Part 0: System Overview

A condensed map of what I found — and how everything finally made sense.

Read my full discovery adventure, starting with the Part 1 (of 4).

Briefly Explained

I realised that contrast was present everywhere in my life and found it intriguing. Then, I understood that a lack of contrast was unsettling, and it extended beyond just visuals. I saw this as a “sensory difference, ” which served as my entry point to understanding Autism Spectrum Disorder.

From Unnamed Glitches to Mapped Patterns

A dental discomfort triggered an unexpected introspective journey. What began as a quest to understand an irrational anxiety evolved into a full system analysis of my behaviour, perception, and cognitive responses. Using a self-led, iterative method based on holistic pattern recognition and novel connections, I surfaced the following core findings:

  • Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD) and ADHD best explain the layered, lifelong patterns I had previously interpreted as quirks or personal failures.
  • The traits are lifelong, consistent, and explain both my strengths (systems thinking, perception, independence) and my challenges (overwhelm, executive dysfunction, sensory issues).
  • I uncovered a range of context-sensitive traits, shaped by internal energy, stress levels, and environment — not contradictions, but a dynamic, interacting system.

I now identify as a self-recognised autistic and ADHD individual, and I’m pursuing formal diagnosis to clarify clinical boundaries and support options.


Major Traits and Discovered-Later Patterns

  • Extensive Masking: I appeared easygoing while suppressing overwhelm and emotional responses. This also applied inwardly, hiding my own distress from myself.
  • Alexithymia: I often couldn’t name or recognise emotions, especially under stress. Emotional insight developed through logical deduction and retrospective analysis.
  • Fawning (Social and Internal): Long-standing habit of people-pleasing and conflict avoidance, externally toward others and internally through suppression of my own needs.
  • Hyperindependence & Hypervigilance: Adapted to stress by relying solely on myself and maintaining full control over situations, often without recognising the cost.
  • Dyspraxia: Hidden but significant motor planning and coordination challenges, becomes noticeable with multitasking physical actions.
  • Executive Dysfunction: Difficulty initiating, sequencing, and completing small tasks; paradoxically coexisting with advanced problem-solving skills in complex domains.
  • Stealth Dyslexia: Delayed or nonlinear reading and writing processes, with strengths in abstract thinking, memory through patterns, and spatial association.
  • Complex PTSD: Rooted in prolonged sensory overload, chronic emotional suppression, and lifelong mismatch with social norms and environments.
  • Sensory Processing Differences: Acute sensitivity to contrast, noise, smell, touch, and light fluctuations. Often unnoticed by others, but deeply regulating my environment and focus.
  • Misophonia: Specific auditory triggers (e.g. honking) provoke panic responses, traceable to unresolved trauma and sensory defensiveness.

The Process

  • Built a multidimensional map of my internal world using self-observation, retroactive insight, and external references.
  • Each new insight recursively unlocked previously inaccessible memories — including forgotten meltdowns and shutdowns.
  • Online resources (screeners, videos, podcasts) provided vocabulary and external validation, accelerating the process.
  • Conversations with close relations confirmed and reinforced my conclusions — many had noticed traits long before I had.

Traits in Practice

AreaExpression
AttentionIntense hyperfocus or complete disengagement. Motivated by curiosity, not importance.
MemoryPattern-linked and emotional; weak for sequences or arbitrary data.
CommunicationIrregular in writing; situational challenges in speech, especially under pressure.
SocialOne-on-one: comfortable. Groups: observer role. Masking often drains energy.
Body RegulationReliant on rituals (lighting, blankets, movement). Internal state inferred via disruptions.
LearningNonlinear. Fast assimilation once patterns are seen. Poor response to step-by-step methods.
Crisis HandlingCalm in emergencies. Overwhelmed by multi-tasking or ambiguous pressure.
DrivingFailed due to sensory, coordination, emotional, and executive overload (reframed as a incompatibility).
WorkExcelled in logic-heavy roles; failed in socially-vague or executive-heavy roles. Prefer part-time autonomy.

What I Needed to Know

  1. I’m not broken. I was running a different OS without the manual.
  2. Contradictions had context. Rigidity and flexibility coexisted depending on stress and clarity.
  3. My strengths aren’t random. They’re features of the same neurotype.
  4. Some traits are adaptations. They once protected me, but no longer serve the life I want.
  5. Diagnosis is a tool, not a label. I’m seeking it for clarity, protection, and future-proofing.

Where I Stand

  • Status: Self-identified; preparing for formal diagnostic evaluation.
  • Goal: Build a sustainable, ND-friendly lifestyle and career strategy.
  • Next Steps: Diagnostic clarification, continued executive support, career shaping based on sustainable energy loops.
  • Values: Ethics, fairness, structure, curiosity, compassion.