Shutdowns| Purple Ella
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- Äas pĆidĂĄn 14. 03. 2019
- Ros and I are talking about our experiences of shutdowns. How they feel, why they happen and how to embrace a lifestyle which supports the autistic brain. More below
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A little bit about me:
Hi I'm Purple Ella and my family is an autism family with three out of five of us on the autistic spectrum. So life can be a challenge but also a lot of fun.
Helpful links
The National Autistic Society - autism.org.uk
Hypermobility Syndromes Association - hypermobility.org
Ever since I got my diagnosis, I started realizing how many "panic attacks" were actually shutdowns and/or meltdowns
Same
The worst I think with shutdowns is other people trying to help. Like, they try talking to you, but you can't talk back, so they start hugging you, which is only making it worse, and you are unable to tell them to stop and just leave you alone.
i had a panic attack (well, what I'm now realizing is a shutdown) trying to put in contacts for the first time at the eye doctor's, no idea why. the entire office swarmed the table to give me tips and having like 3 people stand in front of me and spread their eyelids made me have to quit and go home. i hate this kind of stuff so much. not because it's their fault, I just feel like the jerk for cracking even worse under their best efforts
Im autistic and whenever I have my shutdowns they just keep interacting with me which makes me feel worse and my shutdowns last longer and it gets too much I start to cry cuz the shutdown just ends itself
I go through the same with others... I've told family when I'm back to myself... Please , just throw me a pillow and leave....it will end much sooner....if they don't leave , it can last hours and I think I'm going to die...
Usually for me cuddling with my girlfriend and crying helps quite a bit
I donât want to talk but donât want to be alone either
Thank you for this video. I am a 44 year old man and I am just realizing that I am Autistic. This is may be the first time in my life I've felt like I'm not alone.
I'm in a similar situation. Learning about autism has made it so much easier to understand my problems. Things make a lot more sense now, and it's such a relief!
I'm a 53 year old man and have just today started researching autism and I've spent the last 8 hours going 'oh my god' that's what I do, that's me. Before today I just termed myself as a bit of a social cripple and accepted my uneasiness around normal activities, situations and people. You beat me to it by 9 years, good going Mr Bond. I wish you all the best in taking your next steps. When you discover where that step is, do tell.
I always used to think depression was coming back, now I know better. Yes especially the trying to entertain everyone
Holy heck! You've just given me insights into another type of shutdown that i have. I go into periods where i just can't communicate and almost panic when people come up to me to try to engage. People get really angry about me not being able to engage with them.
when i look back, i think high school was just one big long shutdown
I swear this was me
Blocking out the system đđđ„
Ohhh yes ...
@@lilwinged5291 feels good to know that at least Iâm not the only one lol
You just made me realize that having romantic relationships put me in permanent shutdowns. I see them talk but I can't grasp what is being said. And when I do, I tend to forget what they said. Then I get all kinds of resentments like 'you're not listening!' In the end I always end up breaking up with them because I don't feel like I'm understood or respected. Sigh.
I have found that doing child's pose and putting my head on the floor, like curling into a kind of a ball for awhile helps me reset after overwhelm. It's almost like a nap.or meditation state and can be rejuvenating.
Basically grounding đ
I was diagnosed ASD about 4 years ago ( and ADHD/Dyslexic). I'm still in the process of recognizing autistic behaviors that I used to dismiss or cover with unsubstantiated reasons. It is hard know what is what. I know we are all different, but when my traits do not match someone else's traits, I wonder if I'm really autistic. But there are so many traits that do match I believe the diagnosis was valid. It is fascinating to me how "blind" we are to our own traits. It took me 59 years before I realized I had autism.
Thatâs whatâs happening to me and I am 58 đđŒ
@@janewalker1907 Jane - you're about the age I was when I discovered my ASD. Its been a long hard path to our discovery. I'm still grateful I finally found this truth. That was almost 5 years ago for me. I'm still learning a lot about myself.. and I've, for the most part, accepted what I've found. I wish you a healthy, healing process on your ASD journey.. " Welcome Home!"
I'm 31 and just discovering more and more autistic symptoms within me which makes me think I should go get diagnosed. I have that "impostor" feeling as well.
Iâm just diagnosed at 51. Mixed emotions still. Happy, relieved, stressed, depressed. Iâm hoping to get leveled out in the emotional department. Iâm currently trying very hard to be kind to myself. I have a response for many things said here. But I just cannot go on about them right now. I too have always been the one making sure everything is perfect and fun for everyone, and I have been the entertainer, the joker, and have also wondered, âBut where am I ?â The retrospective as well as current discoveries about my life seem to never end. Iâm grateful for the Purple people and all of the other ASD community members on CZcams for giving of yourselves in the way that you do. It really does make it feel as if I am not alone.
