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To think I have autism or ADHD? I can’t cope anymore and want to die

90 replies

ThisTipsyQuoter · 14/07/2024 23:20

I’m writing this in tears, I want to just end it all. I am 21 and have just been told today, 6 weeks into a cafe waitressing job that I’m unlikely to survive my probation period with them. Got quite upset and sought comfort from my partner when I got home who instead got frustrated and said he doesn’t see how we’ll manage our plans for the future (kids, saving a house deposit) if I can’t even hold down a basic minimum wage job, and he has a fair point.

I have always been like this, I feel like there is something wrong with me. I try to run away from my problems but I’ve realised the problem is with me. As a child, I had an autism assessment (which found me to be neurotypical) by my pre-school as I had selective mutism. I was perfectly fine, chatty and happy at home with my parents - I came from a stable family. But I’d go into pre-school and was 100% mute. I can’t remember why I was like this or what my thought process was, and that’s highly frustrating. This continued until the age of 7 where I began to whisper to other children, and by the end of Year 6 I was fully verbal and had a lovely group of friends. I was always very much into imaginative play up until the age of 10/11, which I feel I should have grown out of by then.

Starting high school was traumatic for me, I lasted a month. I couldn’t cope. I kept losing my timetable, planner, P.E kit. I couldn’t make sense of the layout of the building or homework. I would become incredibly overwhelmed at lunch time with kids bustling through the corridors. I had some sort of nervous breakdown that terrified my poor mum so much that she withdrew me from school to home educate me as she genuinely thought I was going to kill myself if forced to go, and she was probably right.

Home education was okay for me, my mum found a lovely tutor who did group sessions of 5 or 6 kids who also couldn’t cope with school and we had lessons at the local community centre. I did my GCSE’s with her and smashed them, I was able to be very academic in the right environment. I did an access course at college (this was the height of Covid so there was no social aspect, it was all online) and smashed it, and I have just finished my first year of a bachelor’s degree in an allied health profession. I have smashed all of my assignments, but I haven’t made a single friend or even had a proper conversation with any of my peers. I try but I stumble over my words and I find it genuinely exhausting.

I’m also losing my motivation for my degree. I remember I had a phase of really wanting to work in the NHS/Healthcare, and it became somewhat of an obsession. I watched so many dramas or documentaries about working in one specific profession and did so much research and I thought “this must be my niche!”. But then a few weeks into uni I just didn’t give a shit anymore and I’ve struggled to get back that initial feeling of euphoria. I passed placements in first year by the skin of my teeth, they said they felt I wasn’t engaging and didn’t show enough interest in the subject. I lied to my partner and said I’d had brilliant feedback from placements, because I’m so mortified by the reality. He was so proud of me and I don’t deserve it. I can’t see how I’ll pass next placement, so uni is probably fucked. I’ve had other fleeting obsessions before, in my teen years it was a character from a TV show. I also desperately want a baby, but I think that's a hormonal thing rather than an autism/ADHD thing and I am managing to keep it under control.

Now, onto jobs. My first job was waitressing but this was the height of Covid when it was dead, I was barely there and then quit a few months in because the commute home at night was a bit dodgy and I had a traumatic incident with a drunken customer. I then moved onto a bartender job. This was a small Italian restaurant where they only had one bartender on at a time and I thrived, I had my own little “station” to manage as I pleased without other staff members hovering. I am quite clumsy and dropped trays often but I was so good at the general management of the bar that the owners loved me, and this really built up my confidence.

My positive feedback in that job helped me decide I wanted try working abroad for a while, and I used an agency to land me a hotel front desk job in a country I was fascinated with, and accommodation was included. I got a 2 year visa. They sacked me after 3 months. My probation failure meeting discussed how I was “awkward and robotic” and “struggled to speak to guests”. This mentally destroyed me, I felt so attacked and not like a normal human being. My manager also said that I “confuse the hell out of everybody” and that I “appear to have a lot of hidden anger”. I was so confused, I don’t have a combative personality and I like to think I am kind and caring, so this was heartbreaking.

