Could YOU be autistic? (and not know)

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  • Опубліковано 7 лют 2025
  • Could you be autistic and not know? I, and many other autistic adults with a late diagnosis of autism, will tell you - YES!
    The current model of autism diagnosis is predicated on the assumption that autism traits will make themselves seen in early childhood. In fact, it is often thought of as a childhood disorder. But the amount of late diagnosed autistic adults means that clearly this model is missing something and instead of an outside-in approach we need to start thinking about an inside-out approach - listening to the internal experiences of autistic people, rather than having neurotypical researchers describe what they think they see.
    WATCH NEXT: Autism diagnosis criteria explained • Autism diagnosis crite...
    If you think this describes you like no one has ever described you before - here are some further resources. Please note, relating to all these points DOES NOT mean you are definitely autistic - there are many other conditions that it could be, so please see a professional if you're concerned.
    Autism Quotient (AQ) test:
    psychology-too...
    Women on the spectrum checklist
    the-art-of-aut...
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    👭 Autism in women/girls playlist 👭: • Autism in women/girls
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 4,7 тис.

  • @YoSamdySam
    @YoSamdySam  4 роки тому +375

    WATCH NEXT: Making sense of the diagnostic criteria for AUTISM ua-cam.com/video/1yva4RZW_s0/v-deo.html

    • @kpbergey
      @kpbergey 4 роки тому +8

      Very informative, direct, & just what the world needed. I love how you approach it from the perspective of the individual's pov. There are different personalities types so i used to always think it was odd that medical professionals usually use blanket conditions (usually leaning just to traits normally found in males). Keep making fanatisic content. :) Cheers!

    • @abandonedchannel6661
      @abandonedchannel6661 4 роки тому +6

      Your entire list of autistic traits you explained literally sounded like you were reading parts of my life on paper. good god why did I find out I had autism when I was freaking 18 I feel like I feel happy that I'm no longer confused but I feel so much anger and sadness with the assholes in my life growing up only to have them leave and me blaming myself for loosing my friends when the friends were in the wrong. Thank you so much for this educational video I have no words to describe how grateful I am to have watched this.💜

    • @abandonedchannel6661
      @abandonedchannel6661 4 роки тому +1

      I forgot to mention I'm 22 now but I feel pretty happy for this video😊👍

    • @miles_521
      @miles_521 4 роки тому +1

      I’m in my teenage years and it’s only been diagnosed now. The traits have always been there but they only flared up whilst going into young adulthood

    • @hellothanks_
      @hellothanks_ 4 роки тому

      Hello, to what doctor specialist would have to go forbit to be official diagnostic psychologist, psychiatrist? Please

  • @camscupcakes1701
    @camscupcakes1701 4 роки тому +3002

    me: knows i have austism
    also me: LeTs SeE iF i HaVe AuTiSm

    • @Catastropheshe
      @Catastropheshe 4 роки тому +50

      Bc it's fun 😄

    • @spacelore1210
      @spacelore1210 4 роки тому +142

      Thats me. It's quite difficult to be 100% sure if I have autism.
      It feels like I'm standing in the middle of "normal" and autism all the time ...

    • @accountname-gg3ms
      @accountname-gg3ms 4 роки тому +9

      Yeah me to

    • @camscupcakes1701
      @camscupcakes1701 4 роки тому +12

      wait how did this get so many likes jjjhdhrhdjdkd

    • @bervin3232
      @bervin3232 4 роки тому +7

      Same

  • @moonie7163
    @moonie7163 5 років тому +3623

    I spent half the video thinking "Isn't that everyone tho?" and the other half looking at the background because it sparkles...

    • @janellybean100
      @janellybean100 5 років тому +54

      Luna Folmer me too

    • @SpectreOZ
      @SpectreOZ 5 років тому +85

      Hmmmm shiny... shiny.... 🤣

    • @harbours.
      @harbours. 5 років тому +273

      That’s the problem. How the hell do you decipher between a disorder and just a personality / mindset type. Most people probably have some of the traits of autism but that means nothing. And causes people to self claim to have x y z disorder that they don’t have, they’re just that type of way for whatever reason.

    • @tiiaj7589
      @tiiaj7589 5 років тому +83

      Luna Folmer haha I was checking out the background too. Is it solid? No, there’s a fold on the top right corner. A curtain? Most likely....ok, what is she saying again?

    • @alaadwidar697
      @alaadwidar697 5 років тому +11

      HAHAHAHAHAHA SAAAME

  • @lucky-px6pv
    @lucky-px6pv 4 роки тому +5253

    “Multipotentialite” you mean it’s NOT normal to consistently change interest, go back to them, change them again and end up good at everything at one point but always feel like you’ll never find something that’s JUST RIGHT and genuinely your true interest/calling?

    • @TinyCloud90
      @TinyCloud90 4 роки тому +450

      this is me. I like drawing and do it from time to time. then I started guitar, left it and then switched to digital painting, then I start poetry because I need to get rid off the stuff in my head. rinse and repeat.

    • @castielcrews1496
      @castielcrews1496 4 роки тому +191

      Oh my gods! There is a word for it?????

    • @katierenee5699
      @katierenee5699 4 роки тому +258

      I'm not the only one?!?! I swear I felt so strange for doing this because no one else I knew did this! I felt like everyone else around me had found a passion or calling and I just kept bouncing from one thing to the next. It's nice to know i'm not alone!

    • @taleef1760
      @taleef1760 4 роки тому +51

      Fuuuuuuuck there’s a word for that!!!!!!
      It’s crazy how many of the points in this video I hit but I don’t know if that means I have autism or not.

    • @lucky-px6pv
      @lucky-px6pv 4 роки тому +43

      kurisumakise
      the v o l u m e in this bus
      is
      A S T R O N O M I C A L
      it is
      W A Y Y Y Y
      too loud

  • @OPandemonium
    @OPandemonium 2 роки тому +530

    My mom said I was diagnosed as a child but she didnt tell me because she didn’t think it was a big deal. I only found out because my daughter was diagnosed and my mom was like oh yeah you were too. Thanks mom, would have saved me 46 years of feeling like an alien. And getting hit a lot for being “ so goddamn weird.”

    • @SuperJimmytang
      @SuperJimmytang 2 роки тому +55

      Thats neglect, a terrible decision but your mom to not help you

    • @janus4689
      @janus4689 Рік тому +23

      My mum did the same thing with my dyspraxia, and I'm starting to think I might be autistic, and wondering if its another one of those things she just didn't bother to tell me

    • @cmonkey83
      @cmonkey83 Рік тому

      Wow, your mom is an evil person and I am so so so sorry you had to be raised by such a person.

    • @ReflectedMantis
      @ReflectedMantis Рік тому +8

      I was diagnosed with ADHD when I was 6 but didn't know about it until I was 18 because I was literally never told about it. I think it's because my dad just doesn't understand exactly what it is and thinks it's just being forgetful.
      I only found out when we were talking about my brother possibly having ADHD and my dad not only confirming that he already knew he did, but I did as well.
      This was only about 2 years ago lol

    • @katbos4995
      @katbos4995 Рік тому +17

      My son was diagnosed in Germany in 1988 (he was 2), when we moved to the US none of the teachers, therapists, or doctors knew what autism was.
      They put him in the corner in the back of the classroom. After the school flunked him for the third time for FIRST grade, I pulled him out and homeschool him.
      Since literally no one knew what autism was, I didn’t talk about it out loud again.
      I followed the precepts in the book “There’s a Boy in Here.” And just like the child in that book, I took my son from rocking 8-10 hours a day playing with a fuzz ball, to now he’s married with kids and the manager of a metal shop.
      So, maybe the reason your parent didn’t tell you, was because there were zero services and nobody in the schools knew what it was; as it was in our case in the 1980-90s.

  • @arienrhod1
    @arienrhod1 4 роки тому +2590

    "Talk to childhood friends."
    Childhood friends.
    Wait. What?

  • @ceciraegagnon1901
    @ceciraegagnon1901 4 роки тому +1689

    I’m so lost with my identity I don’t even know at this point because yes I do relate to a lot of this but I tell myself I’m just faking everything and I’m normal

    • @ghadaalmuhannadi1125
      @ghadaalmuhannadi1125 4 роки тому +83

      IKRR that’s what’s happening to me :/

    • @deltaone2837
      @deltaone2837 4 роки тому +54

      You are spittng facts right now.

    • @raccoondingodog6825
      @raccoondingodog6825 4 роки тому +15

      Same. Still not sure :/

    • @mrs.pineapple
      @mrs.pineapple 4 роки тому +42

      Saaaaaaamme every one says its cuz i have imposter syndrome 😞🤷

    • @deltaone2837
      @deltaone2837 4 роки тому +8

      @@mrs.pineapple OH gosh. They are saying that about me too.

  • @pretelquetzal
    @pretelquetzal 4 роки тому +904

    Every day I say "today is the day I get my shit together" and then I dont 😭

    • @issaread5937
      @issaread5937 4 роки тому +27

      Felt this on a soul level !😫🌝

    • @madamdardis
      @madamdardis 4 роки тому +19

      I hear you! I’m tired of it, snd days I have radical self acceptance and others like today, I just don’t.

    • @jedrashidul6952
      @jedrashidul6952 4 роки тому +10

      I finally got my shit done at 36😂👍 there's hope.

    • @savvivixen8490
      @savvivixen8490 4 роки тому +3

      I feel so called out ._.

    • @stephenolan5539
      @stephenolan5539 4 роки тому +10

      @@jedrashidul6952
      I going to try before 60.
      So a couple years left.

  • @SarahIngleOfficial
    @SarahIngleOfficial 3 роки тому +1275

    It’s nice to know that other people also thought they were an alien growing up. I’m not autistic, but I do have ADHD, and it feels like we are brain cousins. 👽💜

    • @FizXify
      @FizXify 3 роки тому +71

      I'm only looking into it and not sure what I have. I'm not sure if I have ADHD or if my poor executive function (and other symptoms) is related to autism

    • @carmengogeidnas9670
      @carmengogeidnas9670 3 роки тому +62

      @@FizXify me too. I fit most of her criteria for autism, but have ADHD and they have a lot of similarities. Working on finding a doctor.. Let me know what you find out!

    • @Harryw007
      @Harryw007 3 роки тому +24

      I was in a very similar situations. Turns out I only have autism and it can actually cause executive functioning issues, especially with organisation. Before being formally assessed I had no idea which one I had (or even having both at the same time) other than thinking I must have 'something' lol.

    • @ProbablyBees
      @ProbablyBees 3 роки тому +60

      Adhd and autism are often comorbid

    • @Harryw007
      @Harryw007 3 роки тому +16

      @@ProbablyBees yes it definitely but it is still possible to just have one or the other.

  • @sydperkins4083
    @sydperkins4083 5 років тому +3561

    Was anyone else here labeled “gifted” in school?

    • @mydogeatspuke
      @mydogeatspuke 5 років тому +321

      Yep! I was reading the newspaper upside down at 3 years old, much to the delight of my (briefly) proud father's friends. I was doing A level maths and speaking fluent French in year 7, which was I believe 11 or 12 years old, and could play several instruments by ear. I'm now a barely functioning adult haha.

    • @bahrlee
      @bahrlee 5 років тому +17

      YES!