There it is again - the feeling of "Oh, so that's what it is!". Thank you.
I have recently suffered a two week shutdown. I have been working from home during a high-stress project and found myself unable to respond to e-mails, or pick up the phone, and sat watching the meeting reminders come and go like someone locked into the back of a Black Cab where the driver had popped off for a bit. The engine was running, but I was staring into middle distance and dozing off whilst sitting at my desk, my leg jiggling so much that I ended up with an inflamed knee joint. A two week flinch, waiting for... I don't know. The universe to punish me for inaction? Thanks for working together to articulate a very human experience.
You must be self employed to be able to do that, right?
@@joeblow1942 Maybe. For most it doesn't make a difference, because no matter how important it is, a person in shutdown can't just "make" themselves do something. And yes, that can make it very hard to keep a job that's not built to accommodate that.
I don't have any helpful suggestions, but I *am* very grateful for this video, because now that I know shutdowns exist, I understand myself a LOT better. I'm that person who needs to be alone a lot because I compulsively "manage" everything for everybody. I knew it wasn't good, but I didn't know *how much* stress it causes.
melissa thompson I now know when a shutdown is imminent but it comes at such inconvenient times. I struggle with the guilt of this. Like Ros says, Iâm so busy making sure everyone is ok and Iâm like hey where am I?!
Yes. Yes. Yes. !
I've felt like this ever since the beginning of quarintine till now I'm not sure shutdowns last for this long but it's what I feel especially brain fog it's so bad sometimes I cant even think a full sentence
I've been working really hard on university work whenever I felt like I was going to feel bad. It's been going on for a while and I think it just created a shutdown. I've been sitting there for a few hours watching videos and not having ANY emotional response to them. It doesn't feel like myself. Advice from me at this moment is just PLEASE ALLOW TIME TO REST. I think I rest when I don't work for 10 minutes or when I shower or sleep, but that's not rest. Rest is being in a calm place doing something that doesn't activates this spirral in my brain.
I feel like I'm just surviving. My job in public education, my apartment life, the constant barrage of noise and constantly having to adjust on a dime when, sometimes, I just can't. I'm trying to pay off school loans and this and that, I feel like I have little free choice. I don't make enough money to just move, rent and housing prices and land prices are skyrocketing, and I come home and put ear plugs in and crash nearly daily. Trying to find ways to adjust, but tired of being made to feel I'm just not pushing myself hard enough.
"Words. In an order that makes sense."
I haven't heard others do this. My phrasing is "Words. It's something that's comes out of your mouth from your brains. They usually make sense. I don't have them."
HahaâŠâThis is really not great!â. Iâm the opposite - donât have whatâs typically described as meltdowns, but most definitely have shutdowns. And it is hard to describe what it feels like. If you have them, no description is necessary, if you donât, no description is adequate. Iâve been told that itâs disturbing and distressing to others nearby, so thatâs something to consider.
I agree, that when I find myself pushing through over and over for too long, shutdown is eminent. Keep doing this and burnout is eminent. Thatâs my experience. Even though alexithymia makes it difficult, itâs important for me to pay attention to the early signs. Prevention is the answer for me.
so this is what it's called...thank you ladies! You two have no idea how much this video has explained a lot of my life when I felt like something was wrong and thought I was broken!
Iâm not diagnosed, but Iâm beginning to really truly wonder....
My therapist (who I donât currently see) used to just say that Iâm the sort of person who goes into a vegetative state when depressed....hm
There is no movement, none...nothing...just me sitting on a blank slate, in a blank space....waiting for color and movement to begin again...
Quite often my shutdowns are the first step of going into meltdown where I at the end I become very agitated where I start shouting I want to go home. I call my shutdowns and meltdowns by calling them my Starfleet crises. I have never learned how to mask my feelings and emotions and never seen a need to do it. When people see me acting different than normal it is hard for them to understand I am not doing it on process which upsets them and makes me feel guilty and very misunderstood when I look like I am staring at them. I do not stare at people intentionally as I am processing my thoughts and processing their conversation at the same time as well as trying to concentrate and process on what their saying and questioning if I am making the right responses which leads to overload. This happens in shopping centres where I am also processing the persons conversation, my thoughts and sensory overload with background noisy conversations, crowds of people, too much information and artificial lightning. It's hard as an autistic adult of 55 as I only got autism at the age of 51 and it's hard to explain to siblings and relatives about my late diagnosis and to explain that I am not using my diagnosis as an excuse for my strange and off putting behaviour. My shutdowns and meltdowns have got worse as I got older as it is difficult for relatives to adjust to me and my diagnosis.
