake, and probably fretting and thinking about how to cancel, for many hours, nobody's door knocking is getting through to me.
      It has to be this way. I don't get furious like Angela, when my shell is attacked, but if I know about it I can absolutely detect (for days afterwards) in my psychology that it has happened. I imagine I have a rechargeable battery to run on. Certain things deplete it faster than others. Certain things, like human interaction, actively damage it so that it takes longer to recharge.
      Also, I can tell from the knock what the mindset of the knocker is. I do not enjoy pondering what made somebody so angry with me. Headphones.
      Message to burglars: Just because your investigative knock goes unanswered - you will never be in more danger than when an autistic woman looks up to see you are inside her house. You could have a crowbar in your hand - but you've triggered a nuclear event and I don't fancy yours much. Things are probably not going to play out the way you think they should. And to the non autistic non burglars - you're allowed to thank us for subverting the paradigm that the person inside the house must always answer the knock on the door - because now the burglars know trepidation. They, unless they are complete idiots, will know that it's not the automatic green light when that unanswered knock seems to imply that there is nobody home.

    • @Jayartosaurus
      @Jayartosaurus 5 місяців тому +7

      i genuinly feel like rage when it happens like ive been interuppted during something even if i was just existing

  • @jeanelarson
    @jeanelarson 5 місяців тому +173

    "Meltdowns are not the same as temper tantrums." Thank you for saying this. This is the hardest thing for me to communicate with others who don't understand.

    • @the.masked.one.studio4899
      @the.masked.one.studio4899 5 місяців тому +11

      YES!!! Getting my daughter diagnosed as a young child was so hard because of this. I’m also so scared of my meltdowns because if a non autistic person does the same it’s labeled as HORRIFYING/manipulative/terror inducing. Sometimes I need to yell and figuring out how to tap into that feeling and turn it into something more positive (we do singing and barking), but sometimes I just don’t have the mental power to redirect myself.

    • @jeanelarson
      @jeanelarson 5 місяців тому +16

      @@the.masked.one.studio4899 SO RELATABLE. I was trying to explain a meltdown I had in IKEA early-pandemic and was met with "We all have our Karen moments!" Really, not the same. Panic attack, blurred vision, desperation to get out of the store. I was loud and disruptive, and also embarrassed, unrestrained, scared. I got stares as I climbed over the blockades and all I could think was, "I might die if I can't get through that door." It was horrendous.

    • @bunnyboo6295
      @bunnyboo6295 5 місяців тому +2

      @@jeanelarson Wow I had similar experience during pandemic

    • @enolp
      @enolp 5 місяців тому +8

      My mom had a really hard time explaining my situation to my siblings because they would see me crying and my mom coming to help me and as far as they were concerned, if I cried I got whatever I wanted. Keep in mind that at this point I was 20 years old. I got so self conscious about my stress-response tears that I started to try to hide them whenever I could, because even though I needed support I couldn’t stand the thought that my siblings would think of it like me just trying to get what I want. Luckily they understand now that it’s because I’m autistic and the reason that happens is because it’s my response to overwhelm and often lack of being able to get my needs met

    • @bunnyboo6295
      @bunnyboo6295 5 місяців тому +9

      @@enolp wow good mom. I don't even respond to my own needs because I had to learn you can't get them unless others also need the same thing at same time. You learn life is just painful others can do it so you must pull through any pain. But in your cause if you were thirsty your mom allowed you to have a drink

  • @brynnejewell1275
    @brynnejewell1275 5 місяців тому +82

    I so appreciate the "no music" option.

    • @saxiamondstern
      @saxiamondstern 3 дні тому

      So did I - until there was the first "music" at 1:37

  • @AutisticEntrepreneur
    @AutisticEntrepreneur 10 місяців тому +117

    The meltdown stuff is hard to talk about especially if you have shame around not being stronger and had pressure on you as a kid to be perfect.

    • @alberich3099
      @alberich3099 3 місяці тому +3

      YES that is realy the case for me.
      My meltdowns were always seen as tantrums, and with it came punishment. Which led me to not realy experience meltdowns anymore, but going streight to a shutdown.
      There is no warning for me anymore that I'm getting overloaded, it just snaps and I shut down not beeing able to do anything but exsist - which is realy stressfull.

  • @JamesWiegel73
    @JamesWiegel73 5 місяців тому +146

    No surprises... is the reason why I don't tell people my birthday. I absolutely cannot stand the attention if I'm not prepared for it.

    • @SmallSpoonBrigade
      @SmallSpoonBrigade 5 місяців тому +7

      I thought I was the only one. I hate having a birthday celebration at work, I'll have a little one at home with family, but that's it. Not only is it a lot of attention, but it's also a lot of stimulation and I'm then expected to remember other people's birthdays and what level or recognition I'm supposed to give it.

    • @Head0fTheHerd
      @Head0fTheHerd 5 місяців тому +6

      When people ask when my birthday is, I always say "sometime next year" 😅

    • @dickottel
      @dickottel 5 місяців тому +1

      I only brought some candy on one of my birthdays at work. That year I was working with my crush and was hoping for a hug... that didn't happen 😂

    • @BrickNewton
      @BrickNewton 5 місяців тому +1

      Arrghhh this!!!!! I try to take the day off if possible, but my last job they would schedule a morning tea and we would all sit down and talk (about 5 or 6 different conversations at once! Too much to handle) then the Birthday card and song.

    • @ChelleLlewes
      @ChelleLlewes 5 місяців тому +3

      I thought I was the only one who doesn't tell anyone when my birthday is! I loathe being the center of attention unless it's MY idea! And I NEVER get that idea! 😊

  • @YtUser-c1c
    @YtUser-c1c 5 місяців тому +52

    Meltdowns are the most complicated thing to understand as a non autistic mom. I always said to my son: it’s over now, so let’s move on. Now I understand why he can’t, not immediately after. I am learning more about autism from you and Orion Kelly than in 20 years of visiting therapists… Thank you for your honesty and openness. I love your sense of humor. ❤️🇳🇱

    • @ChrisandDebby
      @ChrisandDebby  5 місяців тому +7

      Thanks for the kind words. How old is your son? We are currently making a lot of content specifically on meltdowns- being proactive to minimize them, what to do during one, and how to assist in the recovery process afterwards.
      We are really really happy our content is helping you and your family.

    • @YtUser-c1c
      @YtUser-c1c 5 місяців тому +14

      @@ChrisandDebby my son is 25 almost 26 now. I lost so much time looking for the right info. Therapists always think from the “normal” perspective. They feel the autistic person has to adapt, and “normal” people don’t.

    • @ess1163
      @ess1163 2 місяці тому +1

      Yes. Me too with Orion Kelly. Even tho the Nds in my life are female. And in denial.

  • @deinodinosuchus
    @deinodinosuchus 5 місяців тому +146

    In the future when I have my own home, I plan on having a sign that says something akin to “If we haven’t discussed your visit/you haven’t called ahead, I will not answer your knock,” or just straight up, “If we haven’t discussed your visit, don’t knock,” because I can’t stand people showing up unannounced 😂

    • @spike315
      @spike315 5 місяців тому +2

      A No Soliciting sign does a lot of that

    • @BrickNewton
      @BrickNewton 5 місяців тому +4

      No appointment no see

    • @wisecoconut5
      @wisecoconut5 5 місяців тому +12

      There is a house in my neighborhood with a 4 foot vertical sign that reads, "Go away." Mad respect!

    • @Gorgonzeye
      @Gorgonzeye 5 місяців тому +7

      Mine says, "Hippity hoppity, get off my property!"

    • @crystalclear6864
      @crystalclear6864 4 місяці тому +1

      Not a bad idea!

  • @Jalkr
    @Jalkr 5 місяців тому +62

    Hi again. The hating to have people show up at the house thing is HUGE for me. I HATE it. Part of WHY I'm a hermit: nobody comes here especially not in winter.

    • @alberich3099
      @alberich3099 3 місяці тому

      yes!
      It is doublely stressfull for me as my parents didn't respect privacy, and me haveing beeng to a boarding school.
      Not only do I hate just somebody showing up at my flat, I've sent people (dear to my heart peopl) away because I could not deal with it.

  • @margoterrill5120
    @margoterrill5120 3 місяці тому +32

    It's deeply, profoundly, heartbreaking and a relief to know, after 70 years why I am the way I am. My life has been one long train wreck. I spent virtually all of my life masking, confused, humiliated, abused and terrified . I only have a few years left now, and it is so painful to know how different my life could have been, had autism been understood when I was in my childhood or teens.