I flew home and didn’t leave my bed for a few months. I then got a job at a phone shop and that was actually fine for me, sitting at a computer suited me and I worked with 2 blokes who were very relaxed and not overly chatty. We had a laugh from time to time but I was mostly left to my own devices and it was lovely, I also was great at the actual work. I left as I was starting the get the interest in healthcare at this point and wanted some more relevant experience.

This is when I became a support worker for autistic, deaf and/or blind children, and I was wonderful at bonding with the children and understanding their needs, they really took to me. But I didn’t cope on one-to-one outings with the children. I would leave their lunchboxes on the bus, or forget their medication schedules and panic, mix up the details in their care plans etc. I knew that this was absolutely not on and I knew that my clumsiness was actively endangering the children, so I did the responsible thing of resigning. I knew I had to quit when my poor manager had to spend her evening trying to find a child’s backpack that I had left in McDonald’s, as it had essential medication in. I fucking hated myself.

Finally, my most recent job that I started 6 weeks ago is a waitressing role in a cafe. I have just moved in with my partner of a year and moved an hour away. I’ve coped with the move and new town okay, but I’m struggling with the job. I have a weird ability to smash interviews and really impress the interviewer, and then by the end of my first month they are wondering what the fuck happened. I think I can mask whatever is wrong with me for short periods but then it comes out eventually. I smashed the first 2 weeks of this waitressing job and was told I was excelling and that I had the potential to move up to supervisor in a few months, but now I’m really struggling to keep up with my tables and remember who needs to pay, who’s ordered what etc. I had a table with a peanut allergy come in the other week and I didn’t trust myself at all, I had to ask a manager to do it which isn’t a good look. I’m 21 and they have 16 year olds there who manage the job fine. All my managers talk to me like a child and I think they find me quite weird. I was sat waiting for my lift after finishing my shift the other day and one of my managers kept staring at me and she looked utterly baffled but never approached me. It’s like I bewilder people. They discussed in the probation meeting today that they don’t think I’m coping and that I may not be right for the team but they said they won’t decide fully until the end of my probation, but I’m quite clearly done for.

I have been in bits ever since, it’s a basic fucking waitressing job, 16 year olds can and do work this job and are fine. I think I’d work best in a job where I’m left to my own devices to get things done, rather than in a team where I really struggle with understanding the dynamics, politics etc - but I don’t know what jobs would have this structure. Ideally something where I'm left to work on a project independently then report to a manager weekly sounds bliss to me, but those jobs typically require degrees and experience.

I genuinely feel like I have some sort of brain damage sometimes. I’m starting to think I must have ADHD or autism but I’m scared to pursue the diagnosis.
As for seeking a diagnosis, my partner is from an Eastern European country when everybody is expected to just get on with it and not dwell on anything or seek a diagnosis, and I think if I told him I wanted to pursue a diagnosis he’d really struggle to get his head around it. I also think my mum would be in denial and would give me a hard time, my older brother has autism and she always says she’s glad she has a neurotypical daughter to help with his care in the future. I feel so alone, as I sit here tonight I feel like killing myself. I can’t cope with adult life at all. Please somebody reply I desperately need support I’m in floods of tears

OP posts:
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ThisTipsyQuoter · 15/07/2024 00:17

CherrySocks · 15/07/2024 00:07

Also you are only 21, it takes most people quite a while to find a job/career that suits them.
You come over very well in written messages, maybe you could get a job that uses that skill.

Yes I love writing. That's part of what interested me about occupational therapy, the idea doing the assessments and then writing up my findings. I know occupational therapists need verbal communication skills with clients and for multi-disciplinary meetings, but there is also a lot of independent case management. I still don't know if it's for me as I do have executive dysfunction (forgetfulness) which I fear would harm my clients, but the idea of independent working and self-management was part of my thought process when applying to do the OT degree. I did of course also have the empathy for children with special needs which was the main motivation.