Everything you said is me ,
Omg everything you said is me I knew I wasn't the only one we be OK .I think ,
Lol
'Everything is good I am rechargeing, but I am not '
Relatable!
HI Ella,
I have been in a relationship with someone autistic (he just said a bit autistic, but little did i know) but behaved really strange like no contact for days and short replies, he never told me what actually happened and now i finally know it is called shutdowns... Thanks!
Okay, so I have now officially realized that I am crushing really hard on Ross.
I have a BPD dx but I can relate to this so much. I have found that stopping faking being ok has made me more stable overall in that I have far fewer big breakdowns now. I've learned to just be rude and walk out of groups when it's getting too much and go and have "quiet time" and say no to things that will be more difficult than enjoyable for me. I still have times though where, often after too much peopling, I will just find I'm sat, not doing anything, not even twitching my feet (I'm a fidgeter so that's odd!) like my entire brain & body has just switched off.
ME
OH MY GOD THANK YOU, i tried to politely tell my band mates i was getting frustrated re-recording a song over and over again and i had a meltdown. they started telling me i should have gotten up and left, i seriously didn't even know it was an option. guh.
Were you aware there is some evidence that some people diagnosed with BPD are actually autistic?
@@kellyn3347 I was not! Have you got any links? I'd be interested to read any research or anything.
@@Miss_Lexisaurus I just read it in the last week. It's related to people on the autism spectrum receiving other mental health diagnosis because there wasn't enough knowledge or research about testing for autism in adult women. I was so surprised!! I'll see if I can find a link and post it!
I call my "cerebral nausea", for it is how it feels.
You have no idea how much I needed to see this!!! I have NVLD & just came out of a several day shut down-Iâve always known that I needed this-but realizing this is a much needed recharge helps lift shame-I lived in shame for so long-itâs really sad to think about. I almost enjoy my shutdowns sometimes because I understand that itâs what I need-so I look at it from a self care perspective now.đŠ
Hi, I am still waiting for a NHS appointment for an autism assessment (18 months nearly waiting to be offered an appointment) but I have suffered shutdowns since my teens.
I get catastrophic shutdowns where I effectively lose consciousness briefly and then do not function well for up to a week when it is really bad, other times I get a untreatable migraines which mean I have to sleep for 18 hours. I definitely find information overload and masking effect it, I find that an academic conference will trigger one even if I take time for myself.
I have found that I have been able to cope better once I removed the hormonal triggers (I also have PMDD which courses me significant fluctuation in mood and ability to work including triggering shutdowns, thankfully I have got a specialist consultant for that who has put be on drugs which block my reproductive cycle completely allowing me to have stability). As a research student I can work form home a lot which helps since I can manage the stimulation levels more, but I have definitely found having a mental heath mentor useful in learning how to manage myself.
What I find helpful in reducing the chance of a full shutdown is doing colouring or sewing which keeps my hands busy, I can also find sucking chocolate helps (but I have to be careful not to binge as this can make matters worse later as it defers the problem). I have also found that being aware of the build up and getting away from triggers helps when this is possible, such as remote working for a week or so to avoid the triggers on my campus.
Thank you, both of you, for sharing so openly what it is like to live with your condition. I am impressed with how articulate and self-aware you are. It has given me, and hopefully many other non-autistic people out there, an insight into your world.
I'm gaining so much information about myself listening to you guys and it makes me understand myself much better
How many times have I watched this video? Not counting. Beneficial and enjoyable always. Thank you. Today's viewing take away? I agree with depression most likely not being the culprit in circumstances described so understandably by you two lovely ladies. Feeling the relaxation that comes with the satisfaction of validation after decades of invalidation. Gracias.
Yes, Ros especially, my shutdowns are exactly like this, and they happen all the time.
My brain is like an overloaded computer, and doesn't work anymore and I have a blue-screen-of-de.ath. Also, everything sensory feels traumatising and too much for me. I can't make decisions, can't do self-care, and can't communicate.
Need silence, solitude, bath and bed, and to disconnect from human time, and to just follow my own intuition. I also take brain holidays to cope.
Before I thought I might be autistic, I used to think I must be bi-polar. It was the only thing that fitted my weird decent from happy and positive to not coping with anything or anyone, barely functioning and not leaving my safe place for days and then only if I have to. Of course with 2 daughters we can't always get the rest we need when we need it. Thanks Ella and Ros xx
Fantastic for sharing. Iâve had this my whole life and never knew what it was. Itâs like someone is pulling the plug out of me.
I identify with Ros & her illustrations of what a Shutdown can be likened to ( The Computer analogy ) but I also know the necessity to keep going when you have the responsibility of children on the spectrum ( all 3 of mine are + ADHD ) and holding down an external job.
