| Thank you for posting these links and for sharing your experience. Another autistic person here and just wanted to leave this comment here for anyone that might find it helpful (and don’t want to imply this is for you specifically either!). Masking was incredibly detrimental for me. In fact I didn’t even realize I was doing it. Once I realized I was autistic (at the tender age of 31) I decided to stop doing so whatever the cost may be. To my surprise, embracing my autistic qualities and understanding them has changed my life completely. I’m far more social now, and I realized that trying to be social like neurotypical folks is basically impossible if you’re autistic. However, being social like an autistic person is incredibly rewarding. Many people tell me they don’t even realize I’m any different, even though I’ve gotten there not by trying to be the same but by being more authentically myself. It has been a long road (I’m 36 now), and while it has been difficult I can say that has been beyond worthwhile. We have beautiful things to share with our fellow humans, even though I think those things scare some folks. If you’re like me from a few years back, don’t give up. We are our own greatest critics which is a double edged sword. You’re better than you know, and before you know it things will change in ways that are difficult to imagine. Quick PS edit: apologies for grammar or words that are out of place. I’m on my phone and my fingers are seriously fat |
Can you explain this? I'm probably autistic-- my son was diagnosed and from my and my wife's research I am clearly autistic but haven't been diagnosed-- and I don't understand how I would start to try and do less "masking". I don't even really understand that, myself, because I'm in my 40's and just started learning about this stuff, so to me, "masking" is just who I am to other people.