As I said before, I like to be left to work independently. If I have an interest in something, I can write about it for hours. Would love a career that consists of me sitting in a cosy office/living room with a cup of tea typing all day! No small talk about people's kitchen renovations or weddings. Absolutely fine to email managers to share progress and could cope with occasional meetings to discuss work. But being surrounded by a dozen coworkers day to day kills me.

OP posts:
NotDonna · 15/07/2024 00:20

perhaps research would suit you? OT research perhaps?
you come across as being very bright and wanting to use that intelligence. It’s a shame the neuro typical world is thwarting your progress! It’s not you, it’s your surroundings.

Echobelly · 15/07/2024 00:21

I wouldn't despair just yet - I think it just mainly sounds as though customer-relations type jobs aren't for you. I know you tried the special needs support stuff as well but there are many other things you haven't tried and as people have said, you are very young.

NB, did you post about losing the receptionist job abroad a while ago, that rings a bell? I'm sorry things haven't improved since and that your partner is being so unsupportive.

I think having a diagnosis would help if possible - it sounds like it could be ADHD, maybe sensory processing disorder.

pikkumyy77 · 15/07/2024 00:21

F

ThisTipsyQuoter · 15/07/2024 00:22

Echobelly · 15/07/2024 00:21

I wouldn't despair just yet - I think it just mainly sounds as though customer-relations type jobs aren't for you. I know you tried the special needs support stuff as well but there are many other things you haven't tried and as people have said, you are very young.

NB, did you post about losing the receptionist job abroad a while ago, that rings a bell? I'm sorry things haven't improved since and that your partner is being so unsupportive.

I think having a diagnosis would help if possible - it sounds like it could be ADHD, maybe sensory processing disorder.

No I haven't posted about that particular job before, have posted about maybe having autism/ADHD before but not really about jobs.

OP posts:
PartyPrepProblemo · 15/07/2024 00:27

Hi OP,

Not being a great waitress doesn't mean you won't be able to hold down a job.

I was a TERRIBLE waitress. A VERY slow and awkward bartender.

I'm now quite senior in a totally different kind of job which requires different kinds of skills.

There are lots of desk jobs out there where you can work on projects or tasks and not have to do all the customer facing stuff, or travel all over the place.

Maybe you could look into something like that?

Itwasespeciallygood67 · 15/07/2024 00:28

Hi op! I have a DD your age with autism and you sound to me as if there are certainly enough markers there to justify going forward for assessment, especially when you have an autistic brother. It sounds like you may have ADHD too.

Diagnosis doesn't bring much support with it but you stop feeling quite so badly about yourself and you can develop strategies to enable you to function more effectively . And to be able to pace yourself a bit more. Also it's sometimes helpful to have a piece of paper on you saying "I am autistic" so that accommodations can be made at work or during invasive hospital examinations.

Don't be too down on yourself; you just haven't found the right niche yet but you will find something! I wouldn't recommend catering or childcare tbh where you you have to adapt on the hoof to continually changing situations. A job working from home or something where you have your own set of procedures could be good. Maybe an admin job but only working for one person. I have a female friend with ASD and she is a personal assistant to an author and it's just her in the office in the author's home and she loves it.

So don't be disheartened. It's more that the jobs were wrong for you, rather than you not being accomplished!

Btw, not sure I like the sound of your bf. He should be more supportive. And it's not good that you feel awkward speaking to him about your degree. And honestly, ignore what everyone else thinks. Even your mother! You need to do this for yourself! Diagnosis in girls usually happens much later than with boys. Print off some info about female ASD and how it presents so differently in women and if anyone challenges you, don't say anything, just hand them the papers!

Op I would get in touch with the Lorna Wing centre:

www.autism.org.uk/what-we-do/autism-training-and-best-practice/diagnostic-services www.autism.org.uk/what-we-do/autism-training-and-best-practice/diagnostic-services]]]]

And see if they can point you in the right direction for an assessment.

And then go and speak to your tutors and counsellors at uni and say you are struggling and explain why. They may have some suggestions or be able to facilitate a step sideways.

Take care. And don't give up!