I work in the Healthcare sector and in the work Team ( All NT's although I suspect that 1 may be on the spectrum - my Spectrometer is pretty accurate! ) only 1 knows of my ASD the others just think I'm a bit "odd awkward & opinionated" . However in the adjoining office ( filled with at least 3 nurses ) there is 1 nurse who would clearly know when I was not my "usual self" and would ask me if I was okay? ( I get vertigo when I have shutdowns and severe tinnitus to mention a few symptoms ) one day I decided to disclose to this lovely nurse about ASD and my struggles at work and in life ( I broke down in tears ) she was so kind and empathic which in itself was validating and gave me a sense of not feeling so invisible and excluded. When I shutdown I have no expression on my face, I have a very monotonic voice and I often get blurred vision and hyper sensitive in all of my senses ( It even hurts to wear clothing )I "fade out" as in I cannot hear anything at times ( at work meetings which is very unhelpful ) and when I get Home I even have difficulty undressing myself. I collapse on my bed and cannot speak....
It's a dreadful feeling of disconnect from your body/other people and the world around you. I am blessed to have a Husband who recognises when I am in this state and helps me and gives me the time I need to recover without expecting anything from me. I really enjoy the discussions that you, Ella have with Ros as they resonate with me. Thank you for sharing your experiences and so glad that you have such great support around you. So glad that your Dog recovered ; D
I experienced something during a party once. I was already really freaked out about going to birthday party for two of her friends. When we got there my fiance went across the room and started talking and I had to keep my head above water on my own and a group of people that were new to me or that I haven't really spoken a lot too. And then host shortest a comparison picture of how much weight he lost compared to how he used to look. He was standing against a forested background, with a sweater on orange beard, dirty blonde hair. When I saw the picture it instantly reminded me of Rodger Wakefield from Outlander the series. But instead of saying that what came out of my mouth was, "you look Scottish". In which he proceeded to ask me if the reason I said he looked Scottish was because he looked fat, regarding the picture where he was bigger. I told him no it's because of the beard but he cut me off and was like no it's because I was fat there, and... I didn't hear what he said after that because I became paralyzed. There I was in a social situation with a group of people at his birthday paety, and he just interpreted my words as calling him fat. I couldn't move, I couldn't talk, I wanted to defend my thought but I didn't want what I said to be misinterpreted again. My reseaded into my own head and body or a few seconds. I couldn't hear, take in a visuals, to be honest I don't even remember what happened to the picture after that. The inability to clearly convey my thoughts coherently when I speak or write happens often, so I'm often tongue tied or have confusing sentences written down. If I try and ask questions in class the teacher often misunderstands what I'm trying to ask and answers something else. Even after trying to clarify what I mean they still don't understand, so when they asked me if I understand I just say yes because I feel like it's useless trying to continue to clarify something that makes complete sense to me but for some reason they can't understand. After situations like that I often rethink what I've said an try to think what did I say wrong I was speaking in plain English. How can I rephrase it for the 3rd time so I'm heard. And it's so frustrating that I dread social situations and people can't understand why I just would prefer to sit at home play with my colourful balls of yarn. If you gave me a 125 gallon tote filled with yarn balls completely mixed up like Christmas lights into one gigantic mess that would be a fantastic afternoon activity for me to try and take that whole thing apart. What would that be called selective mutism or shut down?
I find a lot of what youâve written to be highly relatable, and even though Iâm not an expert when similar things have happened to me Iâve labelled them as shutdowns and selective mutism.
No I can't even wrap my head around your story. Why would he say you think he is fat, when you were saying he looked Scottish. I don't understand the logic he used to come to that conclusion... But maybe that's why I suck at social interaction...
Sounds like me at every party I went to (reluctantly, in a panic).
Yes, it's really difficult when you are misinterpreted and then literally bullied for their misinterpretation of the situation. It's usually because they themselves have a problem in that particular area. Keep going, some people are insensitive and rude and they are the problem, not us as we really dislike intentionally hurting others xx
@@angelag303 xx
You guys are amazing...I can so relate to this video and that giving ourselves permission to be quiet when we need to is key....such helpful advice..huge gratitude!!! Also thanx for raising awareness of asc....it can educate neuro typicals to be more understanding and inclusive. I'm 60 next year and have always struggled in the workplace with selective (situational is a more appropriate word dont you think? ) mutism and shutdowns. Watching these kinds of videos on CZcams during lockdown has finally shed light on why it is that I have struggled so much throughout my life. I am going to emerge from 2020 being far kinder towards myself; also confident and proud to be part of this Awsum tribe I now recognise that I'm part of....Yay!! Thanx again đ
Shut down in work today (Iâm a waitress), and I couldnât talk or anything but all I wanted to do was shouted âI wanna go homeâ and crawl up in a ball đ„ș but obviously that isnât professional so I had to mask it and try not to cry try to breathe thru the panic attack then nap as soon as I got home đ
I used to just have the shutdown and I thought it was extreme exhaustion now I normally don't have shutdown unless I have a meltdown first. If too many people try to interact with me in shutdown I will go through meltdown again. Only really learning how to take care of myself to avoid shutdown now. It really does help to have someone there to support you and take care of all the other tasks so the person in shutdown can give their brain a break.
