A letter to my fellow neurodivergents...

I鈥檓 sorry if you鈥檝e grown up hearing that you鈥檙e not doing your best, that you鈥檙e just not trying hard enough. I鈥檓 sorry if you鈥檝e grown up teaching yourself that you had to push through discomfort only to realise you still can鈥檛 do all those things your peers could. I鈥檓 sorry if you grew up knowing you were so different from everyone around you, yet you weren鈥檛 cared for like you should have been.

There鈥檚 this belief among people like us 鈥 people who are autistic, dyslexic, have ADHD,聽OCD or any of the other neurodivergencies 鈥 that we have this 鈥楤etter鈥 that we鈥檙e just not achieving. I grew up with undiagnosed ADHD and autism, only getting a diagnosis for both in my early twenties.

I imagine that I, like a lot of you, have spent my whole life being told that I鈥檓 not doing my best, that I could just achieve more, that I could do more, that I could be more if I just tried harder and applied myself better. I grew up convinced that there was this mysterious, just-out-of-reach 鈥楤est鈥 that I just had to achieve, and that all of the work I had done and successes I had achieved thus far have been, well, very average.

My whole life, I鈥檝e been convinced that I could do anything I set my mind to if I just pushed myself harder, and if I didn鈥檛 achieve it鈥ell that鈥檚 just because I鈥檝e been lazy or lost focus or simply because I鈥檓 just not good enough. I鈥檝e been convinced that if I just put my mind to it, then I would be able to find all of life鈥檚 answers, I could cure cancer, I could achieve greatness.

But the problem, of course, is that I鈥檓 twenty-two years old, I鈥檝e been at university for five years now and I鈥檝e not achieved that greatness or reached that 鈥楤est鈥 that I鈥檓 so sure I have. Frankly, I鈥檓 still trying to work out what 鈥榶ou鈥檙e the apple of my eye鈥 means and why it鈥檚 a compliment (that鈥檚 a joke for my fellow autistics that have gone through the diagnostic process).

鈥楤est鈥 is so far away from where I am right now, yet I鈥檓 entirely convinced that if I tried harder and was better, then I would finally go through metamorphosis into a Spectacular Human and there鈥檇 be Nobel鈥檚 in my right hand and Oscars in my left, discoveries accredited to me and people begging for interviews.

And so I, like lots of you, have been struggling to accept myself as a person because how could I possibly be worthy of anything when I can鈥檛 even sit still or stop fidgeting or handle small talk for long enough to truly achieve?

Lots of us who are neurodivergent place such a substantial amount of worth on ourselves because we know intrinsically that we鈥檙e simply not trying hard enough because that鈥檚 all anyone has ever told us. And so, if you ended up in therapy at any point, you may have had similar conversations to me where your psychologist/counsellor tells you that most people don鈥檛 put that amount of pressure on themselves to achieve, they already know that they can do their best. But the problem is, you and I aren鈥檛 normal people, and we know this 鈥 we have this 鈥楤est鈥 that鈥檚 just out of reach that they don鈥檛 have.

I鈥檝e struggled with this my whole life and this innate sense of failure has been the catalyst for many terrible spirals and I have had to come to terms with a few things that I thought might be worth sharing.听

I鈥檝e spent a not inconsiderable amount of time being so sure that I can do quite literally anything, but I鈥檓 somehow choosing not to; that I鈥檓 somehow choosing to not cure cancer, which isn鈥檛 even slightly true. The thought spirals in my head that I can and I should but I鈥檓 not good enough because I simply 飞辞苍鈥檛 鈥 which just further convinces my own brain that not reaching 鈥楤est鈥 is a choice. Because if I can do all of these amazing things, what am I not doing well enough?

Truth is, I can鈥檛.听

This 鈥楤est鈥 that my family and my teachers told me I wasn鈥檛 working hard enough to achieve doesn鈥檛 exist, at least not for me. Are there times when I could have done better or achieved more and actively chose not to? Oh absolutely. But I am not actively choosing to fail classes or get distracted or struggle with conversation, I鈥檓 not actively choosing to avoid successes that are Just Out Of Reach. I simply cannot do these things.

And oh boy did that realisation make me angry. 鈥淲hat do you mean I can鈥檛 do everything? What do you mean I鈥檓 not good enough?鈥 I would ask myself. But that鈥檚 not the point. I鈥檓 more than good enough and so are you. 鈥楤est鈥 is different for everyone, and it鈥檚 going to change throughout your life depending on your circumstances. At age twelve, I could devour upwards of twenty books in a two-week school break and now I can do maybe one or two. I know people who could function everyday at university a few years ago but are really struggling now and that is perfectly fine.听

It鈥檚 okay if you can鈥檛 do things. It鈥檚 okay if you鈥檙e never able to use verbal communication, it鈥檚 okay if you鈥檙e never able to finish university, it鈥檚 okay if all you can do is survive your days. It鈥檚 okay if you don鈥檛 reach your family鈥檚 expectations of you, it鈥檚 okay if you don鈥檛 reach your own expectations of yourself.听

I鈥檓 sorry if you grew up convinced that you鈥檙e at fault for any and all reasons why you don鈥檛 Do Those Things, and I鈥檓 sorry if there was so little compassion and understanding available to you. I鈥檓 sorry especially if you - like me -聽have placed all of your self-worth on each thing you do that is closer to the hypothetical 鈥楤est鈥.听

You are more than what everyone says you can achieve if you just worked harder and were better. You鈥檙e enough as you are, you are not 鈥榯oo much鈥 and you are always, always doing your best.

Tagged in autism, ADHD, neurodivergent, self-discovery, self-love, What messes with your head