ThisTipsyQuoter · 15/07/2024 00:30

This makes me sound like a horrible person but when my manager was going on today about how she didn't think I was managing my tables to a high enough standard and it was affecting the guest experience I really struggled to relate. I just wanted to say "Well so what that table 3 had to wait 5 minutes to get their ketchup! People in the world are dying in wars!" Obviously I didn't actually say it and I kept it in my head but my brain just wasn't on that wavelength. I understand that it is a business and I'm expected to do the job I'm paid for, and I also don't think negatively of other hospitality workers, but I just can't connect to it at all.

OP posts:
SwordToFlamethrower · 15/07/2024 00:34

Yes, ask your gp for a "right to choose" referral with Axia and ADHD360. you should meet the criteria with what you're saying.

Don't do customer facing roles. You're clearly not suited to them.

Bless your heart, it sounds like you're really struggling. And for what it's worth, your partner sounds shitty and unsupportive.

ThisTipsyQuoter · 15/07/2024 00:35

To me the whole social hierarchy of this job is just unbearable. Being spoken down to by a manager and then 5 minutes later I will see said manager goofing around in the kitchen doing Gangnam style. I can't take it seriously at all.

OP posts:
KTheGrey · 15/07/2024 00:36

You are obviously highly capable in many ways. Luckily or unluckily your capabilities will help you exclusively in professional jobs - where you will have the opportunity to build your own routines with the help of other professionals.

Doesn't sound like waitressing is a great fit for you - but maybe freelance copy editing or proof reading or something of that sort will be better.

Go to the GP and see if they can help as well, because the crying is very draining of joy.xx

ThisTipsyQuoter · 15/07/2024 00:43

ThisTipsyQuoter · 15/07/2024 00:35

To me the whole social hierarchy of this job is just unbearable. Being spoken down to by a manager and then 5 minutes later I will see said manager goofing around in the kitchen doing Gangnam style. I can't take it seriously at all.

I think maybe this stems from my potentially autistic brain feeling that a manager is a superior and serious role, and that's why it irritates me when I see them having a laugh or joking with other team members after I've just been told off by them. It's like my brain is trying to suss people 24/7 and can't cope if somebody's demeanour changes.

I have lots of little social niggles like this. In this job I've also noticed a few of the women are lovely to chat with on their own, but then other colleagues who they've known for years come in and they go into a more "comfortable" demeanour with them and their personality completely changes and I want to then remove myself from the situation.

I also can't continue conversations day to day. If feeling awkward and wanting to try to get to know somebody I will say the classic "How's your shift been today?" The conversation will then develop from there and they may tell me, for example, that they have a birthday lunch planned with their mum for the next day. Next time I see this same colleague, rather than ask how the birthday lunch with their mum was, I am likely to ask "How's your shift been today?" once again, instead of picking up the topics we had talked about previously. I expect I appear rude and like I'm not listening due to this.

OP posts:
ThisTipsyQuoter · 15/07/2024 00:48

I also struggle to understand why my managers expect me to small-talk with my tables. They don't know me and I don't know them. Why do I need to ask if they are here for a special occasion or just for a catch-up? I don't care. I see it as a transaction, they are paying for a service - for me to take their food order, bring them their food, fix any issues if needed and then clear their table. They are there to chat amongst themselves, not a random waitress.

OP posts:
Bringitonnowibeg · 15/07/2024 01:03

I have 3 Autistic children. One of them also has dcd. Development Coordination Disorder. It's the new name used for dyspraxia. Look it up and see if you relate to any of it. To me it sounds possible and these conditions can overlap. Getting the help, understanding and support wil always be a positive thing.

needtonamechangeforthis1 · 15/07/2024 01:23

You sound just like me. I am also on the pathway to diagnosis of ADHD and ASD. I have come to the conclusion that I am unemployable. I have never lasted more than two years in any one role.
So I went self employed. Best decision I have ever made! I set my own schedule, no managers, can take breaks and time off when I need to. Yes it's been hard at times but I have learnt so much more about myself and am finally off antidepressants for the first time in years.