My bf whom I suspect is ASD has shut down for a month. I haven't seen him all this time, and we've barely texted or communicated. I can't take it anymore. If it was a week or so, ok. But a month? I have to live in limbo for a month? All he says is he wants to be alone .2 days ago, he said he missed me. I asked if he felt up to hanging out and watching a movie or something, he said "I'd like to." I said "Let me know when." And then he went silent again. Yet again saying he just wants to be alone. This isn't a relationship, I can't do it. I'm too lonely and I am tired of being in limbo. I tried. I really tried. I'm crying while I type this. :(
I just found you and you just described my life. Awaiting assessment. Canât leave the house right now. Hoping for better times. Thank you for your videos.
Looking back this explains what happened during a christmas celebration with my family where I had what I have called "bluescreen of death" all the sudden during it and stopped responding to everything and stopped taking things in. (It was very noisy and so many people talking and so much going on with all the nieces and nephews running around and screaming and creating chaos and all the adults talking and my brain just overloaded and crashed and took quite a bit to reboot and someone was talking to me when it happened and got angry that I shutdown.)
Awww , i also shutdown sometimes , hope you are feeling better now đ€ đ„°
I have a day like the one you described like once a week and I barely get by, but Iâm starting to realize that Iâm not lazy, Iâm not a bad person, I just really really struggle some days. Today is one of those days â€ïž
Yay! Now I have some information to inform my partner. I have shutdowns almost weekly (didnât know what this was until recently), he always asks me âwhatâs wrongâ, gets in a bad mood when I canât reply, thinks that itâs something heâs done, something that has just happened (âyou were fine before we ... so obviously thatâs the problem... & youâre just overreactingâ), I try to say itâs not that, Iâm fine just leave me alone to process my thoughts/feelings but he doesnât, he CANâT, he sees something is wrong & it needs to be fixed (which is really quite sweet of him) but it causes me to blow up & have a massive meltdown! It should be obvious that I canât process what heâs saying when Iâm covering my ears & shaking/rocking on the ground but heâs just so annoyed that I have âoverreactedâ again he canât stop yelling at me (I know heâs just crying out for an explanation because itâs emotionally draining on him when I just seemingly suddenly go all cold/distant/unresponsive), itâs such a vicious cycle. Then I feel so guilty I donât want to see anyone ever again in case it happens again. I do not possess the ability to identify my emotions, theyâre always intricately intertwined with various past, present & future events, & just the bright lighting in a restaurant can set it off, itâs really freaking hard to explain that.
I find when I'm in shutdown I can just about manage to cope using 1 syllable responses, but often will trip on my words. I need to completely retreat for a few hours with no interruption, sometimes more, I'm currently in bed after work doing exactly that!
I can relate on so many levels! Thank you for your honesty. Iâm in shutdown right now so finding thought process hard but Iâll come back at some point (under my purple supporter name) and write more đ
Yes...yes...& yes.... Only worse...I have shut downs then never want to surface...I think I disassociate.....dont feel real....acctually I been knowing it's coming... Even now it's hard to think....I don't have any support.... Am 66... My whole life feels wasted....only pray helps me endure.... Been on meds... Been in therapy....etc. Treated for everything except Autism till I was 61 when finally I got my Diagnosis.đ praying for those who suffer...đ
Thanks for making this video. I was recently diagnosed with ADHD at 44 and I've seen a huge overlap in symptoms of ASD, I assume this is because research is so far behind. I still don't know the difference and I definitely have ADHD. Anyway, I've started looking into ASD due to the overlap. This video helped me see that what I always referred to as being on the verge of panic, sometimes for days, and needing to stay in bed in the dark under the covers. I found talking close to impossible and was either stiff or limp. I also wasn't physically able to get myself home or leave where I was. This happened 3x's while driving and I had to call and get 2 people to pick me up because I couldn't drive my car home. I assumed since I was diagnosed with anxiety that this was just a severe prolonged panic attack.
Anyway, long story longer...there also seems to be a misconception that autistic people don't have the social skills to be out going, the life of the party or generally extroverted. So because this is me, I never considered autism. Thanks again for letting me know that this can be the personality of someone with ASD.
I didn't think about Autism or ADHD until I learned about masking.