    • @ChrisandDebby
      @ChrisandDebby  3 місяці тому +15

      I am so sorry to hear how challenging it must have been for you for so long. I know all those feelings you’re mentioning, and the relief in combination with the anger and frustration you must feel after getting diagnosed at this stage in life. I felt much of that but after 41 years, and it’s still hard to process. I can’t imagine adding 3 additional decades of all those feelings you describe. You’re not alone in this but it still doesn’t take the decades of pain and loneliness away. I’m glad you’re here and sharing this - it helps remind us that it’s important more people better understand autism now so we don’t all have to wait so long to be understood and accepted - even by ourselves in a world that still has a long way to go to be a place where we all can thrive.
      On a bright note, I still expect 30+ years of you kicking around and enjoying your life 🥰

    • @shorgoth
      @shorgoth 5 днів тому +1

      Yeah, I'm 40 and I feel the same not quite frustration... but sadness, sure sadness works, anyway... I just hope I'll be able to hold on until science allow for life extention. I'm just happy things are changing in society, not quickly but fast enough to see progress for sure. I found a degree of solace in sharing those difficult experiences. By "monetizing" (not quite the word) my pain in exchange for others avoiding feeling pain my pain has value retroactively, it becomes experience with a function making it more bearable. Maybe you could try to do the same, see if it alleviates your perceived experience. Share to others who need it what worked what didn't worked, what you found painful in your life. The world can't understand us if we don't try to share.

  • @lastlight4252
    @lastlight4252 5 місяців тому +81

    I don't forget to shower or change clothes, I decide not to. Minimizes laundry after all. But, if I can smell something, or something itches, or I spill something on my clothes and I plan to go out, I change my clothes. When I got a dog to be my life coach, he made sure that I stopped work for lunch, for his walks, and changed my life.

    • @highkingcctv409
      @highkingcctv409 5 місяців тому

      Caring for a dog does make a big difference, do you work from home?

    • @caroljones3924
      @caroljones3924 5 місяців тому +10

      I'm guardian to a dog 🐺 and He is my life coach aswell He is also my Buddy and smoothing him really helps when in meltdown and the eating and drinking He is an amazing Support to me 🐺❤️

    • @oh_bruhh
      @oh_bruhh 5 місяців тому +5

      i relate to that. i've been getting more exercise since i got a dog. plus i shower more often now, since the dog smell is more noticeable than my own body odour

    • @joelpaultre7440
      @joelpaultre7440 4 місяці тому +6

      Honestly I can relate. If I don't leave the house for a day I'm not making myself presentable.

    • @angeladyson7367
      @angeladyson7367 2 місяці тому

      Cats do a very similar thing... personal alarm clock, if they need feeding or if you're spending too much time in your work they insert themselves into your work space and become a very welcome or sometimes not so welcome distraction. 😅

  • @annelogston
    @annelogston 3 місяці тому +18

    I was recently diagnosed with ASD and moderate to severe sensory processing disorder (I’m 62) and I’ve only just discovered your videos. I’m binge-watching them as I type this. I’m so very, very grateful that you’re willing to share such personal knowledge with us to help make our own journey through the labyrinth that much easier. Thank you SO much.

  • @julierhan
    @julierhan 10 місяців тому +43

    Love this! And thanks for the no music version. Makes it easier to concentrate 🙂

  • @SamS-bx7ed
    @SamS-bx7ed 2 місяці тому +18

    I usually run and hide when someone knocks on my door unannounced. Idk, my flight response kicks in.

    • @greywocky
      @greywocky 24 дні тому

      same ! i will literally crouch in a corner gremlin style lol

  • @frohnatur9806
    @frohnatur9806 5 місяців тому +42

    I think "abstract" wasn't the best term for point 3.
    I think autistic people tend to be ESPECIALLY good at understanding abstract concepts, such as what molecules are, why they interact in the ways they do and the properties of the elements they consist of and such. Basically, sciences like chemistry, physics and maths seem to often be understood much more easily by autistic people, as they are known to be drawn to logical systems. Those sciences are abstract, because they deal with models of minute parts of our universe, that we can never directly observe, so intuition is basically out the window for these subjects.
    A more fitting word might have been "imprecision" or "ambiguity". Autistic people tend to struggle with any ambiguous statement, because they try to deduce its meaning and hit a wall when the meaning isn't deducible and could be any of multiple possibilities. Neurotypicals seem not to think about these possible meanings too much, instead just going with whatever meaning first popped into their head.
    But hey, I might not be autistic. Maybe it's just ADHD on its own

    • @Tiffany-Rose
      @Tiffany-Rose 5 місяців тому +1

      I'm ADHD and Autistic and can say that I am definitely not drawn to or understand math, science and tech stuff more easily. We all have our strengths and weaknesses.

    • @frohnatur9806
      @frohnatur9806 5 місяців тому +2

      @@Tiffany-Rose but something else logical or "systemized"?

    • @ChelleLlewes
      @ChelleLlewes 5 місяців тому +6

      I agree. I am extremely adept at pattern recognition, but I suck at math because I have a little problem with discalcula. Numbers in general don't make much sense to me, and I can never remember a phone number, so I don't even bother having a phone. Obviously, I can't do a sudoku puzzle.
      But I can do the Saturday New York Times. In ink. And I have been told I'm a walking thesaurus. So there's that. 😉😇
      Even on the spectrum, we are all unique in our abilities, tolerances, and avoidances. I really hate it when our individualities are forcibly subsumed into what is being called a, "community," and the assumptions become that we are all alike.
      And just one final little plea: I'm not a, "person with autism." I am an autistic person. Person-first is demeaning because it implies that I could be, "without autism," if only I really really tried! It victimizes the autist.

    • @BelovedofSekhmet
      @BelovedofSekhmet 5 місяців тому +10

      I agree with you. I think imprecision and ambiguity are much better words. I often find it challenging to interpret the true meaning behind vague statements made by others.

    • @frohnatur9806
      @frohnatur9806 5 місяців тому +3

      @@ChelleLlewes I agree with saying "autistic person" over "person with autism". The latter just plays into the hands of pseudo autism help organizations like Autism Speaks, that just want to get rid of autism so that neurotypicals won't have to deal with them, which is one step away from getting rid of autistic people themselves, aka eugenics.
      But I re-read all comments up to yours, and I didn't see anyone writing of "people with autism". Maybe I missed it

  • @meldeneanw
    @meldeneanw 5 місяців тому +32

    I didn't know these were secrets. I guess I just don't have anyone to talk to about them but it appears they are all true for me. For example, my 'special buddy' is Rufus, a stuffed bulldog I've had for over 40 years. I feel better when he's near, or at least I know where he is. I take him with me to the doctor to smell for comfort, especially when I know there's going to be needles involved. My meltdowns are HORRIBLE like nuclear explosions. I absolutely HATE surprises. I do forget to eat, so I carry around a huge box of BOOST chocolate drinks in my car (I'm still surprised to see people at restaurants at anytime of the day, sitting down and eating) in case I'm feeling light headed. I used to forget to shower but now I go to the gym EVERYDAY and my routine includes a shower before I leave. I do wear the same clothes for many, many, many days at a time. I wish I was a NUN or a JEDI so that it wouldn't seem strange that I do. Although I do feel misunderstood, I have my scripts and I still study movie and television show dialogues. That's because if I don't recognize what type of conversation I am/will be engaging in, or am quick enough to patch an impromptu together, I just won't say anything at all. I do a lot of nodding and do often just physically remove myself from a situation. So, thank you for this and all the videos you post. They do help me feel less alone. I consider them to be public services🙏

  • @erikaquirk4625
    @erikaquirk4625 5 місяців тому +62

    When I first self diagnosed, I thought I only had shutdowns (internal meltdowns). But then as I slowly re-remembered my life there were ah ha moments. Like the time I flung all the ceramic sandwich plates into a cement wall…

    • @Eeeemomo
      @Eeeemomo 5 місяців тому +8

      Hmm I’m remembering the time I flipped the scrabble board while playing with my dad and grandma because my grandma put a word in the place where I was planning on putting a word for the entire game 🤔

    • @megchulufas4172
      @megchulufas4172 5 місяців тому +8

      Same experience here. I can recall more than a few meltdowns, although I’m in my 60’s, and I don’t think I’ve had one for a long while. I’ve been changing my life to be less stressful for the past 10 years, and that might be the difference.
      I also relate to the issue with understanding abstract concepts. I’ve run into this more than a few times, too.