ru53 · 15/07/2024 01:26

OP I haven’t read the full thread but if you haven’t already - find out what help and support your university can provide. You may be surprised as most universities actually have very good and readily accessible support for students. There will be some kind of well-being/ pastoral support team you should be able to contact. I’d start by looking on your university’s website.

mutationseagull · 15/07/2024 01:28

I’m autistic with adhd and I very much relate to your experiences. I am nearly twice your age and I couldn’t cope with a waitressing job. I was let go from one or two similar jobs. The fact that you have an autistic brother does make it more likely that you are also neurodivergent. And if you’re autistic you are quite likely to have ADHD too – the majority of autistics do. You might want to check out some of the self tests here. Many of them are the same tests used by clinicians and while they can’t give you a definitive diagnosis they may give you some validation, clarity and ideas for further investigation.

You don’t need a formal autism diagnosis to better understand yourself, but obviously there can be benefits to getting one in terms of accessing support, and people can be very dismissive of those of us who are “self-diagnosed”. There can also be downsides to formal diagnosis, depending on your circumstances. So ultimately it’s a very personal decision. If you feel that ADHD symptoms are a major part of your difficulties then you might want to make getting diagnosed and medicated for that a priority. I only got medicated for ADHD recently and it has made a huge difference to my life. I have huge regrets about not being able to get diagnosed and treated when I was younger.

There are some great support communities online. If you’re on Facebook, check out the group Autism Late Diagnosis/Self Identification Support and Education. Autistics Worldwide is another good group. Both are welcoming to self-identified/suspecting autistics and full of lovely people and great resources. Finally, please remember that there’s nothing wrong with you! You are not inferior or defective, you just have a different brain.

Dr. Natalie Engelbrecht in her office, holding a psychometric test.

Autism tests | Embrace Autism

Do you think you might be autistic? Have a look at the various autism tests and other psychometric tests (empathy, alexithymia, stimming, camouflaging, etc.) we compiled for you!

https://embrace-autism.com/autism-tests/

ToRecordOnlyWater · 15/07/2024 01:39

Didn’t want to read and not reply.

I’m so sorry you’re feeling so low. You write so eloquently and beautifully! I was diagnosed with ADHD when I was 20- it’s one of those things that seems to be easily missed when you’re younger (especially in girls as they present differently and often don’t have the same hyperactivity little boys stereotypically do). Everyone around me suspects I may be autistic but have never been assessed for it. I was diagnosed by chance, I was suicidal and having treatment for PTSD and lucked out with a psychiatrist specialising in ADHD who spotted it when I hadn’t even considered it! It turned out a lot of my depression stemmed from the effects it had on me.
My best friend is autistic and sounds similar to you. She has gone through more jobs than I can count, she just hasn’t found one to suit her - I think people like her, myself and you (by the sounds of it) aren’t cut out for public-facing waitressing jobs, customer service type situations. I work as a tattooist so have to put on a Cool Sociable Person hat to get through the work day, small talk is not my thing and I am not able to remember things I’ve been told in previous sittings by people (reminds me of the part of your post when you said about co-workers mentioning things they have coming up, my brain is too full of nonsense to remember that someone was going to Cyprus on holiday or that their dog is at the vets!!)
I’ve had shit days at work when my ADHD brain isn’t working. I’ve double booked clients and cried while they stood there arguing over who got to have the appointment, I’ve forgotten to write things in my diary and had calls from outside the shop asking where I am as they’re booked in. It’s rubbish when our brains aren’t kind to us, some of us just aren’t wired that way to have that level of organisation.
When I was younger making these slip-ups, it would send me into the worst spirals - how useless must a person be to forget they’re meant to be at work, when I lived at home and had literally no other responsibilities besides being at work when I needed to be? I muddle through my job because I love it and am skilled enough thankfully that people can overlook my slow replies, awkward conversational skills and occasional forgetful moments. To me, it was something that came with time, and learning to be kind to myself.

Having a diagnosis really does help, my mum couldn’t understand it as she just thought ‘well, you seemed fine in high school, just a bit lazy’. For me, it helped me forgive myself for my grades tanking, struggling to relate to the people around me and the feeling that I’d been underachieving for my whole life while not understanding how my concentration got so bad when I really wanted to excel.