To the few people I feel safe enough to unmask around I always explained that my extrovertion came from years of being incredibly shy when I was young, so I just pretended to be outgoing to hide the shyness and fit in better. I now think this is probably aform of masking. However, people who have ADHD are also known to mask. Are there differences I should look for? Would it even make a difference to get a diagnosis this late in life. There doesn't seem to be much support for ND adults.
Sorry that was sooo long. Thanks for taking the time to read thisđ I'd appreciate any input you have and understand that what you say is in no way a diagnosis. I'm just curious what you think... and if anyone else made it this far please comment your thoughts. I'm really interested in some thoughts from people with experience. đ
I know that anxiety is a common misdiagnosis for people with ASD
Thank you so much for explaining meltdowns & shutdowns & giving advice about them. It has helped me understand a lot more of why I do these things & I donât feel as bad about myself knowing & understanding. I have a very similar experience to you when I have meltdowns or when I shutdown. Itâs nice to know Iâm not the only person dealing with this, that I can/need to stop being so hard on myself, & Iâm learning that I need to stop pushing myself. Your videos are much appreciated by me, thank you again â€ïž
I sadly have both. It is embarrassing. When a shutdown happens I donât communicate with words. I point at whatever I want the other person to know. With making noises. I withdraw and canât hear whatâs going on. I find if the day is just to much I withdraw from reality. My meltdowns are like a tantrum. I pull on my hair bite my inner lips I hit my head or suck my hair or chew it. It drives me crazy.
Donât be embarrassed ! You have nothing to be embarrassed about ! A meltdown isnât a tantrum !
I came across a couple of your videos just today, and feel I found my Purple People! Thank you! But now I have so many questions! It seems that the doctors really don't understand that their "brand" of patients could actually have autism & still dys/function through life!
Omg! You lost a couple of family members and Cody almost died? I don't know how you do it and with 3 kids? I would be a wreck. My dog got attacked on May 5th of last year and we're still in recovery.
I think I developed shutdowns from being punished and shamed for meltdowns.
Thanks for this. I'm recently realising that I am on the spectrum, but struggled with not being able to identify with the "meltdown" descriptions I've heard. Shutdowns, however ... Yep. :)
You are so lucky to have these friends!! đ đ đ
When I experience what is calked shut downs . I feel
Like everything is just too much to handle. I often sleep, shower , listen/ watch nature vids , get out in nature to help pull through. It helps but the halo of intensity is still there until I see it through with a good round of crying ,asking God to help and just allowing my emotional trauma to be . Its hard though because it feels like it will never go away when its there . But it does with time , awareness & love. I am not clinically diagnosed yet but I know I am autistic ! I self- diagnosed myself this past year and what a relief that has been ! Now I am connecting & learning, researching & through that I feel much better about the way I am and how I act. Its not easy being in the world where everything is so commercial and denatured setups of living . I truly desire a quiet simple life in a A -line cabin By a nice lake. By a small town . But thats a dream i go to in my imagination right now . Perhaps there will be autistic communities that are the size of small towns run by autistics . We know what we need , where we need it and when! Conventional cities / towns are to crowded commercialized and loud !
Thank you for these videos, very helpful.Great to see Ros too!!
I've been wondering whether I have shutdowns, & this really struck a chord with me & I think I've concluded that I do. I have my ASD assessment later this month & your video about your assessment also helped me, so I just wanted to say thank you. It helps to be able to label these things which occasionally happen to you without you understanding that they're an actual thing & not just a weird quirk of yours.
i haven't been diagnosed yet but this literally explains perfectly the days i had to take off from my job working at kwik trip because every shift was overstimulation to the max. the lights were too bright, the people too loud as well as the cash registers and beeping and other noises of the store. i had to mask extremely hard and rehearse everything i said and would analyze conversations and decide what worked and what didn't. and then those days i needed off just felt like i was falling apart and couldn't keep going. it took so much energy and i was exhausted. and no one else could do anything to help i just wanted to be alone. sometimes with my bf i would go into non verbal episodes where i just couldn't communicate what i needed and him touching me or trying to hug me made it worse. or i'd get hella frustrated about something usually with myself and just feel so much rage inside i needed to scream or get it out somehow. but then it would only last so long and things would go back to normal, although i still would just feel exhausted. not being able to get proper sleep on top of that was very hard. just so many things and i'm just now realizing. good thing i have a therapy appt in 2 hours lmao
Some days my mind is immensely dark and I feel in advance that the risk of a meltdown/shutdown is extremely high. Unfortunately, they have often happened in social situation after I had first recognized the danger. It's not just that the risk of a shutdown is high, but I am already in a state where I have partly shut down, which mean, for instance that I can walk three kilometers to see a friend and when she doesn't answer my sms I walk home again. I am completely destructive in my mind. The world is not understandable.