    • @Tumnusthecat
      @Tumnusthecat 5 місяців тому +6

      I remember me going through the alley way of my server job and just chucking tubs of butter at the wall and slamming metal pans into the floor. All the signs seem glaringly obvious in hindsight.

    • @unluckyomens370
      @unluckyomens370 5 місяців тому +4

      I used to call my meltdowns panic attacks. They were not caused by panic and id claw and my neck and arms or pull my hair. I also do this like “humming” thing its like a scream but I “mute” it in my throat and dont open my mouth

    • @A.Abercrombie-uo9ji
      @A.Abercrombie-uo9ji 3 місяці тому +1

      I can very much relate to the re remembering..... the more I think I am starting to get it, and maybe figure myself out I start to remember things about my life and then the ah ha moment hits. This definitely has been an interesting journey!

  • @bmiller949
    @bmiller949 5 місяців тому +56

    I never feel lonely when left alone. I prefer it that way.

    • @angeladyson7367
      @angeladyson7367 2 місяці тому +7

      There are definitely times when I prefer my own company but there are also times when I feel isolated and want to be understood.

    • @srldwg
      @srldwg 15 днів тому

      No need, innate or instinctual desire for human connection. 😐
      Even every once in awhile.
      Part of me gets it, but I think the point is simply FEELING lonely at times.
      Not saying that that means actively looking for companionship.

  • @brianlink5379
    @brianlink5379 10 місяців тому +25

    Woah... uh... Got to the feeling misunderstood part and, although I'm right on board with other things mentioned and find them helpful in better being able to articulate things for myself, I ***really*** don't like hearing and reading "Autistics don't do well with abstract concepts"... I think maybe what you're looking for there is ambiguity/uncertainty?
    I think those of us who are on the spectrum often excel far beyond our neurotypical counterparts when it comes to abstractions, especially with our special interests -- that's a major component in how I and others are able to see/perceive relationships others don't/can't

    • @ChrisandDebby
      @ChrisandDebby  10 місяців тому +12

      You’re absolutely right with your point about abstract concepts. I actually also do well with many abstract concepts as with many other autistics. Certain abstract concepts though I struggle with, at least in practice. I think the concept of time is very difficult for me, but I wonder how much of that is my ADHD. Also I struggle with black and white thinking with certain abstract concepts. For example- telling a white lie. I find this to be fairly abstract and I struggle with it. Maybe not in theory but I do in actual practice. What I wanted to get at, but didn’t do very well, was also what you mentioned- ambiguity. This ambiguity, especially with communication, really frustrates me and used to make me worried and uncomfortable when I had to talk to a lot of people.
      Really, really appreciate your feedback here.

    • @brianlink5379
      @brianlink5379 10 місяців тому +6

      ​@@ChrisandDebby All good. I completely understand what you mean about the practical application of certain abstract things, such as time or telling a white lie -- I also struggle with time-related stuff multiple times every day and what to say/do in a lot of situations which fall into social gray areas.
      Approaching this from my lived experience as a late diagnosed AuDHDer with dyslexia (I'm in my mid 30's. Dyslexia diagnosed 10 years ago, 2 months before I completed undergrad. ASD & ADHD both diagnosed ~2-3 years ago 😬😅)...
      I would argue those are not so much difficulties with abstracts, even though you're right, those do happen to be abstract concepts. I'd qualify time-related struggles more as challenges of executive function (especially if ADHD is in play) and white lies as a challenge of generally accepted social conventions that just aren't readily compatible with how my brain works.
      I understand these things on a conceptual level and have occasional wins in practice but repeatedly make a fool of myself for over/under-estimating time requirements and/or doing/saying things others might find harsh/insensitive/rude/etc... when not intending to be that way.
      When I zone in on things, I certainly experience "losing concept of time" but I think that's just a phrase we use. Analogous example: I frequently forget to eat, drink, or use the restroom, particularly when hyperfocused or otherwise not tuned into bodily signals. I still have a firm grasp on the concept of eating, drinking, and using the restroom and their importance, but I've stopped registering the signals for those things and they don't cross my mind until I am long overdue for one of them or I'm no longer "in my own little world" so to speak.
      I wonder how you think/feel about one particular realm of ambiguity that drives me nuts... superlative language in general but especially now with attention economy pushing for the -est (or other extreme) of all the things (b-est, bigg-est, fast-est, clean-est, perfect, most, etc...). When all the things become special, then nothing is special (or at least it becomes increasingly more difficult to figure out what actually is special). Determining if someone is speaking what they really mean versus exaggerating for emphasis is a cognitive minefield for me.

    • @brianlink5379
      @brianlink5379 10 місяців тому +4

      @@ChrisandDebby I struggle with the notion of "black and white thinking" because I'm not sure there's a true consensus on what that actually means. When you think of or use the term, how do you mean it?
      At least for me, when I'm accused of having black and white thinking, it's almost always in a situation when I'm overwhelmed with ambiguity/uncertainty or something with enough layers of nuance that it's beyond the capacity of my working memory. I might be asking/stating a series of yes/no (or similarly binary) things but that's how I can cope with and work my way through the facts/aspects of a situation to ultimately reach an nuanced conclusion and/or discover pieces I may have missed. (I.e. trying to determine known from unknown to establish a foundation from which I can build on)
      Sometimes it's because I perceive multiple meanings for what someone just said/did, even if they're unaware of the potential alternative interpretations, and I'm trying to understand what their intended meaning -- I wonder how much of this is baggage from all the things I have to be aware of and keep track of in order to mask successfully while others seem to be blissfully unaware.
      Other times, it's because I'm stuck in "analysis paralysis" and trying to get out of it so I can make tangible progress on something.

  • @juliefore
    @juliefore 10 місяців тому +42

    Thank you for the music-free version.

    • @pamelars7497
      @pamelars7497 5 місяців тому +4

      What is the purpose of music in videos anyway? Does anyone know how that became a thing?

    • @batintheattic7293
      @batintheattic7293 5 місяців тому +3

      @@pamelars7497 I think it's because uploaders watch each other's content and conclude that there must be a musical accompaniment to finish the piece properly. In many cases it's just not true. Now people are being post ironic with the most irritating presentations of 'musac' and I need them to stop it. It doesn't get less annoying just because it's now tongue in cheek.

    • @TheLexikitty
      @TheLexikitty 5 місяців тому +1

      @@pamelars7497 Random reply I know, but for me music can add or subtract from the video’s point, and sometimes people do really good things with music that almost create a score-like effect or lead to humor or drama being added. But in general, statistics-wise, it keeps NT people around longer and thus improves the video’s reach.

    • @TheLexikitty
      @TheLexikitty 5 місяців тому

      @@pamelars7497 I am also biased here, as I did go to college for violin performance

    • @pamelars7497
      @pamelars7497 5 місяців тому +1

      @@TheLexikitty that seems a bias to follow without questions 😊

  • @NeuroDivergentGamer1981
    @NeuroDivergentGamer1981 10 місяців тому +43

    When ups or FedEx pull into the driveway I go into defcon 1 and hide so they don't think I'm home...

    • @darbydelane4588
      @darbydelane4588 10 місяців тому +11

      When ANYone pulls up to my house I hide!🤣

    • @assimilateborg
      @assimilateborg 10 місяців тому +6

      Luckily we have those delivery box stations so I can send everything there and I just get a notification that something arrived.

    • @tracirex
      @tracirex 5 місяців тому +3

      my husband and I both hide when someone comes to the door even if they've already seen us

    • @barbaradoye1989
      @barbaradoye1989 5 місяців тому +5

      With me it invokes a walk of shame... followed by awkward short conversation... followed by another walk of shame but this time... double the shame. I skittle inside the door like a mouse. I've learned to just do it or get wet packages! It is what it is. Luckily, my mail lady is very, very kind with a very warm smile. It makes a big difference!
      Take care everyone! Remember, you are NEVER alone and you have a community to lean on!😀

    • @love-if7wt
      @love-if7wt 5 місяців тому +1

      Me toooooo 😂

  • @christinsongbird
    @christinsongbird 5 місяців тому +10

    So my neighbor downstairs has been trying to make friends with me. She’s a really nice lady but she just talks too much and overloads me every time we have a conversation. She talks A LOT and fast and bounces from topic to topic. It’s verbal mush. One time she knocked on my door I did not let her in and she probably could tell that I felt off and this huge block coming off me like no no you can not come in this is my safe place. I’ve literally hid from people who’ve shown up unannounced. My home is my safe space and if you overstay your welcome I will tell you to leave.