I realise this is a big waffle and maybe off the topic of your original post, I just want you to know that it does get better. You are intelligent and unique and who cares if you aren’t good at small talk? You are more than that. You need to find a job that isn’t going to make you feel so shitty- it’s hard, I know. My best friend who is autistic would get a job in retail and quit the same day sometimes, she hates the cliques that form and hates being told off while others get away with far worse. She got a job working in a small independent shop selling crystals (an interest of hers) and thrived.

sorry for the massive post! Hope there’s something useful in there or that it helps you feel less alone in some way

3luckystars · 15/07/2024 01:49

If you put a flower in a dark box under the stairs it will wither up, but put it into the right environment, into the sun with water, and it will bloom.

Pursue a diagnosis, you only get one life. Keep it secret from your mom if you need to. You deserve happiness like everyone else.
Good be luck x

PomPomtheGreat · 15/07/2024 01:59

Definitely pursue a diagnosis. I'd be highly surprised if you didn't get one given what you've described here. But be very careful of sharing your future life with someone who will dismiss this and tell you just to "get on with it."

That's a huge red flag for your future happiness.

biscuitandcake · 15/07/2024 02:02

My deep secret I don't tell people is that the (well paid professional ) job I currently do is much easier than the minimum wage waitressing job I used to have. There's an idea that thebetter paid a job is the harder it must be, therefore minimum wage jobs should be easy for anyone. But waitressing is a nightmare. It sounds like there were jobs you were good at, and things you are good at. You are young and still working stuff out. But being a bad waitress does not make you a failure. It means you shouldn't pursue a career as a waitress.

biscuitandcake · 15/07/2024 02:07

ThisTipsyQuoter · 15/07/2024 00:48

I also struggle to understand why my managers expect me to small-talk with my tables. They don't know me and I don't know them. Why do I need to ask if they are here for a special occasion or just for a catch-up? I don't care. I see it as a transaction, they are paying for a service - for me to take their food order, bring them their food, fix any issues if needed and then clear their table. They are there to chat amongst themselves, not a random waitress.

See, if this was France this would not be a problem. Your bad luck you are trying to be a waitress in England where aloofness is not considered OK. You could try putting on a French accent next time (don't literally do this. But it would be funny).

HolyPeaches · 15/07/2024 02:16

I have a weird ability to smash interviews and really impress the interviewer, and then by the end of my first month they are wondering what the fuck happened

Wow, this resonated so much with me @ThisTipsyQuoter. Sending you a massive hug, sorry to see that you’re feeling so shit💐

I too feel like I have the same weird ability to smash interviews. I have always been offered jobs as I can turn on a switch and become this ultra confident and savvy person. However, I do believe this is me masking.

I have a diagnosis of GAD but believe I could also be ADHD or have autism.

My first job at 17 was in a restaurant, and although I stayed there for 3 years I was a mess. Would get customers orders wrong. Get in a mega panic when the restaurant was busy. Lose my notepad which had peoples orders on. Lose cash. Drop things. Slip, trip, bang into people. God knows how I kept that job 🤣 I only left as I was moving away to university.

I also hyperfixate on things and then lose interest. During lockdown I decided I wanted to be an artist as I enjoyed art at school. Spent hundreds and hundreds of pounds on paints, brushes, easels, canvases the whole lot. Did one painting and got bored. All my art stuff is sat in a cupboard collecting dust now. Same with fitness. I was determined to get fit and go to all these gym and running groups. Same again, spent hundreds (if not a thousand) pounds on nice gym gear, trainers, water bottles, accessories etc to just lose motivation and stop.

I’m 30 now. Work for the NHS (admin/corporate) and hate it. I’m planning my exit, but in a pickle as I don’t know what I want to do. Where I want to go. It’s an awful feeling.

A couple of weeks after starting my corporate job i remember feeling so overwhelmed with emotion. I was sat crying at my desk and remember my line manager just looking at me with horror and confusion. I felt a massive case of imposter syndrome. Like I was shit at everything and that I didn’t belong. I hate small talk. I hate work events. I went home on an evening and just went straight to bed as I was so emotionally drained.