    • @gkanupriya
      @gkanupriya 5 років тому +83

      Yes... I was at grade 8 level reading when I was in grade 3. I speak 5 languages and learnt to read and write Korean in 3 days (I kid you not)

    • @woodruff473
      @woodruff473 5 років тому +9

      Yes very much so

    • @mayamayhemmusic
      @mayamayhemmusic 5 років тому +9

      Yeah, me too!

  • @lemonlord
    @lemonlord 4 роки тому +775

    "easily manipulated by people without realizing it"
    Me: **thinks of my horribly toxic friends in elementary school that manipulated me constantly until I caught on around 6th grade** oh crap

    • @sonyafirefly3879
      @sonyafirefly3879 4 роки тому +14

      I may or may not have had horribly toxic friends since elementary school and highschool that I only caught on to in my late twenties. And the only reason I caught onto it is because they both decided to end the friendship in an extremely emotionally and verbally abusive way after talking about me behind my back for an entire year.

    • @lemonlord
      @lemonlord 4 роки тому +8

      @@sonyafirefly3879 oh, I am so sorry, I went through something similar, except instead of realizing they were talking behind my back they just kinda abandoned me and I let it happen cuz I was sick of being treated like an extra, after them I am doing relatively better in terms of friendships, I hope it got better for you, they sound horrible

    • @sonyafirefly3879
      @sonyafirefly3879 4 роки тому +4

      @@lemonlord It is getting better; thank you. I have more energy for my other friends now, and I can already tell that my mental health has drastically improved. Even my parents commented on it.

    • @lemonlord
      @lemonlord 4 роки тому +3

      @@sonyafirefly3879 I'm glad you're getting better! That is very good, I wish you the best!

    • @emilys.8505
      @emilys.8505 4 роки тому +2

      I didn’t catch on until 9th grade lmao. But then I switched friend groups and now I have the best friends ever.

  • @mouseluva
    @mouseluva 5 років тому +781

    "You're sensitive to sensory things"
    me, rubbing a soft blanket across my forehead and neck while straightening things on my desk: i might be who's asking

    • @kaelin8775
      @kaelin8775 4 роки тому +15

      I collect teddy bears for the soft fur and always play with my hair or mess with my clothes (such as pulling or tugging on them or stroking them repetitively)

    • @ivananovak5653
      @ivananovak5653 4 роки тому +12

      I am opposite, to soft a blanket like microfibre gives me goosebumps and not in a good way, i dont like the static i feel from it. And the way it catches on a rougher part of skin on my hands.

    • @rhyan02
      @rhyan02 4 роки тому +5

      I literally collect all the soft things to rub on my face and neck etc but if it touches my feet I want to throw up 😂😂

    • @rhyan02
      @rhyan02 4 роки тому +4

      I also just realised I was sucking on my pen lid so hard I made my mouth bleed so that’s a thing 🙃

    • @juliemccann1549
      @juliemccann1549 4 роки тому

      @@kaelin8775 I am exactly the same :)

  • @MrBebopChamploo
    @MrBebopChamploo 2 роки тому +230

    I didn't feel like an alien as a kid, I felt like a ghost. Or maybe like all the other kids were ghosts? Like a kid alone on a swing set while all the other kids were running around yelling and laughing. I never understood how to interact with people my age. There would be periods of time in which I felt like I got the hang of it and things were good, but I could never keep that ball rolling.

    • @piiinkDeluxe
      @piiinkDeluxe 2 роки тому +4

      Same.

    • @LauraStepney
      @LauraStepney Рік тому +22

      Same. I would sometimes watch the other kids playing and feel like I just didn't exist at all because they didn't seem to understand how to interact with me and I didn't really get them either. Sometimes I'd say things and no one would even acknowledge that I'd spoken and I'd wonder if I was just imagining the whole world.

    • @piiinkDeluxe
      @piiinkDeluxe Рік тому +4

      @@LauraStepney hugs (if you like them) 💕

    • @dragonhikes
      @dragonhikes Рік тому +10

      I remember thinking there was a pane of glass between me and the rest of the world. I could watch but I didn't understand how to reach out and be a part of it.

    • @gregory7320
      @gregory7320 Рік тому +7

      In highschool I was alone. I felt like a ghost roaming around

  • @edhlvsdgs3778
    @edhlvsdgs3778 5 років тому +1063

    “You’ve has a lot of bad habits such as picking...”
    me: picking dead skin off my foot because I can’t concentrate

    • @emiliamariabarbagallo1601
      @emiliamariabarbagallo1601 5 років тому +5

      oh.my.god.

    • @gwynethbennellick4839
      @gwynethbennellick4839 5 років тому +30

      I ate the inside of my mouth. I picked the skin below my finger nails until they were nice and rough to rub against my lips. I could stop when told to, and start something else. I'm rocking now as I'm typing this. Heck!

    • @bruxitas7330
      @bruxitas7330 5 років тому +5

      @@gwynethbennellick4839 holy shit that literally what I do

    • @bruxitas7330
      @bruxitas7330 5 років тому +3

      Same here that's what I do

    • @bobathings3320
      @bobathings3320 4 роки тому +6

      Me right now!

  • @tessagray1686
    @tessagray1686 5 років тому +1778

    I considered a diagnosis and talked about it with my doctor. He was supportive of it and agreed it may be worth looking into, but also explained that it would take a lot of time and money and wouldn't have many benefits, as its not like you can be prescribed medication and as an adult you won't need school accommodations. He also explained that it can be used against in cases such as arrests or child custody. I ended up not going through with it and appreciated him giving me that information, so I just wanted to share it in hope it will likewise help other people make an informed decision.

    • @chellelaw667
      @chellelaw667 5 років тому +79

      I think you need a better doctor.

    • @celestinae.8847
      @celestinae.8847 4 роки тому +115

      Exactly why I haven't gone in. I think at some point it'll be used against me

    • @Budgetforsuccess
      @Budgetforsuccess 4 роки тому +125

      I’m working on getting diagnosed because as an adult my struggles are interfering with working to make a living and follow my dreams so it’s not always a bad thing to seek a diagnosis to get help. There may be no medication to help but their are resources to utilize to help in daily life.

    • @traceyadixon
      @traceyadixon 4 роки тому +149

      You might not need "school" accommodations, but under the disability equality act (at least in the UK), you can be eligible for workplace accommodations!

    • @mievla
      @mievla 4 роки тому +6

      Thank you for sharing. That is helpful to hear.

  • @artsyebonyrose
    @artsyebonyrose 4 роки тому +444

    "its not you being lazy or stupid" that made me cry omg

    • @Luna77_Cupcake
      @Luna77_Cupcake 3 роки тому +3

      Me too!

    • @happilieverholli9994
      @happilieverholli9994 3 роки тому +2

      Same 🥺

    • @melissaflores1497
      @melissaflores1497 3 роки тому +4

      I was told those thing a lot as a kid.

    • @TheRedstonePlayerMC
      @TheRedstonePlayerMC 3 роки тому +2

      yeah ok but a quick reality check - is anyone "lazy" by your definition then? Maybe your point is that we should never judge anyone but that is a bit ridiculous, can't we have societal norms and expectations just because a subset of outliers don't fit the mold? if you lay in bed all day & get tired from exposure to virtually anything (social interactions, lights, sounds, environments...) then by most practical definitions you are likely seen as "unproductive" even if it's out of your control
      Can we not acknowledge a person as unattractive just because they have a birth defect and it's not their fault? Can't we observe someone being "unintelligent" if their iq is several standard deviations below 100? not trying to be excessively rude but the mental gymnastics you guys are doing to portray autism as "different not worse" but you still want the diagnose because it obviously hinders your day-to-day life & some of you guys need special work- and financial aid but it's "not a handicap how dare you say that???". Not saying anyone should feel bad and its certainly not your fault, nobody "deserves" anything whether good or bad IMO, we are all human with flaws that we are working with, but can we keep the discussion real?
      I don't feel any animosity toward autistic people in general, the only thing i dislike is this denial of observable fact. And on a sidenote - if autistic people are more cerebral, literal "NT" thinkers then why are you guys so preoccupied with semantics?

    • @artsyebonyrose
      @artsyebonyrose 3 роки тому +1

      @@TheRedstonePlayerMC it's not be trying to deny an observant fact. it's more about how autistic people's struggles and reasonings are disregarded and played down and all boiled down to the idea that we are PURPOSEFULLY being lazy and/or unproductive. which isn't the case. trust me, its painful to want to get something done and being unable to, then being told by the people around you that you're purposefully not doing the thing (for whatever reason they've decided), when in actuality you have a gigantic mental wall stopping you from doing the thing.
      i obviously can't speak for all autistic people bc we're all individuals, but i for one have never said anything like "its not a handicap how dare you say that". being autistic is a disability and i know this. i think you have a bit of misguided frustrations, but i understand it's probably come from things you've seen others say and you just want to understand.
      at the end of the day its not that deep. the word lazy has negative connotations and is a word that we get called a lot before finding out we're autistic/get diagnosed, so it strikes a cord. but i'm not denying the fact that unproductivity is a thing. i'm extremely unproductive at times, but that's what it is: unproductivity. laziness implies that you have control over it and you're purposefully deciding to be unproductive. which for me just simply isn't the case. hope this clears some stuff up!

  • @allie9015
    @allie9015 3 роки тому +163

    “#7 you’ve lost friends without realizes what you did or what went wrong”
    So many times, all my life. And it’s always very hard for me to “let things go” when that has happened.

    • @ShiruSama1
      @ShiruSama1 Рік тому +5

      More than 10 years later I sometimes think I should ask for an explanation. Still clueless.

    • @turtleanton6539
      @turtleanton6539 Рік тому +1

      Yes😊

    • @Fayeewallace
      @Fayeewallace 8 місяців тому

      I lost contact with my friends because I moved away from them and I didn’t have a phone or social media then

    • @Fayeewallace
      @Fayeewallace 8 місяців тому

      I never had arguments with them or anything

  • @lizfetzner5989
    @lizfetzner5989 4 роки тому +511

    "you have significant deficits in things other people consider easy, for example making phone calls"
    Me: at my third day of work having a meltdown in the bathroom because the manager asked me to answer the phone

    • @kanzi1958
      @kanzi1958 4 роки тому +44

      phone calls are the worst. So glad texting exists...

    • @andread8
      @andread8 4 роки тому +3

      Agree

    • @constancedenchy9801
      @constancedenchy9801 4 роки тому +33

      I hate phone calls...I find them overwhelming. The fact I can't see their face creates anxiety

    • @sarenikaktus
      @sarenikaktus 4 роки тому +33

      i have anxiety when i need to make a phone call, so i have like a little mental preparation and rehearse what i have to say, my heartbeat gets a lot faster when talking to someone on the phone. even when we have to order food i make my bf make the call, i avoid it as much as i can and i don't really know why

    • @catbirdler
      @catbirdler 4 роки тому +11

      @@constancedenchy9801 me too!!!!! I HATE the disembodied voice!! I thought I was the only one! I have actually lost friends over the years and I am sure it's because I never call anyone. I have been told this by more than one person. My good friends understand and check in with me, but otherwise.... I actually prefer texting. Nice and quiet and no pressure to respond immediately.

  • @t3mptr3s
    @t3mptr3s 5 років тому +307

    I cannot imagine going to my mom and asking her questions about my childhood. She's been in denial for so long. She even gets defensive when I tell her what was going on internally.