  • @SmallSpoonBrigade
    @SmallSpoonBrigade 5 місяців тому +23

    I realized last year that I don't really understand the future very well. I understand that the future exists, but I understand that things will happen, unless they won't and it's not always clear whether it's something that happens in a few minutes or possibly in many years.

    • @batintheattic7293
      @batintheattic7293 5 місяців тому

      It's the best of addresses, though - the dim and distant future. Many of us spend more time here than we are comfortable talking about. And yet we stubbornly refuse to put it on our letterheads. I like never never land. I will only be leaving it in a body bag.

  • @verminter
    @verminter 4 місяці тому +8

    Your special buddies are all great, but Rupert is FANTASTIC! That coloring!
    Hershel, a fox who wears a bowtie, helped me get through caring for my sick parents. If anyone out there had their special buddies taken from them or were shamed into getting rid of them, I'd highly recommend finding new ones.

  • @deathtouchltd
    @deathtouchltd 10 місяців тому +30

    I have severe IBS, and the only thing that I have found that helps it is a gluten free diet. I used to think that there is no way that gluten would cause so many issues, but I can honestly say that it’s been the best it’s been in 20 years.

    • @ChrisandDebby
      @ChrisandDebby  10 місяців тому +7

      I’m noticing this with my diet. Once I eat gluten, I start coughing and it isn’t long before I’m hanging onto the toilet for dear life. I’ve basically cut out gluten completely, but it’s harder when I’m back in Taipei.

    • @deathtouchltd
      @deathtouchltd 10 місяців тому +7

      @@ChrisandDebby I know the struggle well. It’s hard at first to believe that you can cut out gluten for your lifetime but once I really learned what to look for, it’s not too bad.

    • @bevodonnell1191
      @bevodonnell1191 4 місяці тому

      Yes

    • @robtooley4002
      @robtooley4002 4 місяці тому +3

      I'm the same. One other thing that helped a little is probiotics. Not cured but it helps.

    • @deathtouchltd
      @deathtouchltd 4 місяці тому

      @@robtooley4002 What brand?

  • @ladonwilliams1333
    @ladonwilliams1333 3 місяці тому +7

    Thank you for this level of honesty. Most people talk about the same ol’ stuff. This was refreshing and so relatable. It feels good not to feel so alone. 🥺

  • @leah-wp3dx
    @leah-wp3dx 4 місяці тому +6

    The gut issues are real.
    Going out is hard in the first place with the people and noise and overall discomfort but then also not knowing if you'll have a toilet near by is really stressful and makes you need the toilet even more.... So I don't go out without a plan. (Think about going to the grocery store & how gross those toilets are; plans are required)

  • @assimilateborg
    @assimilateborg 10 місяців тому +19

    I don't have buddies, but my meltdowns I had to talk about, as some happened when I was with friends (who did not know about my autism). And I go for a walk, usually not being aware. I find myself somewhere one hour later and have to walk the whole way back (if there's no bus).
    I'm living alone, luckily not missing meals and showers. It's a strict routine. Basically daily planning for these things.
    And diarrhea strongly correlates with stress/out of normal situations.

  • @AgnieszkaPoznanska-Aga
    @AgnieszkaPoznanska-Aga 5 місяців тому +7

    People usually have "Welcome" written on their doormat, we have "Do not Disturb" and we mean it 😂

  • @RMedich
    @RMedich 10 місяців тому +22

    I wonder why we have belly issues. I have had them my whole life and no amount of ‘up periscope’ endoscopies could determine why. I do love your humour, I totally relate to all of it.

    • @ChrisandDebby
      @ChrisandDebby  10 місяців тому +13

      I’m diving into this topic pretty deeply right now and I’m trying a new diet. Im giving it 3 more months. If it works, I’ll do a video about it!

    • @RMedich
      @RMedich 9 місяців тому +4

      @@ChrisandDebby definitely! I have heard it before whilst researching. We have to wait 3 years for autism diagnosis in Scotland so while I wait I’m in research mode. Thankfully, the aDHD wait isn’t as long. I will be on the drugs before I know it and thinking with clarity. Like that limitless film only more chaotic.

    • @thesincitymama
      @thesincitymama 5 місяців тому +4

      @@ChrisandDebbythe diet didn’t work? Or you just didn’t do this video yet? I have been looking for solutions to this for my whole lifetime

    • @batintheattic7293
      @batintheattic7293 5 місяців тому

      I don't know how to avoid the discomfort but I suspect it's a consequence of too much stomach acid generation. They reckon that it's a common phenomenon for women to need to urinate when they hear their mother's voice. I reckon I become a gastric acid factory when certain others are talking to me. It's particularly acute when I'm being nagged or interrogated.

    • @Tiffany-Rose
      @Tiffany-Rose 5 місяців тому +3

      Stress. One thing most of us have in common is stress. Huge digestive trigger.

  • @simoneclift3155
    @simoneclift3155 5 місяців тому +12

    Oh my goodness! Thank you soooo much ❤
    Listening to you list those things out loud was such a comfort to me. To hear someone else explain the physical effects of the fear of every day life is a great comfort to me.
    Thank you ❤

  • @BarrieBrown
    @BarrieBrown 5 місяців тому +3

    At 5:15 perhaps instead of saying Neurotypicals think DIFFERENTLY you should have said they DON'T THINK. IT'S LIKE THEY'RE ON AUTOPILOT WITHOUT ANY REASONING INVOLVED IN WHAT THEY SAY OR DO. That's been my experience anyway.

    • @DrinkYourNailPolish
      @DrinkYourNailPolish 5 місяців тому +1

      YES!! It feels like NTs don't give any weight to their words as if what they say never matters and they don't care abt ANYTHING!
      And in my perception it just comes off as they're straight up LYING.
      For ex; if I ask an NT what their favorite food is and they just tell me whatever random thing that pops in their head, and the next time I see them I bring them that particular food they told me was their favorite and they go "what is this?" And I say "this is your favorite food." And they say "no this isn't" then I'm going to assume they're a liar and I can't trust anything that comes out of their mouth from then on.
      B/c if a person can't be considerate abt their words when it comes to the small seemingly insignificant stuff, how can I trust them with the important stuff moreover how can I trust they will even know what is important at all if nothing has any gravitas?!

  • @dottyfulcrum
    @dottyfulcrum 5 місяців тому +6

    I solved the showering and changing clothes problem with a schedule for the one and counting clothes pegs for the other. Oh, well, except for the monthly clothes or the yearly clothes . . . and, seasonal clothes. Showering is according to the date on the calendar. Mid-April to Mid-October is a slightly different schedule than Mid-October to Mid-April. Most clothes are 7-stinky-or-stained. But, usually 7 days which are counted by putting clothes pegs on the hangers. I could easily go on, but I won't.
    Hate the "someone at the door." I answer the door now, but when I was younger I never felt the need. I don't understand why it's necessary to answer it just because someone knocked. That's weird. I absolutely do not answer calls from numbers I don't know. I have a "this person has never called here before" ring tone that is different from people I know that call and businesses I work with who may call.
    Surprises are always unpleasant. I can mask pretty good (decades of practice) usually, but boy I would just rather not even.

  • @moonyfruit
    @moonyfruit 4 місяці тому +3

    My husband is kindly blunt when I get embarrassingly smelly, but he doesn't make me feel ashamed of myself.
    I do forget to shower, but showering is sometimes too much. Too much, up to having to deal with the feeling of my wet hands touching each other and fumbling with the towel to keep them dry... 😢

  • @shorgoth
    @shorgoth 5 днів тому +1

    1: I don't have special friends... maybe I should... but the dust arlergy don't like that.
    2: When I meltdown I start to dish harsh truths without philter to break relationships that stress me out like employment. I'm completely not myself when it happens, an alternate personality takes the wheel, I call it the tank... because it stomps everything in my life and shoot at everything that moves.
    3: I left for good people considering friends a few months back, I realized they didn't understood me and my values after 20 years of what I considered frienship. It's soul crushing.
    4: the worse thing for me is not knocking, it's neighbour playing music at every hours... can't sleep can't eat, can't function when it happens.
    5: yeah, taking care of myself is a challenge. It's easier when I have social obligations, it's a good reminder for me, part of the routine. I don't wear unclean clothes though since at home I don't wear clothes when I can avoid it. My skin just breaks and bleeds when I wear them for more than an hour or two... not fun. And yeah the digestion part, what I hate the most is the cramps I feel when I eat fibres, dairies and acidic stuff and the explosive consequences...