Once I get a real shutdown, I am usually not fully aware about what I am doing. Sometimes I can hit a wall for instance, without being aware that I was hitting he wall if people around me react I may suddenly wake up as from a dream just having witnessed myself hitting a wall.
Yes i just now played this today and i relate to all of the parts about the theme of regulation and energy cycling - and those parts reminded me of how i was perceived, received and judged, and i faked it for survival, was invisible and was directly harmed. while there's proof and plenty of data and observation, i still dont have neither assessment, diagnosis or followthru i'm in such a resistant and backwards region. the medicine and sci news on ''autism'' and perhaps some related neuro conditions/disorders is recent.
Wow, your description of large social interactions described me PERFECTLY.... I'm so glad I found your videos, imma watch them ALLLLLL thank you thank you!!!
Its amazing your friends stayed to support you
Love this video! Recovering from a shutdown myself right now and I had to go to work so I decided to try not to mask as much. Not even sure what that feels or looks like for me as I've been masking my whole life! I just turned 40 three days ago! Self diagnosed only 3 or 4 months ago! Very helpful codeo and I love it when you two do videos together, great chemistry and I'm usually laughing at some point because I relate to it so much.
I've had a bit of a run watching your videos and this one has really chimed with me. Thank you both for sharing your experience which are so relatable and make so much sense. All the best.
Ooh, thatâs why I keep bumping into things and everything is too loud more than usual!
thank you for these tips i am applying them day by day to n taking notes i feel like maybe over time ill be better at understanding this and hopefully it help me with some one i really care alot about
I needed to watch this! Thank you! I'm the autistic mom of an autistic 7yo and a nearly 2yr that is also showing signs of being on the spectrum. This explains what I have been feeling so often in the past few years
totally, I have experienced this. i almost got fired because of it.
Yes Iâve had quite a few shutdowns, also a mum of 3 and when I notice Iâve found definitely resting then following a to do list for the next couple of days helps.
Thank you!! Excellent delivery you two. Iâve been experiencing these âoverloadâ events for most of my 57 years, and now I see itâs not just depression, etc. đ Still on the fence whether trying for a diagnosis is right for me. If I do have Autism Iâll be letting the world knowđ
Thank you for this video! So relatable! More vides like this please! đ
Thanks for sharing ... I think I may be currently in a several-week-long shutdown at the moment ... some interesting points made by you. I can totally relate to the idea that the way you feel now is the way you always feel ...
This video was so helpful for me to understand my partner who is on the spectrum. I used to feel so rejected whenever he needed time alone (completely alone without me) especially when we've just had a nice time together the days before his shutdown. But the way you explained the sensory overload helps me understand that it's not personal and that he just needs one day to recharge. Personally being an NT with anxious attachment style, being with a later in life diagnosed aspie has been a real learning and growing experience.
We are doing some home renovations and Iâm cycling between meltdowns and shutdowns. đđą. My 12 year old is also autistic and he has been the same. Just watching your videos does help so thank you. Realising that my brain just works differently and to give myself some slack. I also have some wonderful friends that I can offload on also. And Iâm masking biiiig time ( well trying too also) . Thank you for your videos. Iâm sure they are a huge life line for all us on the spectrum â€ïž
I never knew what was going on with me until recently but used to describe it as a body depression (my body starts to feel heavy), plus brain freeze. For me shut downs feel like my brain has a trap door and every social skill including the plans around what I'm doing it should be doing fall out leaving me blank. A mini shut down involves me temporarily losing my words (happens most days at one point or another) and feeling exhausted.
Thank you for your videos. Theyâre massively helping me understand my own brain so I can hopefully help others understand me
This is truely a great video. Thank you for sharing your valuable insights and experiences.
and small talk is a pain
Wow the party example really emphasized this for me. I am that sort of âperfect hostessâ making sure everyone is set and laughing, and then *boom* in a chair on my phone for the next hour and a half because I donât know what to do and have to shut down. Iâve had these my whole life and never realized what was going on!
I have always struggled with this and was never able to explain to others what is going on. Thank you so much for putting it into words!. I was just diagnosed a few months ago at 44 years old
Yes this happens to me to, I am now aware that if I am in the red ie mentally speeding up then I have to slow down much more with breaks or I will break đč
When iâm in shutdown I canât even comprehend what is happening at the time or know how to express my distress or overwhelm. For me it is worse than a meltdown
Thanks for this video soooo good you rock!
This is great information for now times..
I have shutdowns too. I didn't realize until now though. There's just periods of my life where I don't want to exist. That's the only thing going through my mind: "I don't want to exist." So I hide in my bed until I'm better because I really just need a recharge.
One day depression...OMG. thank you.