    • @annansmith7382
      @annansmith7382 5 років тому +4

      TeaThreePO same!!!!

    • @meganwoehl5277
      @meganwoehl5277 4 роки тому +19

      My mom has been brainwashed by my narcissistic stepdad...but everytime she gets drunk while I'm around she ends up sobbing and apologizing for my childhood...atleast she knows somewhere, deep down, how harmful it was to grow up with a narcissist with anger management issues...still don't think she would ever understand why I am so different...he doesn't believe in Autism or Anxiety or Depression or anything besides physical ailments...and by extension of his brainwashing, neither does she.

    • @elizem6267
      @elizem6267 4 роки тому +2

      TeaThreePO if you give it time and you begin your own healing I’m sure it’ll all be okay

    • @mlighthart
      @mlighthart 4 роки тому

      Me too

    • @e.l.lucychiron
      @e.l.lucychiron 4 роки тому +5

      I once asked someone who specializes in psychology in children if there is a mild form of feral autism found in people who experience mild forms of physical or emotional neglect as children. She said what would be expected in such cases is more along the lines of attachment disorders. Which I thoroughly related to and took to heart until I saw this video.

  • @neilfromcork
    @neilfromcork 3 роки тому +892

    Part of the reason I don't want to get a diagnosis is that I mostly feel that the gatekeepers of diagnosis are themselves neurotypical. I don't want to hand over control to someone who can't know how it feels to be me.

    • @atiger4716
      @atiger4716 3 роки тому +30

      Some of them are so disociated from themselves that look neurotypical but they are a fake mask, and possibly would feel triggered by other people odds.
      So many truly ill people in the psycology field, and psycology is not a science at all, perhaps a pseudoscience at best.
      Would I need a diagnosis from them, sound crazy to me

    • @Harryw007
      @Harryw007 3 роки тому +30

      For me knowing for certain and the sweet, sweet accomodations that I've gotten has made my diagnosis extremely worth it but your points are valid as well.

    • @smoothie3993
      @smoothie3993 3 роки тому +72

      @@atiger4716 it’s absolutely not a pseudosience and that’s actually harmful to the people who have mental disorders and conditions to hold that belief.

    • @RenaissanceRockerBoy
      @RenaissanceRockerBoy 3 роки тому +66

      @@atiger4716 Psychology is real, and invalidating people who have disorders is disgusting.

    • @matthewyabsley
      @matthewyabsley 3 роки тому +26

      Well that's not always true. Many people are drawn to the profession because they have an interest in understanding their own difficulties.

  • @laura_jones
    @laura_jones 2 роки тому +72

    Since finding your videos, I feel like for the first time I "belong" in a community. I'm undiagnosed, and I've only been studying this for about a week (albeit a bit obsessively), but I resonate so incredibly strongly to you and the folks in your comments section, I just can't overlook it. When you say "us" or "we" as autistic people, I really do feel like I'm included in that. I've never felt that way before, and it's so freeing. It feels strange to say that finding myself to have a "disorder" has made me feel whole... but it does. As you've said several times now, we're not "broken". This is the first time in my life I've believed that. I'm not broken. I really AM just different.

    • @its.me.mj.anotherone
      @its.me.mj.anotherone Рік тому +5

      Agree with every word here!! 🙌🏻 It is weirdly freeing. Happy you made it here too ❤️

    • @Missdoubletrouble541
      @Missdoubletrouble541 11 місяців тому

      ​@Mp-wc2chyou can't save someone from autism, it's hard wired in our brains.
      Herbs definitely wouldn't do it.

    • @dragonfly8291978
      @dragonfly8291978 3 місяці тому

      Ditto! Thank you!! 💖💖💖

  • @erinpeterson3202
    @erinpeterson3202 5 років тому +629

    from someone with a severe case of adhd, this list is very relatable. adhd and autism are like "sister disorders" that overlap in a lot of symptoms and presentations and both are frequently missed in adults. if you relate to this list but find, upon further research, that autism doesn't seem to make sense or fit, adhd is maybe worth looking into as well. it looks a lot different than the stereotypes 💛💛. (please note that this comment is not meant to say that you don't have autism if you relate to this list! just offering another path if you find yourself still confused after research)

    • @YoSamdySam
      @YoSamdySam  5 років тому +48

      Absolutely!!!

    • @9SMTM6
      @9SMTM6 5 років тому +38

      Take note that the symptom overlap is mostly with the predominantly inattentive subtype of ADHD, sometimes reffered to as simply ADD (but in the 80s ADD was referring to all the subtypes too, so there's that...).
      Otherwise people see lots of symptoms with ADHD they can't relate too, as we people that get diagnosed with ADD are often lumped in with the hyperactive remainder, as they make the majority of the diagnosis.
      It's really tireing to be honest and I would appreciate a clearer separation by medical professionals, I'm not hyperactive and if I explain my condition to others they'll either assume wrong things about me (if they don't know me well) or doubt the diagnosis (if they know me and see I lack a lot of the symptoms associated with "ADHD").

    • @erinpeterson3202
      @erinpeterson3202 5 років тому +34

      @@9SMTM6 in the current version of the DSM the correct classification of the disorder is ADHD of three types; primarily inattentive, primarily hyperactive, and combined. this isnt a super clear separation to a lot of people, but it is the correct terminology for the disorder currently.
      I am no expert, but based on personal experience, there is broad overlap with autism across all types of ADHD. obviously they are not 100% the same, they are different disorders. but there is a lot of overlap especially with symptoms of ADHD that are often overlooked (sensory issues, stimming, social issues, emotional dysregulation, etc.)

    • @ilistentojojosiwa2681
      @ilistentojojosiwa2681 4 роки тому +12

      It also reminds of of OCD a lot. I am diagnosed with OCD and my tics and they way I view the world seems similar.

    • @gabo341
      @gabo341 4 роки тому +7

      yes. i have adhd (combined) and what id call a pretty sever case. i have every symptom on this list. i may have autism but I definitely have adhd.

  • @fjakjcwjcjjwjcch
    @fjakjcwjcjjwjcch 4 роки тому +575

    I… always assumed it was the ADHD and the anxiety
    now i'm very confused

    • @fadedsophomore
      @fadedsophomore 4 роки тому +7

      Same

    • @claralobsiger4284
      @claralobsiger4284 4 роки тому +6

      Same! 😩

    • @stellasdoesstuff
      @stellasdoesstuff 4 роки тому +130

      People with ADHD and people with autism have a lot of similar experiences, so it's not unusual for people with ADHD to relate to things autistic people say about being autistic

    • @KattMurr
      @KattMurr 4 роки тому +4

      Me too..

    • @RianeBane
      @RianeBane 4 роки тому +62

      There's a lot of crossover between those disorders, particularly between ADHD and autism. Both are characterized by executive dysfunction, both can be overly sensitive to stimuli (many people with ADHD also have sensory processing disorder), both can have difficulty with relating to peers or interacting with them, etc.

  • @autismfromtheInside
    @autismfromtheInside 5 років тому +420

    "perhaps you are now off to google this word" - lol

    • @YoSamdySam
      @YoSamdySam  5 років тому +31

      Glad I caught somebody in the act! 😜

    • @SpectreOZ
      @SpectreOZ 5 років тому +3

      Nothing wrong with self edification... finding out the answer to what has your present attention allows you to move on...

    • @jaygolden7408
      @jaygolden7408 5 років тому +8

      Haha! Jokes on you! I have a suspiciously strong need to know what words mean and could figure it out based on the parts of the word because I'm lazy!

    • @Brady.Schmitt
      @Brady.Schmitt 5 років тому +6

      haha she called me out before I could even blink!

    • @Shoe26
      @Shoe26 4 роки тому

      Aspergers from the Inside lol I can’t relate, coz I have autism, so of course I know the word

  • @KMWeir
    @KMWeir 2 роки тому +84

    My granddaughter was diagnosed with autism when she was 18 months old. I think this gives her an advantage. And I’m so grateful. But here comes the hard realization. I believe my daughter, (my granddaughters mother) has autism. She is now 25. She couldn’t handle caring for her autistic daughter. She has had so so much pain in her life.
    I’m a mom of 5 wonderful children. I am also a a Christian and pray for my kids. I’ve prayed and wept more over my daughter than any of the other kids.
    I’m angry. Why? Because I knew something was different about her from an early age. And NOT ONE SINGLE professional I sought had an answer. She was diagnosed with ADHD. I do think she has this. But something was wrong with my child. And everyone said, ‘She will grow out of that.’ ‘She is just unique.’ She never did. And she spent her preteen years through age 23 in misery. I’m just so angry and my heart is broken for my girl.
    Im sharing your videos with her and we are on a mission for answers and support. Now, Heat this. My brother and husband recently were diagnosed with Aspergers ( I know it’s no longer called this). I have 3 cousins who are on the spectrum.
    My heart breaks. I hope my daughter and I can bond and heal now that we know the truth. She has been doing much better the last 2 years. Im very proud of her! But there’s so much more joy she needs to know. Thanks for your channel!

    • @janus4689
      @janus4689 Рік тому +15

      its extremely common for someone to have both autism and adhd so there is a high chance that your daughter has both. I honestly wish her the best and I hope she gets the support she needs.

    • @turtleanton6539
      @turtleanton6539 Рік тому +1

      I was diagnosed at 27

    • @ErinAllen-qe7fy
      @ErinAllen-qe7fy 2 місяці тому

      I find your love and compassion for your children beautiful…just wanted to say that. 💙

  • @brunoboaz7656
    @brunoboaz7656 4 роки тому +228

    "Easily manipulated by people without me knowing "...that really struck a chord with me. This was a great video. Very informative. I thank you.

    • @fjakjcwjcjjwjcch
      @fjakjcwjcjjwjcch 4 роки тому +5

      Same. Would never realize it until afterwards. Still don't after months of trying to work it out

  • @elzabethdowns241
    @elzabethdowns241 5 років тому +454

    “If I’ve just blown your little mind” ugh... that was a moment... your video is spot on... I remember feeling like everyone was issued a “how to be a human” manual that I just did not get... it was an awful way to live... I even recently had a relative tell me they “just don’t buy it, you are fine”

    • @YoSamdySam
      @YoSamdySam  5 років тому +61

      I feel like everyone else got a "what to say in every scenario" handbook for sure!!

    • @ladyjaneoftheearlgreyteatribe
      @ladyjaneoftheearlgreyteatribe 5 років тому +24

      Same here. How do I human?

    • @YoSamdySam
      @YoSamdySam  5 років тому +36

      @@ladyjaneoftheearlgreyteatribe Humaning is overrated

    • @garyfrancis5015
      @garyfrancis5015 5 років тому +23

      Yo Samdy Sam Gas lighting in childhood.
      Family saying "Just be normal" get out the house.
      Socialise with your friends.
      Come to this party.
      My family not knowing as a kid I was alone not lonely.

    • @shriya8966
      @shriya8966 5 років тому +2

      I used to make extensive notes in worry to always have something to say or I wouldn't know what to do from moment to moment

  • @GladysAmelia
    @GladysAmelia 5 років тому +246

    I'm 63 years old, and never thought I was anything but an extreme introvert. Your video has brought back memories that might be explained more easily now. Thank you.