  • @Popper_Drop
    @Popper_Drop 10 місяців тому +14

    Secret 1 made me feel so much better about my plushies cause I'm still adding to- not my collection, my family 🥺🤍 they take care of each other and take care of me

    • @simongotz8126
      @simongotz8126 5 місяців тому +4

      Oh yes!

    • @ushere5791
      @ushere5791 5 місяців тому +4

      amen. my 24/7 best friend is a plushie, and he now has his own entourage of plushie buddies. :)
      but i nearly keeled over when chris started talking about it...! :O

  • @rebeccasatterley1542
    @rebeccasatterley1542 5 місяців тому +5

    I've been diagnosed with Irritable Bowel Syndrome and a wheat allergy/Gluten sensitivity. I had no idea they could be related to autism.

  • @victoryamartin9773
    @victoryamartin9773 5 місяців тому +8

    I am so glad to learn about all the goofy Autistic traits I share with this Autism community. Ya, these are things I've never talked about because I didn't know anybody else did them, and I would feel ashamed of anyone finding out. Well, now I am not only learning to accept them, but I can champion them as the traits that give me membership into this lovely community. Finally I am no longer alone in my shame within a world of people who don't get me and shun me when I misbehave. I don't even care anymore what they think; I tell all and watch them squirm.

    • @ChrisandDebby
      @ChrisandDebby  5 місяців тому +1

      Love hearing this - that's one of the reasons we originally started this channel was because it's important to know you're not alone! Thanks for sharing this too. We are a pretty special group, and this is such an incredible community that hasn't gotten the full appreciation it deserves, just like probably a lot of us that are late-diagnosed didn't over the years. But I agree - no worries about what others think because a lot of it can be embraced as what makes us unique!

    • @NormyTres
      @NormyTres 3 місяці тому

  • @edwardtaylor502
    @edwardtaylor502 8 місяців тому +8

    You are soo brave and this video is extremely helpfull!!! ❤
    Thanx a lot! 🎉

    • @ChrisandDebby
      @ChrisandDebby  8 місяців тому +4

      It's not easy making these videos! I appreciate your support. Comments like yours make it easier and help keep me going!! I'm glad you find my content helpful. Deb and I are currently making classes and we can't wait to share those when they're finished.

  • @kj3d812
    @kj3d812 26 днів тому +1

    Oh wow --- your sharing your Special Buddies literally brought tears to my eyes! I have a Fuzz-a-Mallow (Squishmallow) named Hunbun, and I sleep with him curled in my arms every night. The fact that I'm sixty years old makes no difference. I only learned I'm autistic a few years ago and am still trying to wrap my mind around it, learning to manage my autism on a daily basis, trying to unmask (after decades of high masking especially in the corporate world), all the daily struggles just to function in this world not made for neurodivergent people like me.
    My husband and I recently had to deal with a bout of parasites, and the "medical instructions" said to wash everything in hot water and dry on high heat, every day -- clothes, bed linens, and...stuffed toys. No way! That would destroy Hunbun. I could not take that risk, so we did what we could to get rid of the parasites. (They're gone now.) That incident really brought home to me how devastated I would be if anything ever happened to Hunbun, so yesterday I managed to find another "Stevon the Dog" (Hunbun's original Squishmallow name) on eBay and ordered it, just in case. It's not the original Hunbun, and I feel sort of mixed on having a "second Hunbun," but I'd rather that than risking not having one at all. Squishmallows are limited run, so it's not like you can just run out and get another one.
    Hunbun brings me comfort no words can express. Maybe he has become the adult equivalent of the orange rabbit I had when I was five and somehow got lost or thrown out, and I was devastated. I still look for that orange rabbit to this day, among the Easter stuffies. I didn't know I'm autistic back then, but now it makes sense, and I embrace -- literally! -- stuffed animals as comfort companions to soothe my autistic anxiety. My dentist even told me I could bring Hunbun with me to my appointments! (Now I will probably take Hunbun II, to keep my original Hunbun safe at home.) Thank you so much for sharing your Special Buddies! ❤
    Meltdowns -- yes, absolutely. I also call them "firestorms," as that's what they feel like in my head. It literally feels like my head has a firestorm going on and it's going to explode. (Hunbun is a huge help during meltdowns/firestorms.)
    Forget to eat -- that too. It's an annoying interruption, most of the time. I'm hungry -- which sometimes my brain confuses with nausea -- and I *have* to eat something because if I don't I just feel sick, but I haaaate having to stop what I'm doing to eat. I won't even get into the *difficulties* of eating -- textures, smells, icky crunches, etc.
    Showering -- helllllllllllllll yes! I hate showering because I can't stand the sudden shock of water hitting my body, and then once I adjust to the water, then I have to adjust again to get out, to the cold air hitting my wet body, which is another feeling I can't stand. It's just such an ordeal.
    Clothes -- I have multiple identical shirts and pants so I don't have to choose each day. (Steve Jobs did the same. I call it "The Steve Jobs Way of Dressing.") BUT -- I like my clothes stretched out and comfy, which they aren't when they come out of the dryer all shrunken and tight again. Hate anything tight around my waist. So I have this ritual of manually stretching my clean clothes before I put them on. And then I wear the pants for as many days as I can get away with before having to go through the stretching-out thing again with the next pair. Ugh!
    Really helpful, validating video. Many many thanks.❤

  • @Mrs.Silversmith
    @Mrs.Silversmith 4 місяці тому +4

    My older son was giving my younger son a hard time about having special stuffed animals. I told my older son that he just didn't get it and we all sat down and watched the first part of this video together. My younger son is feeling fully vindicated now. When you are different from everyone else it can be so reassuring to know that there are others like you out there who feel the same way.

  • @notsure9802
    @notsure9802 Місяць тому +2

    I am/have all of these except lonliness. I simply dont feel it. Even having friends i like and trust is stressfull because there are expectations and then i worry if im doing enough.
    On a different topic, i love that you opened with your "buddies". I have a bear that ive had since childhood. Over the years he has aquired his own things. He wears a suit (baby onesie tuxedo from when my son was a baby). He also has his own chair and pillows and a blanket that my grandmother made and holiday decorations. I cant count how many times ive cried into that bear. He's traveled the world with me, and when our house burned down, he was the first thing i grabbed (the first non living thing, obviously).

  • @thefuturist8864
    @thefuturist8864 2 місяці тому +2

    I *hate* surprises. Just the other day I had to go for an interview with a company that helps to get unemployed people back into work (I've been claiming the UK's equivalent of welfare for about 6 months, and apparently this is what happens after that period - something I wish I'd been told about at the start) and when I told them that I keep my phone on silent all the time and don't answer calls as they come in they said I would have to stop doing that. I pointed out to them that it's a typical ASD behaviour and that they know that I have been diagnosed, and all they could say is that if I'm seen to be ignoring contact then I will no longer be eligible for financial support. It's another example of how UK society really isn't set up for neurodiverse people (though, to be honest, it's not really set up for anyone else either).

    • @johnsamson9680
      @johnsamson9680 7 днів тому

      Went homeless multiple times due to this exact thing stopping me from receiving “welfare”.
      Gotta love the British government.

  • @sanny8716
    @sanny8716 18 днів тому +1

    I straight up don't believe there are people who don't get stressed af when somebody knoks on the door and you don't expect anyone

  • @afr11235
    @afr11235 Місяць тому +2

    Honestly the best invention was the little tech that sends a text message to say, "UPS will be delivering a package from [sender] between 1pm and 3pm." The biggest issue is when this time frame is off.

  • @colleenmcbride3656
    @colleenmcbride3656 5 місяців тому +4

    Late diagnosed woman here. I never really had attachments to stuffed animals... mainly because my adoptive sisters would take anything I spent time with or really enjoyed and just destroyed it in any way made them happy. They would burn it, paint on it, draw on it with permanent markers, or cut it. These sisters were older than me too, by at least a couple of years. They even destroyed things my biological mom gave me when she gave me up for adoption.