Watching your video through a tiny whole under a blanket (almost) all over my head,m in a fetal position, while revisiting the topic of Shutdowns and Meltdowns hit me in the gut real bad.
I have been learning about autism and me non stop in the past two months. And right now, you are describing what have been happening to me since yesterday. Something that happened so often since always ... Something I taught was ânormalâ at some point... I now have a word for it...
So many clues and proofs... Each of them pointing in the same direction in quite an obvious way... And this one being added to the lot... I have the same feeling towards meltdowns.... But I wonât go deeper tonight as it is already too much to process I think
I am in the autistic spectrum... dang! Iâm not sad, just under the shock as it answer so many plot holes of the story of my life....
Thanks for sharing ....
All the love x
(I deleted my previous comment par accident đ€Šââïž)
I've had this several times. The last time was after several days of not being able to do my routine. I final got to the day where I could do it (but was still overwhelmed from the previous days) and then I was asked to do 2 simple things by someone and that was the straw that broke the camel's back. I could hardly think or even comprehend what they were saying and I began feeling shakey and nauseous because I was trying to communicate but could not speak in full sentences. It took me 2 or 3 days to recover and feel better.
Other times I get where I can't talk because my mind is blank and I can barely move for being overwhelmed.
Both are stress related - feeling like I am given more than I can handle.
I am not diagnosed so no idea if this is a shutdown
I'm glad the dog is okay.
Walking around outside you know you are outside, but don't know who you are
Classical music walks in nature help
I very recently started in a housing program, and the first day they went through a mountain of paperwork with me of expectations and permissions, and I had to ask the person to stop before I fully lost the ability to understand her. Spent the rest of the day and night huddled in a strange bed in a new place just crying. I couldn't even for a coherent thought.
Thank you for sharing that's was very eye- opening đ I'm on the spectrum and I can't say I've had a Shutdown before, and I'm all grown- up, have experienced Selective Mutism though :)â€đđ xo
I can relate to aspects of information overload. I shut the world down for 10 years by stopping watching the news or popular culture. Life became too much for me. I still don't keep up with popular culture for its cheesiness. I used to keep up with everything before. I think I used to mask myself a lot to fit in and be in the know-how with society. It eventually became overwhelming to mask me anymore and I started to look for easier ways of living my life. During my shutdowns, I feel at peace like never before in my own world. I now just have smaller shutdowns when things in my community become overwhelming for me. Covid-19 was the trigger when society calmed down and I came out of my shell. As a result, I dress more sharply because I feel more confident and less fearful of people. I feel that in some psychological way they have gone through something similar that I have been going through all my life.
During my AUTISM shutdowns I goto quiet locations to recharge mind. I basically hide in nature. I also tend to eat more, as I feel like I'm running out of steam towards a burn-out. It's only natural to get more energy inside ones body thru food, especially if I feel low on energy. FEELING LOW ON ENERGY for me is like going towards my shutdown. It's similar to filling up a tank of gasoline in car. Autistic shutdowns for me feel like my car is starting to get low on gas (aka energy), so I eat. I believe autistic shutdowns get very confused by nuerotypicals with inappropriate hyper-violent behavior. Data? Scientific research? Thanks. Nuerotypicals confuse shutdowns/meltdowns with violence. In America autistics get shot by police due to shutdowns/meltdowns.
I have ASD and ADHD (diagnosed age 38 last year) I don't know how to recharge at all. I am only just getting my sleep under better control but it doesn't give me much relief as I generally have nightmares. I definitely need to work on finding out as my shutdowns are getting worse after usually spending months trying to keep going on adrenaline only!
When I was a child I used to disappear into books. If things were getting too much for me I'd open the door to that other world and walk through. Once I was in there I didn't hear or see anything outside of that book. My Mum used to complain that I wasn't listening to her and even when she'd yell to me to do something, I never heard her. I've no idea if that was a type of shutdown? I'd feel better after I emerged, better able to cope. I could get a similar effect by jumping on my bike and going to the river and just sitting watching the water go past.
That sounds more like hyperfocus, which when used correctly, is very useful, but there are risks as well.
I found this /super/ helpful! How do you cope when you're needing to shutdown but your partner is needing attention from you?
Unplugging phone, you don't want to talk to anyone! Its so tiring/struggle! When you get off wound up! When unplugged, you still need to relate to people, but you know that usually its a lost cause! Damned if you do damned if you don't! Too much emo. in a day, hypes me up, and yet I am so tired! Have you ever been too tired to talk/ think, but have the compulsion to still want to talk! Argh! I need transitioning techniques that work! I could keep talking on this, but will close!đđđ€đ„
I used to come home from work every day and have to sleep for an hour before I could talk to anyone. It is exhausting trying to be funny and hold interesting conversations with people