    • @catbirdler
      @catbirdler 4 роки тому +6

      @Detective Halverson May I step in? I'm also 63, just watched this and resonate with 11 out of the 17 points. I can give you a ton of examples. 1. I'm highly sensitive and need a lot of down time alone to recharge after being with people. I'm very sensory and am drawn to certain textures, lights and anything sparkly. 2. Socially, I prefer to be alone though I do enjoy the company of people. Even though I do want to be social at times, I feel slightly trapped and anxious in the company of others, cannot start a conversation and do not know how to make "small talk". I cannot fake a conversation. I once tried analyzing a casual conversation a bunch of nicely-dressed women were having so I could figure out how to join in but just couldn't relate to the things they seemed to come by so naturally, like talk about lipsticks and shopping. I appreciate and like to be invited to parties, but once there I am overwhelmed with all the people talking around me and am not sure who to gravitate to and feel very out of place, so I end up by myself for the most part wandering around aimlessly with a plate of food or a glass of wine, watching everyone else have a good time. 3. I don't like phone conversations as having to speak to a disembodied voice, where I can't see a face, makes me uneasy. I've lost several friendships over the years just because people were hurt that I never called and they got sick of always calling me. 4. As a child, I had NO friends. Zero!! Kids bullied me and I was excluded from most group activities and playdates. I didn't fit in anywhere and used to cry myself to sleep out of loneliness in elementary school, but the truth is, I was more comfortable being alone and in nature than I was with people. I could better anticipate and understand the behaviours of small creatures and birds than I could with people. 5. I tend to get "lost in the details", whether it's in a story I'm telling, or a movie I'm watching, or a work of art I'm creating. I used to love to do photo retouching in the days before photoshop as I could pick away at photos for hours with a tiny brush and get paid for it. When I was very young, maybe 6 or 7, I used to enjoy picking out the tiny pebbles from the asphalt in the road by my house on hot days, and study them, enjoying the different colours and textures and types... bits of granite, quartz etc. Never played with dolls. 7. I have been easily manipulated in relationships. Recently, I went through a breakup with a narcissist after being together six years. (I didn't realize he was a narcissist at the time... I didn't really understand it till after we broke up.) He was seeing someone else on the side and eventually dumped me for her (she is his 6th long-term relationship). All throughout the cheating, he was lying to me and I believed everything he told me. I thought he was my soulmate and bought every story. It never occurred to me that when he said he was staying late in the office he was actually at her place - until I caught him there, totally by accident. I couldn't understand how he could betray my trust in him. Even now, our mutual friends are incredulous as they saw him for what he was all along while I was just not "getting it" and just laugh when I naively ask why shouldn't I have believed him. 8. I'm very disorganized and have stuff lying around all over the place - because to me, out of sight is out of mind and I'm afraid that if I put everything away, I'll forget what I have to do next. Even though I love seeing orderly spaces. 9. I analyze and ruminate ad nauseum and have a hard time letting go of certain things, both physically and figuratively.
      One of my kids recently suggested that I get tested for ADHD but perhaps this is a better description for these particular traits. I hope these examples help you. This has certainly been a revelation for me.

  • @debcevans
    @debcevans 2 роки тому +49

    I am 67 and a retired mental health therapist. I have recently come to realize that I am a high-functioning autistic. I became a psychologist because I wanted to understand people. As a child, I would watch others and not necessarily interact. I always was more comfortable by myself rather than around others because I was unsure about them. The thing is, all of that observation made a good therapist. I learned how to make eye contact, stay very still (and not flap my hands), and listen. But I still always felt on the outside. I began wondering about myself, when I was able to diagnose my son as high-functioning. M daughter probably is, as well, but she has ADHD, which was much more apparent when she was young. My husband has undiagnosed ADHD, too, and may be on the spectrum. Thank you for the info that you share.

    • @mobuildsstuff
      @mobuildsstuff 2 роки тому

      Thank you for sharing your insights.

    • @AntonYadrov777
      @AntonYadrov777 Рік тому +2

      You have perfectly summed up the level of ASD and ADHD awareness in modern medical education and society in general, that even you, as a licensed psychologist with years of experience, did not realize that you were ASD, until you got to observe your son who reminded you of your childhood self a lot.

  • @kaiwilliams1881
    @kaiwilliams1881 4 роки тому +742

    “You have multiple deficits in things other people find easy”
    Me, trying to call the Chinese restaurant:
    “Um hi, yes, Um, I would like Uh, um, um- I’m sorry, um”
    *orders the same meal every time*

    • @MelodySnowflakeVA
      @MelodySnowflakeVA 4 роки тому +19

      I can relate to that, being partially visually impaired doesn't help either because I get so scared to ask what's on the menu

    • @kaiwilliams1881
      @kaiwilliams1881 4 роки тому +10

      @@MelodySnowflakeVA I relateee 😔 everyone makes fun of me for it but it’s really a thing

    • @MelodySnowflakeVA
      @MelodySnowflakeVA 4 роки тому +4

      @@kaiwilliams1881 aww, don't worry you're not alone^^

    • @Joe-ou1iw
      @Joe-ou1iw 4 роки тому +11

      once i called up a chinese restaurant and was just like "hi, um.. i want food?"

    • @scummoth
      @scummoth 4 роки тому +11

      I won't order from anywhere you have to phone up. Online only

  • @paragoncumulus6636
    @paragoncumulus6636 5 років тому +324

    I had put all of those things down to me being an INFP. But this does indeed "blow my little mind".

    • @ArtistLane
      @ArtistLane 5 років тому +50

      I too embrace the infp label ... I wonder a lot if that’s the best explanation or maybe there’s overlap. Being neurodivergent could be more typical of certain MB types perhaps?..

    • @B1gSm0ke716
      @B1gSm0ke716 5 років тому +53

      Lisa Wells Hello fellow INFPs😎 Hope y’all are doing well.

    • @PegR38
      @PegR38 5 років тому +16

      I was watching this for myself, but the more she listed symptoms the more I thought about my INFP sister.

    • @micks336
      @micks336 5 років тому +31

      I put it down to being an infj 🤣

    • @TrippingOverParadise
      @TrippingOverParadise 5 років тому +1

      ChelleBelle me too!

  • @bon_apetitties
    @bon_apetitties 4 роки тому +253

    "you have difficulty...organizing daily tasks."
    nods in agreement with my clothes and shoes on all sides of the room, with my laundry basket full of clothes to be supposedly washed the next day but ending up pending. haha

    • @momoso143
      @momoso143 4 роки тому +1

      Same :/

    • @nelleke2639
      @nelleke2639 4 роки тому

      Me too 😬

    • @dragonsaregreat1948
      @dragonsaregreat1948 4 роки тому +8

      I organize well and then follow it well for like a week and it ends up falling apart

    • @reyne8424
      @reyne8424 4 роки тому +2

      I have been living as a minimalist for years to make it all a bit easier. Now I have difficulties simply buying replacements when something wears out XD I need it, but I just don't get it. I once had only 1 pair of winter socks for months, until I finally sat down and ordered some. (I wore thinner socks and almost froze my feet of)

    • @NL2500
      @NL2500 4 роки тому +1

      Hadn't even come to the idea that 'that' was something that fell under this category...

  • @shelbybutler9714
    @shelbybutler9714 3 роки тому +70

    This is extremely helpful. Neurodivergency runs in the family. My son has ADHD and Autism, and my dad had ADHD. The more I research Autistic women though, the more I see myself. I work a lot on triggers, but there are still some things that cause my temper to explode. I also have always been very detail oriented and sensitive to smells/textures/sounds; but, I easily forget names (never a face). I have been called rude regularly, when I think I am actually being cordial and logical- overly polite. I love deeply, but things never seem to work out. Autism would explain a lot of my difficulties in relationships.

  • @laurelh1975
    @laurelh1975 4 роки тому +217

    The bit about people calling me shy, rude or quirky, geeezzz all of those! The amount of times people have told me they thought I was a b*tch when they first met me, or "creepy and emotionless".. oof :') thank you for this video!

    • @clairewolf6013
      @clairewolf6013 3 роки тому +20

      People thought I was arrogant. For posing questions in lectures towards the professor. I just desperately wanted to know.

    • @sims2lovealot
      @sims2lovealot 3 роки тому +12

      Ya same. A lot of people say that they realised I wasn't a bitch after they got to know me, lol.

    • @max_punch
      @max_punch 3 роки тому +5

      Some girls on my old school said they tought i was a psychopath, still dunno why really lmao

    • @skoldpa
      @skoldpa 3 роки тому +9

      I still remember the first time a friend told me he thought I was a highly confident, emotionless, dominant kind of person when he first met me. I was genuinely shocked because I had never even imagined people could perceive me like that, it was so weird

    • @ameng5
      @ameng5 3 роки тому +8

      Not even joking I just recently tried to explain to my friend that I didn't think being "shy" was even a personality trait. It's more like a layer hiding your true personality underneath it. You're "shy" or maybe quiet for a while bc you don't know how to talk or interact with them and then you're fine. Is that not how being shy works? I hate when people try to use it to define me.

  • @jaygolden7408
    @jaygolden7408 5 років тому +778

    Me, an anxious depressed witch: Okay no need to attack me lol

  • @franniecherry
    @franniecherry 5 років тому +277

    People who are wondering: yes autism overlaps with things like anxiety and introversion. I mean, if you were different from other children you would have anxiety and become introverted?

    • @notsoon6721
      @notsoon6721 4 роки тому +11

      you can`t "become" introverted

    • @diamonddog2638
      @diamonddog2638 4 роки тому +17

      @@notsoon6721 Technically you can but just not as the the word "become" may imply. It's up to interpretation. You generally don't really actively decide that today you want to be super introverted but tomorrow you don't want to. A lot of it has to do with personality, which isn't always something you can control. But, if someone constantly feels different and afraid of social interactions, they might go from being a sociable extrovert as a child to a very quiet introvert as a teen or adult by the time certain actions are no longer seen as "normal" for a kid. That's still becoming introverted, it's just not an active choice.

    • @hiwall4883
      @hiwall4883 4 роки тому +12

      Exactly, makes sense that an autistic child who grows up with rejection and constant negative feedback will develop anxiety and withdraw from society. I don't think it's necessarily an autistic trait, it's just a result of a childs experience of the world growing up with autism.

    • @user-bc7nx7nr8o
      @user-bc7nx7nr8o 4 роки тому

      Hmmm...whodathunkit?

  • @michelletait4958
    @michelletait4958 3 роки тому +53

    This is an excellent video. I realised some time ago that I am actually autistic and it was a mindblower. I asked my GP for a referal and the psychiatrist I saw agreed that without the expensive testing, going on my history it is highly likely I am autistic. I felt so free and alive in that moment I almost cried. My entire life made sense. The healing started and now I am an aide for autistic children and it's going so great! The kids have transformed having someone who gets them in place of a harsh disciplinarian. Videos like this are the key to a life changing journey. Thank you!

  • @tangerinefizz11
    @tangerinefizz11 5 років тому +220

    I wasn't diagnosed with autism until I was 44 years old. When I was a kid growing up in the 80s, autism diagnoses were mainly given to nonverbal kids who often had intellectual disabilities. However, I was recognized by others and myself as being different, even though my situation didn't have a name then.