    • @bevodonnell1191
      @bevodonnell1191 4 місяці тому +5

      Liking your comment feels wrong. I don't like it because I'm happy about it, but because I empathize. I'm sorry that was part of your continuum.

    • @colleenmcbride3656
      @colleenmcbride3656 4 місяці тому

      @@bevodonnell1191 Thank you for your sentiments. I try to find a positive for alot of stuff that happens to turn the negative memories into something positive, like in this situation, I don't really have the money for extras, so I don't feel left out say, not having squishmallows. Nothing wrong with them, and they're absolutely adorable, but it's one thing I don't feel the need to have and to spend money on.

  • @pknuttarlott4934
    @pknuttarlott4934 2 місяці тому +2

    4:11 I have found marijuana can slow things down for me.

    • @SeeingBackward
      @SeeingBackward Місяць тому

      Absolutely! Having the right strains is important, but after several years of COPIOUS high-purity extracts and living in a place where people don't become violent at the drop of a hat, something switched in me, and at first I thought I broke something.
      When a startling noise happened, I found myself hearing it and identifying it before getting the chance to physically jump, and I thought I broke my startle reflex.
      Then people in my life started treating me with the kind of narcissistic violent-dominance escalation when presented with any information they felt threatened by that I'd got from my parents growing up, and I started jumping at any sharp noise again.
      It was only at that point that I realized that the broken thing was that I'd been trying to "white-knuckle" it through life in a way that it specifically relieves.
      Now I actually make phone calls when I need to without any level of anxiety and the only reason I don't answer unknown numbers is because they're always spam.
      I can even be fully excited about and even look forward to situations in which I'll be meeting new people, like a first-day at a new job, which I was always ambivalent about before because interacting with a new person for the first time had always been so stressful for me.
      I'm still occasionally 'weird' and sometimes have trouble reading a room, but I've actually been picking up on a lot of social cues and contexts that I never did before (to the point of noticing them in the shows that I've rewatched a thousand times before and realize "oh! that's why they had them do that then!"), especially since also realizing and treating my ADHD.
      Now that I know that the "high" feeling that it provides is just the feeling of "relief" it's a whole lot easier for me to access that feeling, and I can maintain the same effect with much less now.
      I so thankful every day to live in a place where the government would rather collect tax money on a product that brings relief to its citizens, rather than one that uses tax money that could go to other good uses in order to hurt its citizens for just trying to get relief!

  • @brandonradosevich6989
    @brandonradosevich6989 3 місяці тому +4

    So, I was just recently diagnosed with ASD. I remember being 12 or 13 and my father forcing me to throw away all of my stuffed animals and I have honestly never felt the same since. I honestly am just so glad that I have finally learned a part of who I am and it's been soooo amazing.

    • @jolenethellama
      @jolenethellama 24 дні тому +4

      This actually made me cry.
      I am so sorry you were forced to part with your buddies.
      And having to throw them in (I'm assuming) the garbage no less. Such an undignified fate and farewell for them.

  • @cherylcarlson3315
    @cherylcarlson3315 5 місяців тому +3

    In 90s noone said this as raising my son who had live security cat,5 tshirts all same color,had to have yogurt to settle stomach,had meltdown on the regular. Lived with me til 31, had to make him eat 2 bites to realize hungry,had dogs to mitigate fear so was able drive cross country truck and make him eat,walk. All his life people railed on me that I was making him weak,was hard. At age 6told him he was Ubuntu where expected to process Microsoft. He was so computer literate at that age it became his mantra

  • @tung-x
    @tung-x 5 місяців тому +1

    Wool socks??? I don't know how you can stand them!! (I can't wear wool... not an allergy, just itchy)

  • @lynwhittle542
    @lynwhittle542 7 місяців тому +12

    I feel the same about my phone ringing as the Door bell ringing, I go into a freak out
    Definitely feel the not drinking I can sometimes go the whole day with just a sip on water

    • @Mistmantle88
      @Mistmantle88 5 місяців тому +3

      Because there’s so much robocalling fraud now, I have an excuse not to answer any call if the number isn’t in my Contacts. Almost everyone goes to voicemail and gets a callback once my heart rate goes back to normal.

  • @emilymorley3655
    @emilymorley3655 5 місяців тому +1

    So many autistic people have gut issues my son is has aspergers and has mast cell activation disorder and is celiac

  • @truhartwood3170
    @truhartwood3170 10 місяців тому +5

    I didn't know we had secrets. I just have things I've said that people have told me aren't appropriate to share so I stopped. 🤷‍♂️

    • @ChrisandDebby
      @ChrisandDebby  10 місяців тому +3

      That’s why I call them secrets. Nothing to be ashamed about.

  • @pLOVEheart7
    @pLOVEheart7 2 місяці тому +1

    Tom Ford, huh? Must try... & Most of our family here hide from the door and avoid the phone! There was a lot of "You answer it!" "No, you answer it!" throughout the years.

  • @anna-marianunezvega1520
    @anna-marianunezvega1520 Місяць тому +1

    No 1 is sooo wholesome 😭 I'm 39 (f) and my buddies "Wuff" and "Ele" have been with me since birth and are residing on my bed. The dude who comes everywhere with me though is Tigger. Got him in 2007 and could always relate to him a lot (I have ADHD too).

  • @andgate2000
    @andgate2000 5 місяців тому +1

    When i had meltdowns ( pre diagnosis)... my gf just insisted on asking questions..and wanted to " discuss " the problem....ekk.

  • @Tilly850
    @Tilly850 10 місяців тому +5

    I feel seen.

  • @KellyTsai
    @KellyTsai 9 місяців тому +5

    Omg… keep making more videos please!

  • @michaelfreydberg4619
    @michaelfreydberg4619 5 місяців тому +1

    I like Tom’s of Maine unscented deodorant.

  • @Autism_Forever
    @Autism_Forever 5 місяців тому +2

    I was utterly mesmerized by these jelly looking three colored things on your desk. Especially the blue one. Where did you get these magical objects?
    I am a Class 3 ASD person. My meltdowns are caused by disability abuse. I am a very chill person otherwise. I often come back to my senses after a meltdown and discover myself on the floor that is covered in foam that came out of my mouth and my blood, with my limbs paralyzed after having repeat seizures and convulsions for a couple hours, surrounded by bewildered police and ems people.
    I have window next to the door in my home. I have Do Not Knock sign on my door. When someone thinks they are above it all and knocks, I open the window and tell them to get out. Those who refuse to get out, I push down the stairs. I WILL defend my home.
    Like you I have malfunctioning interoception and proprioception. I often do not feel hunger, thirst, cold, and need to use toilet. I had kidney failure. I was told it happened because I did not pee for over 72 hours.
    Like you I have stomach issues. I poop myself when I am abused. All systems fail and I am not able to control it anymore when I am abused. There was one instance where disability abuse was so severe that I suffered complete cognitive failure. I stopped understanding what and who I was and what I was doing. I removed all of my clothes for some reason and pooped myself. I came back to my senses lying in a puddle of my own liquid shit, surrounded by mandala-like doodles that I have drawn on the floor around myself using the liquid shit as a medium. They were beautiful and complex doodles. I am still an artist, even with my mind gone. If they did not smell so bad I would have kept them :)

  • @Tiffany-Rose
    @Tiffany-Rose 5 місяців тому +3

    I appreciate your brutal honesty and relatability 😂😂 The unannounced knock at the door sends me into full blown panic 😫😫 😅

  • @angelasanchez4413
    @angelasanchez4413 5 місяців тому +1

    I want to say about forgetting to eat; YES 🙌🏼 ....and hygieneand man do I smell 👃🏻
    I just have the worst BO, even right after I shower. There's only been one kind of anti-perspirant/ deodorant that worked for me really well and they stopped making it. It probably had all kinds of heavy metals or something in it, but man it worked like a charm. I smell like a total man; like a 300lb man that is a truck driver that's been baking in the sun all day working. Basically my dad 😂

    • @SweetStuffAustin
      @SweetStuffAustin 4 місяці тому

      Hi Bestie! Well, i guess i don't have to send you this video! 🤣
      I love being weird with you💜

  • @Savitar.2020
    @Savitar.2020 4 місяці тому +1

    I've been suspecting for a long time that I have high-functioning autism, and this video's relatability pretty much confirmed it. That, and all of the online tests I took lol
    Also when someone knocks and I'm not expecting it, I become a panicking corpse. And to avoid the wearing shirts for days in a row thing, I have a specific shirt for each day. It helps quite a bit in my experience. My IBS took that last secret personally 😭

  • @batintheattic7293
    @batintheattic7293 5 місяців тому +1

    I went through a phase of burying my dolls and teddy bears. I'd give them a proper funeral and then bury them. As somebody below pointed out - it's really difficult to tease the autism from the trauma. You keep telling an autistic child that everything and everybody they love is going to die - they will start burying their toys. At fifty four - I no longer have to have my surviving childhood toys around me all the time. I have, intermittently, become extremely superstitious about them though. They had to be clean and comfortable. When I was little - they all had to have a nice bed. And be suitably dressed - I suspect that we could detect autism in the fact that our dollies are only naked when they're having their baths. I've abducted abused and neglected dolls, before. As an adult, I mean. I have no difficulty empathising with supposedly inanimate objects and nothing gets me going quite like pity does. How to tell if it's an autistic adult - she's noticed the unkempt, naked, discarded doll and she's reprimanding your child about it.

