DIscovering me

On the 1st March 2025, I was officially diagnosed with ADHD. I was 53 and 3 weeks old.

I knew I was, deep down, but there was still doubt. I self diagnosed a few years ago when we were going through diagnoses with our children, but I didn’t tell anyone that I thought I was for ages, as I felt like a fraud. I was jumping on their bandwagon. I couldn’t have ADHD as I was a woman in my 40s. I was just a bit scatty, very messy, had lots of hobbies that I’d started and then got distracted, often felt like I didn’t belong, and the fact that I left everything until the deadline panic hit was because I was lazy.

In January 2024, inspired by a friend who had been diagnosed as an adult and had found it liberating, I spoke to my GP and then the practice mental health nurse, and using NHS ‘Right to Choose’ I was referred to Psychiatry UK and put on their waiting list (I wrote about this last year, to read the post click here). Just over 13 months after my appointment with the nurse, I had my assessment online.

I didn’t know what to expect, which sounds still as, at his request, I sat in with our youngest when he had his assessment. I was really nervous. The doctor was nice, tried to put me at ease, and then he started asking questions. Some of my answers surprised me – one was about how I did at school and in later education. I can’t fail, and I won’t fail. This isn’t because I’m a genius, it’s because I can’t. If I think I’m going to fail, I quit. And if I do a course, I have to do my absolute best and come as close to the top of the class as I can. If I can’t do well, I won’t do. The doctor seemed very interested in that!

Another question I remember clearly was what would I do if all the things on my to do list were completed. If I woke up tomorrow without any spinning plates (my words here, not his), without anything I wanted or needed to do, how would I feel.

I panicked.

I could not (and cannot) imagine having nothing to do.

I must have looked terrified as I stuttered ‘I don’t know. I have no idea. I can’t begin to imagine what that would be like’ as he told me not to worry and we’d move onto another question.

At the end of the assessment, he told me that there is no doubt whatsoever, I have ADHD. The assessment ended, I told my family, and then I went and curled up on my bed, and I cried.

I cried for the 14 year old me who watched the popular girls at school in awe, not knowing how to be like that. I cried for the younger me who always felt like an outsider. I cried for the me who couldn’t get her written work to match her classroom knowledge. I cried for me now, only just beginning to understand that I was never broken, I wasn’t an alien, and I was always enough.

Eight weeks on, and I’m still doing lots of self-reflection. I’m now seeing where I have masked and camouflaged, and I’m still not entirely sure how I can free myself of masking – and I’m pretty sure I will always camouflage and mirror, especially in social situations.

I don’t necessarily wish I’d gone for diagnosis earlier as I am happy with where I am and who I am, and even if I did regret, it wouldn’t change anything. However, I wish I could go back and hug my younger self and tell me it will all be ok. I also wish I could go back to when our children were little and realise that the behaviour I saw as normal wasn’t normal for everyone. It’s hard to see atypical behaviour when in your world it’s typical. But I didn’t know then, and I have to forgive myself.

This brings me to getting a little political. In a week when RFK Jr has talked so negatively about autism in the US, and Farage as spoken about over diagnosis in the UK, it’s important to remember that there hasn’t been a huge increase in neurodivergent conditions, we’re just beginning to see them. When I was at school in the 1980s, nobody talked about ADHD, and it definitely wasn’t something that would affect an academic, well-behaved girl, so I was missed. There is a meme on social media saying that before 1930, nobody knew about Pluto – but it was still there! It didn’t suddenly appear, it just hadn’t been seen or discovered. It’s the same with ND conditions. And as they usually have a genetic link, quite often a child is diagnosed, and then the parent(s) have a lightbulb moment, and also get assessed – and then you look at other members of the family who were seen as being a bit ‘quirky’, and suddenly it all makes sense.

ADHD, Autism and other ND conditions are not diseases, they are not caused by vaccines, they are not caused by chemtrails or anything else like that. They are a different way of thinking, being and processing. We are different, not less. We have been here since our ancestors came out of Africa, and probably before that. We’re just not hiding any more.