    • @strehlow
      @strehlow 5 років тому +21

      That was my experience too. "Autism" was what the teens in the Special Ed room drooling and snotting all over their desks (which they were often strapped into) had. I would never have dreamed that label would fit my experience.
      But, here we are.
      I rather like how my mind works.
      At least the parts that aren't getting in the way of my marriage, or paying bills on time, or whatever other adult responsibility I have to keep track of.

    • @micks336
      @micks336 5 років тому +3

      Or The comment back then he is nothing like The Rainman.

    • @lau.tizzir
      @lau.tizzir 5 років тому +9

      Have you obtained any kind of personal gratification when getting this diagnosis as an adult? Did your life change for the better in any way? I'm asking this because I suspect that I can be autistic and although a part of me wants answers there is also another part that questions whether it is worth going through everything that requires an official diagnosis, especially when you are already an adult.

    • @tangerinefizz11
      @tangerinefizz11 5 років тому +7

      @@lau.tizzir I'm glad that I sought and got the diagnosis, because it explained a lot with regard to my experiences and issues. It was also reassuring to know that I wasn't unintelligent, because I had questioned my intelligence and competence for nearly my entire life. Thanks largely to the diagnosis, I'm now much more self-confident.

    • @lau.tizzir
      @lau.tizzir 5 років тому

      @@tangerinefizz11 thanks ;)

  • @TarkMcCoy
    @TarkMcCoy 4 роки тому +138

    Me: "But I'm an HSP."
    Her: "You may have been called an HSP..."
    Mind Blown...
    ...and then the similarities roll on...

  • @camillegenois8239
    @camillegenois8239 5 років тому +436

    How is it possible that other people don't feel like this..? How do they experience life then?

    • @ash.mystic
      @ash.mystic 5 років тому +81

      That’s what I want to know! I’m constantly observing other people so I would have thought that I‘d pick up on it.

    • @taoist32
      @taoist32 5 років тому +47

      Camille Genois I still want to know for myself if I am Autistic. I have most of these in my experience, but I always thought I was just introverted. But, I have a lot of these traits, even the sensitivity to light.

    • @gabemerritt3139
      @gabemerritt3139 5 років тому +10

      I have well over half, don't think of myself as autistic, I just grasp logic way more easily than anything social

    • @marleigh5606
      @marleigh5606 5 років тому +7

      Tbh most people I talk to deal with these, but then again the environment created by my school district kinda forces these anxieties and things like it onto most of the students at my high school.

    • @sabserab
      @sabserab 5 років тому +23

      Maybe a different numbed and dumbed down version like us where they constantly can save energy for then even craving others cause they are so bored in life. Imagine that. Lol
      Once I was in a waiting room and everyobody read a magazine. The one that accompanied me asked which one to get me. I said none. She was confused. She said but it's boring doing nothing. And I told her why the need for a magazine, don't people have thoughts?
      Lol she was so offended! I so didn't mean to, and also I said it much too loud!
      But yeah I still want to know the answer, this was a legit question.

  • @barbarachisholm2487
    @barbarachisholm2487 2 роки тому +35

    Thank you for explaining what it may feel like to be autistic. I have suspected that I may be autistic, but when I listened to you counting down all the possible symptoms, you literally described me. You have no idea how happy you’ve made me, to realise that describing myself as “I’m very special”, to now realising why my life was/is so exciting. I’m 60 years old, and I am a very special person and proud of it. 😊 ❤

  • @YoSamdySam
    @YoSamdySam  5 років тому +301

    Let me know if this describes you!

    • @garyfrancis5015
      @garyfrancis5015 5 років тому +31

      16. Does your family say you only see things from your own view point?
      17. Are you a black and white thinker?
      18. Do have a though in your head which you can't put to the back of your mind, but everyone's else can?
      19. Do you forgot people's names and item on a shopping lists.
      20. Do you have problem sleeping because you can't switch your subconscience brain off?
      I added some more. Do you have autism traits?
      Now I'm no apart from the last one about sleeping.
      I listen to greatest hits of Enya I got past only time then fell asleep.

    • @corriemcclain7960
      @corriemcclain7960 5 років тому +23

      Yes, to the whole list. But I had already started to research the idea that I might be autistic. I wish I had an official diagnoses because I think it would make it easier with my family and few remaining (but distance) friends. I know they are more likely to say this is all because of a list of adjectives than want to believe it's more. So I have kept my research to myself for the most part

    • @laureld01
      @laureld01 5 років тому +4

      It does the whole list. I am waiting for my assessment to come back

    • @garyfrancis5015
      @garyfrancis5015 5 років тому +11

      Corrie McClain You don't need to keep your research on autism a secret on this channel.
      Autistics have special interests that can be the subject of autism itself. 🙂

    • @gentlebutch
      @gentlebutch 5 років тому +2

      Yes so much. I've been diagnosed with Mosaic Down Syndrome and there is overlap with Autism and sometimes diagnosed together. I am not willing to go through the time and money to be diagnosed. I have felt most comfortable around people with Autism for years so I wouldn't be surprised if I do have it.

  • @waluigi-time
    @waluigi-time 3 роки тому +122

    lol my mom often called me an absent-minded professor when I was like 10, and people didn't get why I was obsessed with fictional characters so deeply that these characters were like a part of my life more than most people.

    • @Kelle0284
      @Kelle0284 3 роки тому +8

      I can relate. I always created imaginary people.

  • @meganwoehl5277
    @meganwoehl5277 4 роки тому +159

    Wait, wait, wait!! Are you saying my incessant need to google every question or word I don't understand could be related to autism? Because it's a running joke in my family that if anyone is ever wondering anything, I will research it and have the answers for them in 2-5 business days 😂

    • @squigglesquirel3652
      @squigglesquirel3652 4 роки тому +19

      Literally me if anyone is talking to me about anything and we both don't know something, we thing about it for a second and then I go 'hold up lemme just google it' and then I google it and start falling down a rabbit hole right in front of them

    • @bunukalashrestha9575
      @bunukalashrestha9575 4 роки тому

      Really, I do !!!

    • @lacybookworm5039
      @lacybookworm5039 4 роки тому +8

      My best friend calls me a walking reference library, in a affectionate way. 😊📚🎧🎨🛠️🐾 So many intens interests.

    • @irmielam5192
      @irmielam5192 4 роки тому +7

      Me too...and I answered yes to 80% of the questions...
      At work I'm always googling stuff people bring up...it's become a joke...I'm the information "hoarder"...
      Speaking of which I do have hoarding tendencies and extreme disorganization problems too...always wondered what was wrong with me. Wow...this is eye opening.
      I'm in my 60's!!!

    • @mimistitchcraft
      @mimistitchcraft 4 роки тому +3

      ​@@lacybookworm5039 my partner calls me a walking encyclopedia 😭😭😭 just found out last week that i actually have a lot of autism symptoms and had no idea

  • @LumiMoonCh
    @LumiMoonCh 3 роки тому +458

    I've had anxiety for most of my life over not being "normal" enough, and only realised after 30 that I was transgender and autistic. It feels good to fit somewhere and have things make sense.

    • @nio804
      @nio804 2 роки тому +4

      I'm currently going through something similar... Though with regard to gender my feelings are closer to... just being done with my current self? Been there, done that, I should try to the other side kind of thing. Dunno if it's autism or anxiety or depression or ADHD or all of them.

    • @jeffreyreeves9854
      @jeffreyreeves9854 2 роки тому +5

      Jillian, Good for you! It is wrong to push "Non-binary" on children. But at 30, you can make decisions and be yourself. I am cursed with Aspergers. And I try to pass for a dude. Vitamins have helped me tremendously. I hope that everything works out for you. I hope that you have food, soap, Health Care, and a home. Many people don't have any of those necessities and they have anxiety about that.

    • @AlysiaLuvsCats
      @AlysiaLuvsCats 2 роки тому +1

      I’m nearly 30 and experiencing the same. Thank you

    • @katrecemiller8325
      @katrecemiller8325 2 роки тому +1

      Herpes is a common infection or condition, affecting about 1 in 4 American adults, Hsv 1 & Hsv 2 are the common types of Herpes virus and if untreated, they can get unbearable and cause severe medical issues, I'm so glad I'm over herpes and its stigma. all thanks to Dr. Aloha ua-cam.com/channels/_YFEEZEr1BxGkNg1d4vqww.html🍀 🍵 🍀

    • @petraaccount
      @petraaccount 2 роки тому +4

      I am currently reading 'Unmasking Autism' by Devon Price, if this is of interest. They talk about the overlapping frameworks of autism discrimination and being queer. So far the book feels very encouraging.

  • @EmpressKadesh
    @EmpressKadesh 4 роки тому +134

    I've actually wondered if I am autistic because people tell me I'm too blunt and insensitive but I feel like I'm just being realistic. I have also been told though by people that I said things that totally influenced and changed their life like I had some insight no one else recognized. I think autism is a gift. I have siblings that are autistic so I might be too. I grew up in foster care and always moved around so no one was ever around me long enough to really know me well enough to diagnose me.

    • @georgia2303
      @georgia2303 3 роки тому +5

      I’ve been told all these things too! I literally just tell the truth and be realistic and people are somehow mind blown

    • @aliquidcow
      @aliquidcow 3 роки тому +1

      I have mixed experiences with this. Sometimes I say something that seems obvious to me, and I'm almost reluctant to say in case I'm just pointing out something everyone already knows, only to discover that it *wasn't* obvious to everyone else. Other times I point something out that I think other people have missed or aren't acknowledging, only to get the sense from their response that, yes, I'm saying something that everyone already knew and took as read.

    • @vanissaberg5824
      @vanissaberg5824 3 роки тому +1

      I've been called "the quiet observer" because I usually sit in the background listening and thinking by myself and I'm able to point out my observations and find hidden solutions to problems and it often amazes people lol. I also love reading encyclopedias because I want to understand the world better, which to most people probably seems kinda weird and nerdy that I can blurt out all kinds of different facts about the topics I've read and studied. Yeah you can call it a super power I guess. 😂😂🤓

  • @jesters.workshop
    @jesters.workshop 5 років тому +31

    Multipotentialites
    I’ve never found a word more perfect to describe how vast my interests are and how quickly I’m able to delve into them
    Thank you

  • @devianzaconiglia
    @devianzaconiglia 2 роки тому +17

    Jackpot! Yes to all of the points! Therapists said "you are an artist! Intelligent, talented, SENSITIVE, gifted!" ok, but being an artist isn't the answer to why I'm suffering in my life... I'm Autistic and an Artist. Thank you for your videos. I want also to say that your glitter background, your hair style, your appearance and voice tone are really captivating for my brain, and I super love it! Thank you so much ♥️

  • @sandradee6029
    @sandradee6029 2 роки тому +11

    This is the first explanation where I've thought, "Oh...maybe that IS me" Former goth, bright in primary school, less so in secondary, but gradually struggled as things got less structured as an adult. I would flit between friends and havent carried many friendships into adult life. I notice they work best when the people live far away. I care, but just dont want to socialise. Now, in my late 40s, I've had 2 breakdowns, I'm no longer able to work.
    Studying trauma work (somatic experiencing) has raised my awareness to a level where i can recognise my behaviours and triggers. I dont finish anything, dont keep up hobbies, especially social ones, and love books but dont remember much. I had never come across the idea of an ADD/ASD blend before. It makes a lot of sense to me now. Thanks so much for your channel.