  • @jonasandersen8204
    @jonasandersen8204 2 місяці тому +1

    I have 3 special buddies!
    Brave and Asbjørn who I was given when I was born! They always fight but in the end they are very good friends and always stick together!
    Ele is a bit of a newcomer from a few years ago.
    He is super nice even though he tries to act tough! everyone can see he is a big softie tho!
    Now my Fiancé, she has A LOT but the one that has been there through it all is Valde! A bit of a troublemaker but he is there when it counts.
    I can not explain how much I love my "buddies". Thank you for this because it made me realise that I can have them with me even when I am not in bed. Guess who is gonna be at the PC watching a movie while eating pizza tonight, because everything is hard today.

  • @Hidetannerslife
    @Hidetannerslife 5 місяців тому +4

    There's a definite connection between autism and IBD. I think it is because our gut is connected to our brain through the vagal nervous system and most of our thoughts originate in the gut. Hence trust your gut. Just discovered your channel. I like it

  • @charliehatch288
    @charliehatch288 2 місяці тому +1

    I have an entire draw full of the same t shirt

  • @jairai5922
    @jairai5922 5 місяців тому +1

    I relate so much. It is so gross to admit, but if I could just stay in my comfort clothes all day everyday I would 😂 the thought of having to take off my clothes to shower or get ready for bed just makes me sweat and I wanna crawl in a hole and die 😂😂

    • @jairai5922
      @jairai5922 5 місяців тому

      Relating to the knocking or visit unannounced. I hate that, too. I also feel weird entering OTHER people's houses...for the same reason... I'm like, this is their private space.. and I'm an invader 😂😂

  • @Plethorality
    @Plethorality 5 місяців тому +3

    We will tell you if we also have hyperverbal adhd.

  • @HaydenHatTrick
    @HaydenHatTrick 7 днів тому

    So far this has been my personal journey on your channel:
    First video: "This is awesome and informative but I probably should be doing other things"
    Second video: "Ok, I'm getting called out on a lot of stuff here"
    After second video: "You know, there's a good chance I do have ASDHD but the signs are only there if you look at my criticisms but the symptoms aren't there is you look at my accomplishments. We are all unique enough that I shouldn't take psycho analysis too seriously"
    This video "I don't know what you're about to say but how dare you expose me like this!"

  • @katarinatill4713
    @katarinatill4713 5 місяців тому +3

    The Best Part of the day is when the postman rings and you start to hold your breath while you hide in the restroom till he is gone. So uplifting! 😅

  • @lightawake
    @lightawake 5 місяців тому +3

    Thank you so so much for talking about all those personal things that we never see on information websites, or medical websites! I have a giant plushie dinasaur that I got during lockdown, and which I love cuddling to sleep every night since I got him. Your video has made me feel wayyyyy more okay about cuddling a soft toy to sleep as an adult :) He really does comfort me, especially in the absence or a partner or a bath. It makes me realise how sensitive our nervous systems are, and therefore how childlike we are - I'm not mad about it, even though there are so many things that overload me with stress too. I'm glad about the kind of person I am. i love your playful, upbeat personality, you're entertaining and genuine and I appreciate your detail and honesty. It really helps and I'm so glad I found your channel. thank you!

    • @ChrisandDebby
      @ChrisandDebby  5 місяців тому +1

      This message absolutely made my day! When I first shared some of this information, it felt a little uncomfortable because it’s so personal and I’m usually pretty private - but I also think it’s important for people to talk about this stuff! We’re always left feeling that we are somehow weird or immature, but I don’t think that’s it at all. We just have what we like, and some people might have a pet or a certain blanket or a squishie dinosaur or the most handsome frog in the world. Thanks so much for sharing this 😊

    • @lightawake
      @lightawake 5 місяців тому

      @@ChrisandDebby ohh hello! Aw I'm so glad and honoured❤️ it's normalisation via sharing, empowerment through the experiencee's voice isn't it! Asd adults' movement, initiate! Yay😁
      Ps. It's taken me 5 hours to write back to you. I was so excited to reply, but I had to calm down and nap first😂

  • @geriklughart6667
    @geriklughart6667 8 днів тому

    Thank you for sharing your experiences. I feel SO validated. Really appreciate your videos! Life changing!

  • @Diegoineedahugefavor
    @Diegoineedahugefavor 19 днів тому +1

    1:38 this is lovely 🤟🏼🐸

  • @ushere5791
    @ushere5791 5 місяців тому +1

    omfg. i feel completely called out...or seen (when i don't necessarily want to be seen)...or something. i haz an alpha fuzzy critter who's over 20 years old (i.e., he's been with me over 20 years). he now has his own entourage of fellow fuzzy critters who are also alphas (but he's the king alpha). they all live on the bed with me, and my king alpha and his three besties come with me whenever i travel. if i neeeeeeed to have "someone" with me and have to be discrete, then i have a special bag just for my special fuzzy guy. oh, and i recently set my phone to silence any calls from people who are not in my contact list...it's election season, and that effer has been buzzin' like a mosquito convention at the watering hole....

    • @lightawake
      @lightawake 5 місяців тому +1

      Yes! I have a plushie who comforts me too! And I have my phone on silent, with the least possible alerts, also on silent. It's sooo good - I only see texts and alerts when I decide to check the phone :)

  • @darbydelane4588
    @darbydelane4588 10 місяців тому +3

    Love love love!🐓🐸👏🏽🙏🏾💪🏽Chris, you are my new AuDHD role model.🏆

  • @sirgalah561
    @sirgalah561 11 днів тому

    The bathroom thing, and the stomach issue thing rang true with me.. I'm a vegetarian and gluten intolerant.. I forget to shower sometimes for a week.. I like wearing the same clothes all the time and I love my bamboo socks.. I have six pairs (all yellow), they're the only socks I wear.. I also have bamboo undies, I wear them inside out.. They feel better inside out.. The stitching where the elastic keeps your junk from jostling around feel uncomfortable unless I turn them inside out... I have a travel teddy.. Teddy goes everywhere with me (except to work), I'm worried one of my coworkers will harm him, so teddy waits at home for me.. Meltdowns - I get them but as time goes on they're becoming less frequent (unless something really ticks me off) - my councellor has given me exercises to do to recognise the triggers, but it's the unrecognisable triggers that still slip through.. I live with a person who has bi-polar disorder.. I bought two 1kg tubs of Hersheys icecream - the chocolate swirl.. My favourite.. I ate 500g of one two days ago (the night I bought them) then was looking forward to finishing off that remaining 500g.. But it was gone.. One tub was for me and the other tub was for my partner.. She ate her 1kg in one sitting, then while I was out she ate my remaining 500g... I absolutely went ballistic.... All I get from her is "I'm sorry" she does it all the time.. I bought two packets of chocolate coated mint cream biscuits.. One for her and a gluten free version for myself.. I come home from work looking forward to a chocky biscuit - and she's eaten mine as well.. She doesn't seem to understand why I buy her her own biscuits or her a tub of her own icecream.. I don't understand what she gets out of ticking me off to the point of losing my sh*t... I break things when I lose it.. There's not a door in the house that hasn't had an elbow, or a foot gone through it... I think she's hoping that I'm going to go ballistic then have a heart attack... Why can't I have an understanding partner like you.. I've had enough with the person I live with..
    I'd like to go live in a little cottage out in the scrub 50km from the main road.. Just me, my books, my playstation, my DVDs, my dog and Teddy... I'd move tomorrow if I could.. And not tell anyone where I went.. Become the hermit I've always wanted to be... I used to live alone.. For years, as soon as I moved out of my parents place in my late teens I lived alone... Then I met her, and we bought a house together... Bad idea.. Now I dream of seclusion...