Sorry for the life story but just wanted to say please don’t fret. You are absolutely not alone in this. You are so young and I promise you things will get better for you. I keep telling myself I need to see my GP about this so reading your thread has inspired me to do it!

Xxx

ileftmypotatointheovenallnight · 15/07/2024 02:54

ThisTipsyQuoter · 14/07/2024 23:20

I’m writing this in tears, I want to just end it all. I am 21 and have just been told today, 6 weeks into a cafe waitressing job that I’m unlikely to survive my probation period with them. Got quite upset and sought comfort from my partner when I got home who instead got frustrated and said he doesn’t see how we’ll manage our plans for the future (kids, saving a house deposit) if I can’t even hold down a basic minimum wage job, and he has a fair point.

I have always been like this, I feel like there is something wrong with me. I try to run away from my problems but I’ve realised the problem is with me. As a child, I had an autism assessment (which found me to be neurotypical) by my pre-school as I had selective mutism. I was perfectly fine, chatty and happy at home with my parents - I came from a stable family. But I’d go into pre-school and was 100% mute. I can’t remember why I was like this or what my thought process was, and that’s highly frustrating. This continued until the age of 7 where I began to whisper to other children, and by the end of Year 6 I was fully verbal and had a lovely group of friends. I was always very much into imaginative play up until the age of 10/11, which I feel I should have grown out of by then.

Starting high school was traumatic for me, I lasted a month. I couldn’t cope. I kept losing my timetable, planner, P.E kit. I couldn’t make sense of the layout of the building or homework. I would become incredibly overwhelmed at lunch time with kids bustling through the corridors. I had some sort of nervous breakdown that terrified my poor mum so much that she withdrew me from school to home educate me as she genuinely thought I was going to kill myself if forced to go, and she was probably right.

Home education was okay for me, my mum found a lovely tutor who did group sessions of 5 or 6 kids who also couldn’t cope with school and we had lessons at the local community centre. I did my GCSE’s with her and smashed them, I was able to be very academic in the right environment. I did an access course at college (this was the height of Covid so there was no social aspect, it was all online) and smashed it, and I have just finished my first year of a bachelor’s degree in an allied health profession. I have smashed all of my assignments, but I haven’t made a single friend or even had a proper conversation with any of my peers. I try but I stumble over my words and I find it genuinely exhausting.

I’m also losing my motivation for my degree. I remember I had a phase of really wanting to work in the NHS/Healthcare, and it became somewhat of an obsession. I watched so many dramas or documentaries about working in one specific profession and did so much research and I thought “this must be my niche!”. But then a few weeks into uni I just didn’t give a shit anymore and I’ve struggled to get back that initial feeling of euphoria. I passed placements in first year by the skin of my teeth, they said they felt I wasn’t engaging and didn’t show enough interest in the subject. I lied to my partner and said I’d had brilliant feedback from placements, because I’m so mortified by the reality. He was so proud of me and I don’t deserve it. I can’t see how I’ll pass next placement, so uni is probably fucked. I’ve had other fleeting obsessions before, in my teen years it was a character from a TV show. I also desperately want a baby, but I think that's a hormonal thing rather than an autism/ADHD thing and I am managing to keep it under control.

Now, onto jobs. My first job was waitressing but this was the height of Covid when it was dead, I was barely there and then quit a few months in because the commute home at night was a bit dodgy and I had a traumatic incident with a drunken customer. I then moved onto a bartender job. This was a small Italian restaurant where they only had one bartender on at a time and I thrived, I had my own little “station” to manage as I pleased without other staff members hovering. I am quite clumsy and dropped trays often but I was so good at the general management of the bar that the owners loved me, and this really built up my confidence.