  • @bryonycoates3
    @bryonycoates3 4 роки тому +41

    Yes to most of these. I find it so hard getting my life together, I get so tired out by social interactions and daily tasks. I've had several burnouts where I just couldn't function until I recharged

    • @Denis461997
      @Denis461997 4 роки тому +4

      That's apparently introversion, most of these are not exclusive to just autistic people.

  • @hishouha
    @hishouha 3 роки тому +161

    I’ve had my suspicions for a while now but recently it’s even stronger
    I finally talked a little about it with my therapist, took me a while because I’m always scared to assume something that isn’t true.
    Maybe I am not? And I don’t want to self diagnose…
    Honestly, my brother could be too, it would make so much sense really.
    I’m just scared of overthinking and assuming a title that might not be me and « insulting » autistic people in the process. Although I don’t know how it’d be an insult, but that my brain telling me that..

    • @meganm4877
      @meganm4877 2 роки тому +49

      Hi! I'm not going to be able to phrase this very well, but: in my recent ADHD/autism learning binge, I have come across multiple instances of people saying things like "wondering if you're faking/wrong about thinking you are neurodivergent is not something neurotypical ppl do" or "not wanting to take up space that isn't meant for you shows a level of consideration for ppl in the group that outsiders usually don't have". I feel that slight, lingering uncertainty despite overwhelming evidence is probably a good indicator : )
      (...Like me, thinking I was just a really good ally to the LGBTQ community, then loving the undercut hairstyle but being afraid that getting it would be appropriation. Turns out I'm queer ; )
      Anyway, you deserve to explore and figure things out. I doubt any autistic person would take offense at you thinking you are and then discovering you aren't. The actual problem is when ppl dismiss neurodivergence by saying things like "oh, we're all a little OCD/ADHD". And I'm not getting that vibe from you at all : )

    • @willowthewarriorwolf7153
      @willowthewarriorwolf7153 2 роки тому +23

      I feel the same way! I think it's called imposter syndrome (heard this from a comment on another vid similar to this), where you think you're faking it or something. The chances are you're not. I think you should get it checked out. That's just coming from me though. And taking into account that you commented this a year ago, you've probably already made your decision.

    • @desertrose3511
      @desertrose3511 2 роки тому

      @@meganm4877 queer is a slur

    • @MMJLEN
      @MMJLEN 2 роки тому +1

      Same. In my childhood i always felt different from others and i have been thinking i may be neurotivergent. And my brother, who people often say is similar to me, i seen he has some autistic traits and if end up having autism i think he may be autistic too

    • @MatthewAndThings
      @MatthewAndThings 2 роки тому +5

      I feel the same way

  • @pattie2day
    @pattie2day 4 роки тому +14

    I'm 66 years old and have pretty much concluded that I've been autistic all these years! The list given in this video was so helpful.

    • @mizotter
      @mizotter 3 роки тому +3

      SAME--at 57--after a teaching career in which I specialized in working w/ students w/ Autism!

  • @mangala666
    @mangala666 3 роки тому +185

    My parents told me after I graduated high school (with honors) that my 3rd grade teacher told them she thought I was “retarded” because “she doesn’t make friends and is very quiet and keeps to herself all the time. Perhaps she should be in the special needs class.”
    They were so proud to have kept this from me. This would have been in the early 1980s, before anyone really knew what autism was. My parents just assumed it meant the teacher thought I was dumb and fought to keep me in the regular class (with the people I hated).
    And now I’m 40, and reading about all these “you may be autistic if” statements and my mind is completely blown. Clearly I had no idea. And now I need to talk to my doc and see how one goes about getting a diagnosis. I don’t think it would change anything other than just having a piece of paper stating the now obvious…

    • @saramatthews7159
      @saramatthews7159 2 роки тому +5

      Im 38 and teachers told my parents the same thing that I should be in special ed. Now here I am pushing 40 and wanting to get diagnosed. Smh...i wish I'd gotten the help I needed at a young age

    • @lesterrivers8863
      @lesterrivers8863 2 роки тому +2

      My preschool teacher told my mommy that she thinks I have autism then my mommy took me to be tested for autism when I was just 3 years old baby boy they called my mommy told her I have level 3 autism then she said I could have a learning disability then they got me tested again and I was at the age 5 years old then they got me tested again this time it's for ADHD they said I was then I was keep and keep on having accidents then they gave up up on potty training me then they took me to the doctor because I was having accidents and they said I had a bladder refraction and a bowel movement they they kept me in pull-ups and I can't do anything I'm not able life is hard for me

    • @___Anakin.Skywalker
      @___Anakin.Skywalker 2 роки тому +3

      Were you quite but when you're able to speak, talks endlessly and most of the time a know it all?? I'm asking because I have a work mate like that. She can get extremely annoying but people try to understand her because she's totally weird. Put her in a group and let it simmer for about 15 to 20 minutes before you witness her turn out weird

    • @FigureFarter
      @FigureFarter 2 роки тому

      Here's what I would say: "Takes a retarg to know one"

    • @wintergray1221
      @wintergray1221 2 роки тому +5

      "Bright but quiet and doesn't participate." Every single elementary school report card said this on the bottom.

  • @IntoTheSunset369
    @IntoTheSunset369 4 роки тому +45

    I’m an autism mom with autism and I feel completely alone!! My daughter is level 1 and I’m even more mild than her but I never received any therapy and struggle immensely as an adult but I’m learning a lot with her by my side 😊💜🌈
    You basically just described me as a person 😐 hit everyone one the head. I was diagnosed with so many things from childhood to adult and they could never seem to figure out the simple answer was autism. I’m 36 by the way

  • @val-pb9vk
    @val-pb9vk 4 роки тому +768

    me: *thinking i might be autistic bc i relate*
    me: *realizes i was like that bc i was a closeted lesbian*

    • @EchoHeo
      @EchoHeo 4 роки тому +132

      i mean, theyre not mutually exclusive

    • @theeveningcallsforfairies5246
      @theeveningcallsforfairies5246 4 роки тому +35

      I related to a lot of these but because of my gad, my social anxiety, and the fact that I’m nonbinary, but I was surprised to find some of my traits on this list 😅

    • @liz257
      @liz257 4 роки тому +26

      When youre both

    • @drzeworyj
      @drzeworyj 4 роки тому +13

      the two are actually *very* correlated. it's a neurodiverse neurology, not a bunch of psychological symptoms. the key is, were you or *are* you like that? and were you like that in childhood?

    • @drzeworyj
      @drzeworyj 4 роки тому +6

      @@theeveningcallsforfairies5246 oh hello, I was GAD too, until it no longer answered my questions 😂 if you have a specific cognitive/detail-oriented profile, strong logical skills, a possible 'special power' or a learning disability, and felt different ever since childhood, then you are very likely autistic. greetings from a nonbinary autie :)

  • @Aylali
    @Aylali 4 роки тому +58

    I see myself in every single point, and strongly at that. Except for the last one, I don't think I am easily manipulated, in fact I think I am very good at picking up people's emotions and catering to them (stemming from dealing with difficult parents and bullying in school where these skills were important).

  • @anthonyhulse1248
    @anthonyhulse1248 3 роки тому +16

    My 16 year old son was having a really rough time. Thousands of dollars and 6 months later he was diagnosed with ASD, ADHD and OCD. But all this process with him has lead me to believe that I was on the spectrum myself and suffered in silence as a kid because of it. I now know that I masked my symptoms, feelings and experiences. I was often silently in agony and couldn't understand why. This journey has been one of grieving, healing and understanding.

  • @MilleLTH
    @MilleLTH 5 років тому +84

    I have always felt 'out of place' but thought it was something I would grow out of (as I was told I would), and to this day I still feel this way.. But seeing this, and every point being something I can relate to, just makes me feel so much calm that I'm not alone, and that there are valide reasons to why I react and think the way I do.
    Thank you so much for the video!

  • @mothhaddock1801
    @mothhaddock1801 5 років тому +43

    My mom recently told me that when I was younger some doctors told her that I might be slightly autistic and that she didn't want a diagnosis because I "wouldn't need it". Now I feel like I'm finally realizing why I am how I am and coming to terms with myself...

    • @sonyafirefly3879
      @sonyafirefly3879 4 роки тому +6

      I've been slowly realizing it myself and recently told my parents. They both said, "Yeah, you probably are". I really wish that they would have told me. I went through life thinking that I had an awful temper (because of my meltdowns), feeling crazy, and trying to repress everything that kept me sane.

  • @thatonegingerchick4666
    @thatonegingerchick4666 4 роки тому +42

    I’m just going to continue thinking of myself as a changeling since I don’t have the time to unpack all of this

  • @grahamexeter3399
    @grahamexeter3399 Рік тому +6

    All of them describe me to a T. My version of No. 6: "Everybody else has insider knowledge of something I'm supposed to know as well, but they never let on to me what it is." I'm 71 and have felt this on and off throughout my whole life. I've even wondered at times whether I may be paranoid. I just discovered your channel and 'Autism from the Inside' five days ago, and my mind is appropriately blown - into the shape it always was, except until now I've always believed it was the wrong shape! What a gift from you both!! Thank you thank you thank you!!!

  • @hartoonian0402
    @hartoonian0402 4 роки тому +41

    "...childhood friends..." Bold of you to assume!

  • @FrankenX13
    @FrankenX13 5 років тому +12

    In August 2019 I was recently diagnosed with autism, I'm happy to finally have a name for it. Spending most of my life struggling. Since being diagnosed I've been doing research. Thank you for your videos.

  • @leonolan5409
    @leonolan5409 4 роки тому +115

    until recently I always thought I was nerotypical and that everyone did the same stuff as me, but now I'm looking back on my childhood and remembering certain things like: refusing to sleep on sheets that weren't a certain fabric, begging my parents to let me not talk on the phone because I couldn't understand the social cues, obsessing over certain subjects, my inability to understand peoples emotions (I've always had a really hard time with sarcasm), I always pick at my nails and cuticles and bite the inside of my mouth, and having sensitivity to noise...
    sorry for the long paragraph, this is something that's been on my mind for a while and this video spoke to me

    • @Just_A_Random_Weird0
      @Just_A_Random_Weird0 4 роки тому +2

      I relate to everything you just described, you're not alone :) !
      (i have Asperger's syndrome, now called high functioning autism or mild autism)

    • @inka5915
      @inka5915 4 роки тому +5

      Same, I remember my dad always giving me lectures on how to talk on the phone to people, literally plugging my ears in the cafeteria, turning to psychology and neuroscience to try and fit in, etc. It's been a wild ride of a life

    • @kaylaschroeder1
      @kaylaschroeder1 3 роки тому +1

      Don't apologize! You're sharing your experience. You added value to the thread. Nothing to be sorry for here. 🤗

    • @melissaflores1497
      @melissaflores1497 3 роки тому +1

      Oh, the telephone. It was terrifying!

    • @babyface3396
      @babyface3396 3 роки тому +4

      oh jeez. I hate the phone. It gives me so much anxiety when I have to make phone calls. I always feel like there's a script I should know but don't have. Like the person on the other line will say something and then pause, and my mind is like "oh shit, they want me to say something now. That's my queue and I'm blowing it. What are they asking? What is the answer to the question they refuse to say out loud?" and then it will be awkward until they realize that they have to explicitly ask me for something if they want me to give it to them. I feel so embarrassed bc I feel like they must think I'm stupid or something, and it must feel like pulling teeth to get any information out of me. ugh. why cant we do everything via email or schedule things through a website, please.