  • @saxiamondstern
    @saxiamondstern 3 дні тому

    It is kind of creepy that you know my secrets... But then again, it feels good to know that there are more of us with these "secrets"...

  • @toscatattertail9813
    @toscatattertail9813 29 днів тому

    Thought.... what is the correlation between High Masking Autistics, and Dissociative Identity Disorder in the Boomer Generations to the present?
    While my D.I.D. was not formally diagnosed until 2017, (after a hostile work environment caused a massive mental collapse in 2015). I am wondering if the combination of a Toxic Narcissistic, Silent Generation Mother (Always had a belt or wooden spoon in her hand for her "difficult youngest daughter") and an very early masking child (female, born 1954 showed evidence of masking by age 3) could provide the proper environment for the autistic masks to become more complex and eventually evolve into D.I.D. alters so the child is more functional...

  • @jenniferpochynok2024
    @jenniferpochynok2024 5 місяців тому +1

    Use antiperspirant / deodorant. Not just deodorant!

  • @adrianpillai6645
    @adrianpillai6645 20 днів тому

    I have an autistic son, and this video actually makes me wonder if I'm autistic myself. I've never been diagnosed but all these things (except #1) are my struggles. Including the stomach thing.

  • @christineashby4003
    @christineashby4003 24 дні тому

    Thank you for being so unapologetically honest about your lack of showers, and especially your bathroom issues!!!!!
    Feels SOOOOO great to know that someone else understands about these things 👍

  • @lorvokh
    @lorvokh 4 місяці тому +1

    Me watching this video to figure out whether I'm actually autistic before I finally get an official diagnosis or whether I'm just an imposter.

    • @sararodrigues1226
      @sararodrigues1226 Місяць тому +1

      If you're trying to find out, there's no way you're an imposter. Imposters know they are "imposting" 😅 Diagnose or not, you are who you are and you're perfect that way. 😊

    • @lorvokh
      @lorvokh Місяць тому +1

      @@sararodrigues1226 awww thank you for the reply, you made my day ^^

  • @fintux
    @fintux 23 дні тому

    The plush thing was oddly specific for me. Yeah I have my childhood teddybears etc in my cabinet, though I don't take them to travel with me and I don't even hold them, but there's a lot of sentiment for me, so I will never let go of them.
    I think because of my sensory oversensitivity, I've never forgotten to shower or change clothes. But yeah I can kind of forget to eat and especially forget to drink - just did that yesterday! I only realized I had drank too little when I woke up at 5 AM with a migraine creeping in (oh and I guess migraines are a very typical comorbidity with autism).

  • @deirdrestatham5730
    @deirdrestatham5730 23 дні тому

    My son is officially diagnosed as autistic. When I found pants he liked I bought multiple. Same with shirts. I’m not officially diagnosed yet but I realized that if I find clothes I really like there’s absolutely nothing wrong with buying all the ones in my size on the rack. 🤣 I have shirts I like that are so old they’re bordering on sheer. Haha

  • @nyneeveanya8861
    @nyneeveanya8861 18 днів тому

    I think I said this to you before. Ring Doorbell. Best gift my brother ever gave me. Sitting at home and before bell rings phone lets me know someone is coming. I can look and see if I want to ignore them. Little pressure because of interruption but less dread than having to go to the door and not know if it’s someone I want to see. My best doll I got handed down to me at age 6. She had been an older cousins doll since she was 6 and was then newlywed in her twenties. I’m 65 now so the doll is about 80 now. She’s been with me from New Mexico to England every single military base I moved to as a child. Through my marriage, divorce, child of my own, and currently resides in my bedroom closet. Will go to my cousins grand daughter in a couple more years.

  • @carolinerussell3356
    @carolinerussell3356 28 днів тому

    I’m so glad I found your channel. I’m AuDHD and these videos helps a ton with trying to explain certain things to my S/O.

  • @mmut8602
    @mmut8602 19 днів тому

    I'm not being weird, I have an authentic question... The loneliness thing is something I feel very often, I often feel misunderstood. I am not ruling out being on the spectrum, but is it possible that all people could at times feel this way? Like we're really all very different from each other.

  • @melissachase1649
    @melissachase1649 20 днів тому

    My nephew has aspergers and my brother says hes a lot like me. It wouldn't surprise me if i had it. This is all so relatable. Ill wear pjs for days. But you reminded me i need a new stuffy 😊😊😊😊 i haven't had a meltdown in a long time. I was always shamed for being too emotional so ive worked a lot on hiding them now. I now just avoid things that make them happen. Thats why i stay alone a lot. One thing i hate the most is microfiber blankets. The texture really bother me. I hate silky things too. Its just me though, nobody helps me daily besides rides to places.

  • @luckybucky2815
    @luckybucky2815 2 місяці тому

    I find that I eat quickly, don't chew, and I wonder if that is common behavior for Autistic people???
    To add, I find when I chew my food, I have less stomach issues.

  • @kellynowak8332
    @kellynowak8332 14 днів тому

    I ❤❤❤❤ this video!!! Finally someone who understands!!😂

  • @johnridout6540
    @johnridout6540 2 місяці тому

    "Why didn't you answer my call?"
    "My phone was on silent."
    "Why was it on silent?"
    "It's always on silent."

  • @Num1Knight
    @Num1Knight Місяць тому

    So glad I stumbled upon your videos. Your channel is some how my first exposure to information about autism. I am 32 was diognosed ADHD when i was 22 and tried like hell to pin the ADHD on all the weird aspects of my mind and personality. Problem was ADHD didnt explain it all, and i couldnt really explain it either. When i got my ADHD diognosis i also was diognosed with Seasonal bipolar which was their solution to incredible exaustion i would report along with most notably the fact that at the times when things were always exausting i also couldnt find comfort even in the things that I was so intensly passionate about.

  • @burnyizland
    @burnyizland Місяць тому

    I find it interesting how the culture in which we live can be helpful or harmful to us. I too hate people showing up unannounced BUT when I spent 2 months in the Netherlands it stopped being such a huge problem for me. At first I was appalled because it is very common for them to show up unannounced - they do it all the time - BUT they also are total honest with each other so that it is not seen as rude to tell the visitor it is not a good time for them to visit! It's not rude, it doesn't hurt anyone's feelings, and you can be as blunt as you want to about why you won't have them in right then. The reason is even ALLOWED to be 'I don't feel like it," and no one cares! I wish I lived there. It got to the point where I welcomed some visits and that surprised the heck outta me. It must be their bluntness and lack of pretention - they are equally respectful of all(outwardly), without much attention given to hierarchy and will tease you no matter who you are, but also give you space to be however you are.
    (So true on your last secret)

  • @HezekiahLaronda
    @HezekiahLaronda 4 місяці тому

    Oh. My. God. I HAVE A BUDDY! His name is Thomas and he's a stuffed frog. Had no idea this was an auts thing 🤣🤣🤣
    Also, I agree with everything else.

  • @sirbradfordofhousejones
    @sirbradfordofhousejones 2 місяці тому

    #2. I bite my arm super hard. It is incredibly embarrassing… but also effective. Which worries me. Feels good saying it here.

  • @ess1163
    @ess1163 2 місяці тому

    You are hilarious. The dragon. the fast food analogy. Thanks for sharing your details and being vulnerable. All helpful. You are super.

  • @judithjohnson7653
    @judithjohnson7653 4 місяці тому +1

    I feel like you’ve been watching me and taking notes. That’s how closely I relate to your understanding of autism. Thank you for helping me feel understood.

  • @tzign1592
    @tzign1592 4 місяці тому +1

    I put a sign on my front door that says "We will not answer the door if we haven't agreed in advance to greet you." I live alone so this gives some peace of mind. Does the sign work? Yup! I've had people come to the door. Read the sign and leave. It's a beautiful thing!

  • @ehname1
    @ehname1 4 місяці тому +1

    Meltdowns are such a hard thing to explain to even the closest people in my life because they're embarassing, but also because it's not something can be cured or go away. I have lots of strategies in place now to mitigate the number of meltdowns I have, but will continue to have them for the rest of my life and because people don't understand, it's embarrassing every time.