ADHD Explained - Navigating the Neurodivergent Landscape:...
Navigating the Neurodivergent Landscape: Understanding ADHD, Autism, and the Unique World of AuDHD
The image presented offers a concise yet incredibly insightful comparative look at ADHD, Autism,...
ADHD Explained - Not Enough People Talk About the Grief of...
Not Enough People Talk About the Grief of Realizing Your Diagnosis
There’s this moment — quiet, heavy, almost sacred — when the label finally lands. ADHD. Autism. BPD. Depression. Whatever it is....
ADHD Explained - Understanding AuDHD: When Autism and ADHD...
Understanding AuDHD: When Autism and ADHD Coexist
In recent years, more people have begun to understand that neurodivergence isn’t always one clear-cut diagnosis. One of the most complex — and often...
Not Neurotypical™ (Neurodivergent); posting personal experiences on Mental Health and AuDHD, and sharing other peoples’ experiences found online; leaning towards Late Diagnosed AuDHD.
Graham was Late Diagnosed (53) with: Autism & ADHD (AuDHD), & PTSD Trauma, after struggling with Clinical Depression, and Acute Social Anxiety, since his late teens. Graham’s Neurodivergent journey begins
Autism is very misunderstood. by @autisticadhdco(Autistic x ADHD.Co) | Twitter Thread Reader
Autism is very misunderstood.
Not just by the general population, but even by some "professionals"
It’s not one thing.
It’s not always obvious.
And it’s not a flaw.
Here’s what most people don’t know about Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD) and why it matters 🧵
Creating Autistic Suffering: The AuDHD Burnout to Psychosis Cycle- A deeper look
This article was co-authored by Tanya Adkin and David Gray-Hammond Monotropism is a theory of autism. It is used interchangeably as a theory and also a trait that describes a style of attention. It suggests that Autistic people tend to have singular but highly detailed tunnels of attention, as opposed to spreading their attentional resources
Lately, I have been particularly struck by the writings of those who are autistic. They may have great difficulty being understood in the every-day world among their family, acquaintances, and fellow students or coworkers, but many seem to have little difficulty recording their emotions in text. In this medium, they share brilliantly the pain of their isolation among fellow beings that do not and likely never will understand them. They reveal their suffering in words that cannot be ignored. These are intelligent people whose very human writings often shine with emotion and understanding.
Part of my autistic experience is that I am often told that I project a calm aura and have a calming presence - even at times when I do not feel calm myself.— Callum Stephen (He/Him) (@AutisticCallum_) March 5, 2025
Part of my autistic experience is that I am often told that I project a calm aura and have a calming presence - even at times when I do not feel calm myself.