  • @christinamcdonald7308
    @christinamcdonald7308 2 роки тому +21

    Recently found out I am autistic and coming to terms with it (39 years old). I am a highly visual thinker and I can’t stand it when people give me vague and confusing verbal instructions - that gives me chronic stress especially at work. Also have OCD anxiety too which I’ve had since from the age of around 14/15 - never had the support I needed throughout my life and am just amazed I got through the school system, sheer determination 😢🙏

    • @esc5487
      @esc5487 2 роки тому

      I think our age group, im 41, really was just outside of all this, they tried to throw me in "SpecialEd" in elementary school but my mom fought it

    • @AlanAndrei
      @AlanAndrei 2 роки тому +1

      you sound like me. 44 recently diagnosed autism, OCD and anxiety started same age as you. Always felt i was completely different from everyone else and that my brain processed stuff differently (for good and bad). Extremely sensitive, shy and no need for friends ever, just family.

  • @ilovemycats9150
    @ilovemycats9150 4 роки тому +195

    No one:
    My big brother everytime I do something: what are you, autistic???
    Me: . . . w e l l

    • @BLUE_FLUFF
      @BLUE_FLUFF 4 роки тому +18

      That's mean :(

    • @cornybram845
      @cornybram845 4 роки тому +11

      I hope I can get diagnosed so I can respond to things like that with “yes, actually.” And make the whole situation feel more awkward

    • @Ashchillgal20
      @Ashchillgal20 3 роки тому +1

      ASD pretty much my hole life :)

  • @time4chai995
    @time4chai995 5 років тому +44

    YOU LITERALLY JUST DESCRIBED ME. I’m on the wait list for diagnostic screening 🙂

  • @jennytaylor3324
    @jennytaylor3324 4 роки тому +240

    I always smell everything: new paper, new clothes, new anything/anything, and smells really affect me! My bro is the same, too, and we thought we were normal until others reacted with confusion.
    I have often thought privately that almost all of us are somewhere 'on the spectrum'.

    • @halisternator
      @halisternator 3 роки тому +15

      omg. SAME? its not just smell, i’ll also touch everything? like paper, specifically like, old ruined paper? it gives me so much joy and no one gets it. IDK IF THIS IS WHAT YOU’RE SAYING! BUT I RELATE TO THIS. i am not medically diagnosed though :p so take everything i say lightly

    • @emiwarble
      @emiwarble 3 роки тому +11

      Is this an autism thing?? I only really smell foods before deciding if I should eat it or not (the answer is usually "no" because I'm awful with food) but if I'm in a shop with glass figures, I HAVE to touch them. Multiple of them. Especially if the glass is smooth????? Heaven.

    • @roseystudio10
      @roseystudio10 3 роки тому +6

      Wait, that's NOT a normal thing?! Fam, I always notice! Welp, I do suspect myself of having autism.

    • @chamallow989
      @chamallow989 3 роки тому +4

      I keep perfumes I was gifted in primary school ( I’m 18 now ) and when I smell them it can literally make me go completely crazy. But for some reason I thought it was kind of normal.

    • @Arkylie
      @Arkylie 3 роки тому +11

      I sniff dishes to make sure they're clean, sniff food to see if I detect anything off before I use it, sniff clothes to figure out if they're okay to reuse or should be washed... thought it was odd when other people found that behavior odd, but I didn't think it might be an aspect of Autism. Huh.

  • @leahlei5776
    @leahlei5776 3 роки тому +77

    Yes to everything you said. My daughter is diagnosed autistic and I see the things she struggles with in myself.
    My mom tells me I was shy, stoic, and stubborn as a child. She also (still) tells me I’m a perfectionist, but that label doesn’t match my intention. I see visual projects and writing more like complex puzzles that I’m working to solve-and when I’m hyperfocused, time melts away, such that 2 hours feels like 20 minutes to me. You wouldn’t tell someone who wanted to complete a puzzle that half finished is quite good enough. Just like clicking that last piece into a jigsaw puzzle feels highly satisfying, that is my motivation, not because I want everyone else to see me as flawless.

    • @jeffreyreeves9854
      @jeffreyreeves9854 2 роки тому

      Leahlei, Stoicism is shit. The real world is based on Survival of the Fittest. Vitamins can be beneficial. I have the curse of Aspergers. I am more scatterbrained and I envy your ability to hyperfocus.

    • @Chirpy-eo8jq
      @Chirpy-eo8jq 2 роки тому +1

      The perfectionist comment resonates with me! That’s been said to me by mom, dad, and grandma with advice for corrections over my entire life!!! Thank you for sharing, I didn’t realized this could be a part of this

  • @paulfincher506
    @paulfincher506 3 роки тому +33

    Yes yes yes. I so identify with most of these characteristics. So that is why I am a robot from another planet! Hay it has only taken me 56 years to understand who I should be. What a relief! Love

    • @mizotter
      @mizotter 3 роки тому +4

      SAME!!! I am stunned that, at 57, after retiring from a 30-year teaching career in which I did teacher-research, wrote about, and specialized in working with students with Autism--I realize I have Autism. It's only been about 3 days since my realization! I am "re-evaluating every single aspect of my life" and the lives of parents and sibs. I am relieved in a way that I couldn't imagine possible; I feel "okay" in a way I've never felt before!

  • @hailey7712
    @hailey7712 4 роки тому +33

    i was just telling my friend about how i absolutely cannot stand loud noises, bright lights, certain textures and other things and she asked if maybe i thought i had autism. i was like “there’s no way, i would have known by now” but then this showed up in my youtube home page, i can relate to almost everything on the list. i know i have horrible anxiety and i am on lexapro but this makes me think that maybe it’s deeper than that...

  • @Kaleesi1
    @Kaleesi1 4 роки тому +23

    "you have significant deficits on what other people consider easy, for example making phone calls"...This is me all the way. I absolutely dread it, Id rather text any day.

  • @niteotter
    @niteotter 3 роки тому +5

    Thank you young woman. I began to recognize this only a few weeks ago - and I’m 70! Explains so much, doesn’t it? ❤️🤗

  • @DarksideBallerina
    @DarksideBallerina 5 років тому +100

    This is interesting, I resonate with almost all of these, but not everything. I actually like being with friends, but I get home and I need hours to recover. I'm trying to figure out now if I might be autistic or just a weird, introverted, depressed adult (I am diagnosed with depression). I want to mull this over for a bit, but I appreciate a different perspective even if after more research I find this isn't me. I hope it will make me more empathetic to autistic people of all ages at the very least.

    • @garyfrancis5015
      @garyfrancis5015 5 років тому +5

      Yo Samdy Sam talks about a internal monologue in this video maybe your using your intelligence to socialise with friends why you need to hours to recover afterwards the community call it social burnout.
      I'm sorry Samdy doesn't have time to reply to your comment.
      Her subscriber number have gone up from small UA-camr to a big UA-camr.
      I'm like Sam in term of my special interest is autism.
      But the best answer to your comment is last part of this video.
      ua-cam.com/video/LKgoWZ3JHrM/v-deo.html

  • @wilbur7884
    @wilbur7884 4 роки тому +352

    me, a depressed, anxious, overly sensitive witch, who used to literally hiss and bark at people: is the universe trying to tell me something 🤔

    • @crazybrit-nasafan
      @crazybrit-nasafan 4 роки тому +34

      Barking at people is fun. They stop staring at me and move away quickly.

    • @wilbur7884
      @wilbur7884 4 роки тому +21

      @@crazybrit-nasafan frfr, very effective at getting people to go away. surprisingly, I wasnt bullied for it lol

    • @alsy6813
      @alsy6813 3 роки тому +9

      My classmates literally called me "Witch" in elementary school, because I was that weird kid that always reacted unpredictably and strangely and didn't feel pain that much, but had little understanding of what I shouldn't do. I guess, I was too weird to be bullied (plus my class was pretty good, we just had a few groups that didn't interact with each other... I wasnt in any of them xd), so they all just learnt to leave me alone to books and notes, until I had an idea I needed people for. Like, a religion I made up and wanted people to be part of, they ended up following it for two months. Or when I brought some shine colorful glass crystals in school and made them new money for a week or two, lol.
      I always thought I was just a weird kid, but all my strangeness makes so much sense with the diagnosis

    • @rojin866
      @rojin866 3 роки тому +4

      I still bark and hiss at people
      My little brother started doing it too
      Im not a good role model.

    • @Kelle0284
      @Kelle0284 3 роки тому +4

      I meow at people.

  • @kddaly6892
    @kddaly6892 3 роки тому +5

    This video popped up under "suggested videos" in May 2020 and yeah it changed everything. I got diagnosed in August 2020. I wound up taking a gap year from college, for COVID reasons, but mostly to focus on reevaluating my life with this new information. It's been pretty incredible. So thanks Samdy Sam!

  • @lindseyhanson945
    @lindseyhanson945 3 роки тому +1

    You are helping me so much right now..... your exterior is helping my loved ones understand. I mean no one i surprised I'm "different" but your shell is helping me and I am so grateful

  • @t-98
    @t-98 4 роки тому +55

    “You are surprised to know that you identify with all these traits and that’s just not how everyone feels” oof

  • @anelisamorgan8590
    @anelisamorgan8590 3 роки тому +12

    Thank you for gradually lifting the stigma of autism for everyone connected to autism; whether they've been diagnosed or their a family member or friend. 💕

  • @lindamgalvao
    @lindamgalvao 5 років тому +21

    Yes to almost all. The over-sensitivity to sound is especially challenging. The word for it is hyperacusis; researching that might help others who also experience this.

    • @Miss-Hellcat666
      @Miss-Hellcat666 5 років тому +1

      Thank you for this! I never knew what it was or how to describe it, but now you've given me a word for it! Thank you so much 🖤

    • @lindamgalvao
      @lindamgalvao 5 років тому +2

      @@Miss-Hellcat666 You're most welcome! There are several situations that can trigger hyperacusis. It's often tied together with tinnitus. Physically, some people who are exposed to very loud sounds can develop hyperacusis. Head trauma can be another precursor. There can also be a tie-in to PTSD. If you learn to survive (physically or emotionally) by constantly being hyper-aware of what's going on around you, you can basically train the brain to keep the volume setting for your hearing all the way up so you don't miss anything potentially dangerous. The challenge is that it becomes impossible to turn that "volume knob" down again. Hyperacusis can come on suddenly or gradually.
      There are FB groups and other sources of info about hyperacusis. Unfortunately many audiologists, strangely enough, aren't familiar with it. There are some treatment strategies that have quite varied rates of success. I benefited a lot from TRT (Tinnitus Retraining Therapy), which involves wearing hearing-aid like devices, but even that strategy could only help so much. Good luck to anyone struggling with this. Doing research to become your own best advocate is the best strategy.