My positive feedback in that job helped me decide I wanted try working abroad for a while, and I used an agency to land me a hotel front desk job in a country I was fascinated with, and accommodation was included. I got a 2 year visa. They sacked me after 3 months. My probation failure meeting discussed how I was “awkward and robotic” and “struggled to speak to guests”. This mentally destroyed me, I felt so attacked and not like a normal human being. My manager also said that I “confuse the hell out of everybody” and that I “appear to have a lot of hidden anger”. I was so confused, I don’t have a combative personality and I like to think I am kind and caring, so this was heartbreaking.

I flew home and didn’t leave my bed for a few months. I then got a job at a phone shop and that was actually fine for me, sitting at a computer suited me and I worked with 2 blokes who were very relaxed and not overly chatty. We had a laugh from time to time but I was mostly left to my own devices and it was lovely, I also was great at the actual work. I left as I was starting the get the interest in healthcare at this point and wanted some more relevant experience.

This is when I became a support worker for autistic, deaf and/or blind children, and I was wonderful at bonding with the children and understanding their needs, they really took to me. But I didn’t cope on one-to-one outings with the children. I would leave their lunchboxes on the bus, or forget their medication schedules and panic, mix up the details in their care plans etc. I knew that this was absolutely not on and I knew that my clumsiness was actively endangering the children, so I did the responsible thing of resigning. I knew I had to quit when my poor manager had to spend her evening trying to find a child’s backpack that I had left in McDonald’s, as it had essential medication in. I fucking hated myself.

Finally, my most recent job that I started 6 weeks ago is a waitressing role in a cafe. I have just moved in with my partner of a year and moved an hour away. I’ve coped with the move and new town okay, but I’m struggling with the job. I have a weird ability to smash interviews and really impress the interviewer, and then by the end of my first month they are wondering what the fuck happened. I think I can mask whatever is wrong with me for short periods but then it comes out eventually. I smashed the first 2 weeks of this waitressing job and was told I was excelling and that I had the potential to move up to supervisor in a few months, but now I’m really struggling to keep up with my tables and remember who needs to pay, who’s ordered what etc. I had a table with a peanut allergy come in the other week and I didn’t trust myself at all, I had to ask a manager to do it which isn’t a good look. I’m 21 and they have 16 year olds there who manage the job fine. All my managers talk to me like a child and I think they find me quite weird. I was sat waiting for my lift after finishing my shift the other day and one of my managers kept staring at me and she looked utterly baffled but never approached me. It’s like I bewilder people. They discussed in the probation meeting today that they don’t think I’m coping and that I may not be right for the team but they said they won’t decide fully until the end of my probation, but I’m quite clearly done for.

I have been in bits ever since, it’s a basic fucking waitressing job, 16 year olds can and do work this job and are fine. I think I’d work best in a job where I’m left to my own devices to get things done, rather than in a team where I really struggle with understanding the dynamics, politics etc - but I don’t know what jobs would have this structure. Ideally something where I'm left to work on a project independently then report to a manager weekly sounds bliss to me, but those jobs typically require degrees and experience.

I genuinely feel like I have some sort of brain damage sometimes. I’m starting to think I must have ADHD or autism but I’m scared to pursue the diagnosis.
As for seeking a diagnosis, my partner is from an Eastern European country when everybody is expected to just get on with it and not dwell on anything or seek a diagnosis, and I think if I told him I wanted to pursue a diagnosis he’d really struggle to get his head around it. I also think my mum would be in denial and would give me a hard time, my older brother has autism and she always says she’s glad she has a neurotypical daughter to help with his care in the future. I feel so alone, as I sit here tonight I feel like killing myself. I can’t cope with adult life at all. Please somebody reply I desperately need support I’m in floods of tears

I have inattentive ADHD and probably autistic.

I think maybe you are being pushed too quickly. This happened to me multiple times throughout my education and work life. Spend longer getting the basics right and working out your next move. Don't let it be thrust on you. I've been doing great in jobs then given promotions and it's all unravelled so quickly. Whereas I've seen people play it much slower and somehow get ahead.

Also the restaurant business can be cliquey with power trip supervisors who expect young female waitresses to fawn over them.

I did a social sciences degree and eventually got a job that revolves around writing, I am a bid writer. I've stuck with it for 10 years.