  • @CB19087
    @CB19087 Рік тому

    I had an ADhD diagnosis 12years ago but have controlled it with routines. I'm just realising now that all my life i have assumed what others are thinking or intending. I actually have no clue. I've been pretending and copying people because i thought everyone did that. I feel a great sense of relief that i don't have to pretend anymore. But am also in a really good place to relax into understanding and experiencing my own point of view. Adhd and autism definitely presents differently to autism alone. I really resonate with your experiences. Thank you for taking the time to make these videos 🙏

  • @shoshanafox727
    @shoshanafox727 5 років тому +18

    Thanks for making these videos. I'm thinking of sending it to some people I know. I'm 61, and this pretty much describes me. It's too expensive and difficult for me to get the official diagnosis, but it would be nice if some of my friends and relatives knew this stuff. ☺👍

  • @magical.frequencies
    @magical.frequencies 4 роки тому +9

    Also, learning about “Multipotentialite” is so very welcomed for me. Past few days I've been crying multiple times over deep diving into stuff and then POFF never wanna do it again and then gat back to it and then just go back and forth all the time. Now I can relax in this trait as well. Truly, deeply thank you from as deep as everything goes!

    • @Dirty_Davos
      @Dirty_Davos 2 роки тому +1

      This comment section makes me wanna hug all of you here.

  • @dill2169
    @dill2169 5 років тому +222

    Do you really mean to tell me that these aren't things everyone experiences??? Like, that's not just how people are??? I legit kinda have a hard time believing that, cause everything on your list I easily relate to

    • @__________________________7596
      @__________________________7596 5 років тому +4

      Paytton I agree with you

    • @felicityh6310
      @felicityh6310 5 років тому +11

      I agree with you fully, I thought everyone feels this way.

    • @kirbypopstar5807
      @kirbypopstar5807 5 років тому +4

      Paytton introverts also experience a lot of these things. Idk about the lack of social skills though

    • @noemita494
      @noemita494 5 років тому +18

      Do most people get easily manipulated, speak in a monotone voice or have difficulty with things like making phone calls?

    • @brendomiryr
      @brendomiryr 5 років тому +21

      This is why it is never a good thing to try and self-diagnose. I’m sure if you look at the various symptoms of many other disorders, illness, and diseases you’ll get the same, “Oh hey, I experience these things every once in a while too!” But that doesn’t necessarily mean you have said condition. I once thought I had diabetes because I had a dry mouth, urinated frequently, and could never quench my thirst. Turns out I didn’t. I do, however, have Autism and relate to this video entirely. It’s a condition that, for many, is invisible and hard to pick up on because we are constantly masking and adapting ourselves to blend in with everyone else. Some with Autism cannot mask in public and so the condition becomes incredibly debilitating.

  • @elanaweinberg6251
    @elanaweinberg6251 2 роки тому

    I’m so grateful I found ur page!! Thank you so much. Reminding you that most ppl won’t stop to comment thanks. You are helping so many more ppl than you know. It’s amazing. Ur amazing !! Please keep sharing ♥️

  • @KarmaNeverTouches
    @KarmaNeverTouches 4 роки тому +20

    I just got diagnosed and when you were listing things off I was just like...
    "Yes, that me, yes, that too, I have been there, omg someone knows how that feels and have felt and struggled with the same thing"

  • @zanezeik
    @zanezeik 4 роки тому +59

    lately, as a mid twenties adult living with my parents because circumstances, they've begun describing some of my behavior as 'on the spectrum' and kinda wink wink nudge nudging and i just... felt so helpless? like, you never noticed this before? never thought about getting me help?

    • @ruen_me1361
      @ruen_me1361 3 роки тому +7

      Felt. I feel like I’ve been struggling my whole life with everything but only now does it seem like my mothers noticed after my childhood. I actually have a nonverbal twin with autism who likely has PTSD from early childhood trauma, about 70% of the time of one identical twin has is so does the other. I didn’t know this until I began researching autism in High School and thought I might be autistic afterwards. So, I thought wait they probably already tested let’s go ask mum! Well apparently I was getting therapy at around 4 and they recommended testing and she refused, she didn’t want /two/ autistic kids after all. 🤦

    • @toni5543
      @toni5543 3 роки тому +3

      Same. Pointed out to my mum today that my issues with skin picking can be an adhd and/or autism thing. She said 'I knew it!'. Like mum come on now. Why let us get so adult without a diagnosis pretend it isn't happening? 😭

    • @melissaflores1497
      @melissaflores1497 3 роки тому +3

      That is shitty. I was invisible. I have been responsible for my own Help. My folks too self involved. Please look into a Dr and ask your folks what they are willing to do to help instead of tease you.

    • @melissaflores1497
      @melissaflores1497 3 роки тому +2

      @rue_me . The non special kids get short changed. I'm sorry. Still seeking therapy is a good idea.

    • @kashe7285
      @kashe7285 2 роки тому

      ahh, you get it. my mom used to work with children on the spectrum for years and from doing that, she'd always tell me that she believed I was on spectrum. she's been telling me this since I was 12, yet I've never gotten any help.

  • @luxjunk2571
    @luxjunk2571 5 років тому +9

    I've been researching for about 3 years...I finally braved it and now I have a referral form to complete for an assessment. I'm finding it all so intimidating but I need to know. Either way, diagnosis or not, the traits are real and I know I need help with it all...thank you for making your videos, they are so helpful and give me a bit more confidence to ask for help ❤️

  • @simplyelf
    @simplyelf Рік тому +3

    I've now watched a couple of your videos and I relate on so much of what you've said and are seeing similar traits in my kids. I literally teared up listening . Thank you for putting this out there .

  • @gailterry3134
    @gailterry3134 3 роки тому +31

    I went to get an 'official' diagnosis for Autism several years ago when I was in my early 50s. They came up with Complex-PTSD. But the tests were the standardized ones geared more towards males. I also thought that undiagnosed Autism would result in C-PTSD after all those years. So I decided that yes, I'm on the Spectrum, but no, I don't need an official dx to tell me what I already know.

  • @StudioHannah
    @StudioHannah 4 роки тому +190

    I thought this was all just being an anxious artistic introvert. Hah, a lot of these feel sooooo familiar, but how would I tell the difference?

    • @Denis461997
      @Denis461997 4 роки тому +11

      Well, I'm just an introvert, one who learned extraversion with time... I identify a lot but I'm just an introverted polymath

    • @deborahducret-shiley6309
      @deborahducret-shiley6309 3 роки тому +1

      ME TOO!!!

  • @fantasyfanperson
    @fantasyfanperson 5 років тому +13

    Okay, I identify with most of these things. This was actually a lot more helpful than trying to read a list of cold, clinical and often excessively negative symptoms. Guess I'll need to get over my aversion to phone calls and ring up the psychiatrist I have a referral for this week.

    • @YoSamdySam
      @YoSamdySam  5 років тому +6

      The clinically worded symptoms are how I did a whole psychology degree and still did not recognise myself when we did a module on autism. 😂

    • @YoSamdySam
      @YoSamdySam  5 років тому +3

      And good luck!

  • @SaphiraWyndsong
    @SaphiraWyndsong 2 роки тому +1

    I love the way your mind works, there are a lot of autistic adults making videos about the subject on UA-cam, but you are expressing so many thoughts that are going through my mind as well, very eloquently, unexpected connections, and I find myself saying over and over, “yes, that’s what I think as well”. Dealing with the system for a few years now, one daughter finally diagnosed with ADHD after a horrible procession of self harm, attempted suicide, self medication etc. Years to convince teachers and doctors to screen and diagnose for ADHD. Another daughter that is 100% autistic, “high functioning”, ended up in the psych ward because of burnout, a master masker and even after an assessment where she checked a lot of the boxes she was still not considered so. After conversations with the psychiatrist what stood out to me was her remark” she just didn’t have those qualities that I see in autistic girls” WTF. A general tendency to “rate “attributes still based on old-fashioned male autistic traits. I am basically self identifying as autistic and don’t bother getting an assessment the at 56, because I am fed up with the medical world and the “top down approach” as you call it correctly. Thank you for putting the time and energy into this channel, all this has been one of the most helpful sources out of the plethora of information I have gathered in the last years.

  • @marieilbergjacobsen3061
    @marieilbergjacobsen3061 5 років тому +29

    Three times I've gotten the question: "Do you have a diagnosis?" The fourth time was a classmate from school who dropped out doe to servere mental struggles which lead her to get an autisme diagnoses. She wrote me and in a wary polite test asked me whether I was autistic, because she I was one she could mirror.
    At that point I was very flattered, and sure it keept crossing my mind but with the addendum: "I manages life" but now when I'm a mom and have a job I see that I really to struggle to "Adult" - it's like I'm just short of falling in a stress pit all the time. So now I'm in counseling with my doctor whether it's my abusive past that's messed with my head or I'm not neuropypical.
    Funny thing: My doctor don't think I could be autistic because "I can read facial expressions just fine".

    • @ewabrzakaa6395
      @ewabrzakaa6395 5 років тому +1

      Isn't there still present trend against diagnosing women, just because it looks differently than standard male model.

    • @marieilbergjacobsen3061
      @marieilbergjacobsen3061 5 років тому

      @@ewabrzakaa6395 I know here en Denmark it's definitely harder as a women to get a proper diagnosis.

    • @a.v.a.256
      @a.v.a.256 5 років тому +1

      Autistic people can't read facial expressions. That's a fact, not a clichee.

    • @j.kaimori3848
      @j.kaimori3848 5 років тому

      @@a.v.a.256 I can recognise anything that matches the expressions on a poster from year 3. I'm not sure how good it is beyond that.
      I don't look at people's faces much and I'm not sure if that's because I don't read them well anyway or if that shyness is the reason I don't read them.
      Edit: I don't have a diagnosis but this was my odd experience with faces

    • @celestinae.8847
      @celestinae.8847 4 роки тому +1

      Same with me. For some reason once I graduated high school everything became very hard even college.

  • @AngelRawien
    @AngelRawien 3 роки тому +19

    I’m sobbing. If I had only identified with a few… then I’d be fine. But it’s like you’ve read my heart and idk what to do with that information now… 🤭

  • @Bunnies.can.fly.1998
    @Bunnies.can.fly.1998 4 роки тому +14

    My mom had a baby girl when I was 16 and my mom found out later that my little sister is autistic. My little brother is too, they were both diagnosed and they're in all the therapies they need to be. Recently my mom apologized to me because she realized I have autism and she felt awful she didn't have the resources she has now for my siblings. Looking back on my childhood and just everything I've realized it's autism. My mom is on the spectrum as well. Her helper for the little ones is trained and she noticed it in my mom. It's so weird to me that not everyone feels this way

  • @JPWack
    @JPWack 2 роки тому +1

    Thank you for your videos, got my diagnosis recently at 37yo, and now I'm working on my future

  • @pargatjheeta6729
    @pargatjheeta6729 3 роки тому +4

    I'm really grateful for these talks on Autism. Massive thanks! I'm a step closer to understanding myself better, I can totally identify with many of the signs or experiences. The thing that rang the alarm bells with me was when you mentioned that other people can easily manipulate me without me knowing... I've had that happen to me lots and it is very exhausting! Being dragged about in different directions!

  • @YourFavoriteHayley
    @YourFavoriteHayley 5 років тому +109

    So many “out of nowhere” outbursts

  • @ellinorcajsenmaria
    @ellinorcajsenmaria 3 роки тому +3

    Thank you for your amazing content. I watched your UA-cam channel during 2019-2020 and found it incredibly helpful (and fun!), in 2021 I was diagnosed autistic at the age of 37. I am sure you have helped many others as well.