Whether you're questioning, waiting, newly diagnosed, or supporting someone you love — this is for you. Free, honest, and written with care.
Information is provided in good faith for awareness purposes. Always check official sources for the most current guidance.
Hi! I'm Rob — an autistic person, dad to two autistic daughters and a Hampshire Autism Ambassador.
I became an ambassador because I value and celebrate the full spectrum on which autism sits. I believe autism is an individual's superpower — something to understand, embrace, and be proud of, not something to mask or apologise for.
I believe that if I can help just one single person rethink what autism means, or ensure one autistic person gets the support they are entitled to, then my constant pursuit of awareness, improvement, and inclusion is doing something right.
Nobody should spend decades feeling fundamentally broken simply because they see, feel, or experience the world differently — when there is a real explanation, a real community, and real support available to them. That's why this site exists.
I'm currently completing my Level 2 Understanding Autism qualification at Newbury College and am passionate about removing the stigma around neurodivergence — in workplaces, schools, healthcare settings, and everyday life.
I am not a psychologist or clinical professional. Everything here is for awareness and information only. Learn more about the Ambassador scheme →
On this page
This site covers a lot. Here's how to find what's most useful to you right now.
Start with Signs in adults, then Myth busting, then Getting diagnosed.
Head to Daily living strategies, Sensory processing, Autism & food, Sleep, or Burnout.
Read Late diagnosis and Private assessment — it's never too late for answers.
Autism is a lifelong neurological difference that affects how people perceive, experience, and interact with the world. It is not an illness, a disease, or something that needs to be fixed — it is simply a different way of thinking and processing life. (American Psychiatric Association, DSM-5, 2013; NICE Guidelines NG142, 2020)
Autism is a neurological difference, meaning it presents very differently from person to person. No two autistic people are exactly alike. Many people only discover they are autistic in adulthood — often after years of feeling like they simply didn't fit in without knowing why.
Autism affects approximately 1 in 100 people in the UK. (National Autistic Society, 2024) Many more remain undiagnosed, particularly women, girls, and people from minority ethnic backgrounds.
Research shows significant variation in diagnosis across ethnic groups. A University of Cambridge study of over 7 million schoolchildren found differences in both diagnosis rates and access to support across communities, with socioeconomic disadvantage playing a significant role. (Roman-Urrestarazu et al., JAMA Pediatrics, 2021)
The National Autistic Society's Diverse Perspectives report found that autistic people from Black, Asian and minority ethnic communities frequently face additional barriers to appropriate support — including cultural stigma around neurodivergence, language barriers, and diagnostic tools developed primarily using white, male populations. (NAS, Diverse Perspectives, 2014)
Autism is a difference in neurology, not a deficit. Many autistic people describe it as a fundamental part of who they are.
You are born autistic. It doesn't develop over time and it doesn't go away — though understanding it can be profoundly life-changing at any age.
The spectrum isn't a line from mild to severe. It's a wide range of different traits — sensory, social, emotional — that each vary in how strongly they appear.
Many autistic adults go undiagnosed for decades. (Kentrou et al., 2021; NAS, 2024)
Misconceptions about autism are widespread — in the media, in healthcare, and in everyday conversation. These myths cause real harm by stopping people from recognising themselves in autism.
Many autistic people feel emotions — including empathy — extremely deeply. What differs is how that empathy is expressed. Some experience hyper-empathy, feeling others' emotions so strongly it becomes overwhelming.
Autism is lifelong. Autistic children become autistic adults. Many adults discover they are autistic in their 30s, 40s, 50s or beyond.
Autism has no single look. Autistic people come from all backgrounds, genders, and ethnicities. What people usually mean is "you've masked so successfully I couldn't see it."
Everyone has quirks, but that's not the same as being autistic. Autism involves a significantly different neurological profile that affects many areas of life in a consistent, pervasive way.
Autistic people form deep, meaningful, loving relationships. They may communicate differently or need more time to themselves, but that doesn't prevent connection.
Many highly capable autistic people work in demanding roles while quietly struggling — exhausted by masking and burning out over time. Success at work is not evidence that someone isn't autistic.
This claim originated from a single fraudulent study published in 1998 by Andrew Wakefield, based on just 12 children, which was fully retracted by The Lancet in 2010. (The Lancet, retraction Feb 2010; GMC, May 2010) Wakefield was struck off the medical register for serious professional misconduct. Subsequent large-scale research involving millions of children across multiple countries has found no causal link between vaccines and autism — including a meta-analysis of over 1.2 million children (Taylor et al., 2014) and a December 2025 WHO expert committee review of 31 studies confirming no link. (WHO GACVS, December 2025) This myth has caused serious harm by reducing vaccination rates and by suggesting autism is something to be feared or prevented.
Most autistic people deeply want connection, friendship, and belonging — they may simply find the social rituals involved exhausting or difficult to navigate. Loneliness is one of the most significant issues facing autistic adults. The difference is in how connection happens, not whether it's wanted.
Autism looks different in adults than it does in children. Many adults have spent years developing coping strategies that mask their traits. These are common signs — not a diagnostic checklist, just a starting point for reflection.
This list is for awareness only. Only a qualified professional can assess and diagnose autism.
For decades, autism research focused almost exclusively on males. As a result, the signs of autism in women and girls were largely invisible — and many still are. This has led to generations of autistic women going undiagnosed, misdiagnosed, or dismissed entirely.
Girls are often socialised from an early age to be polite, watch others, and fit in — which makes masking feel natural and autism much harder to spot.
Autistic women are frequently diagnosed with anxiety, depression, borderline personality disorder, or eating disorders before anyone considers autism.
Women's intense interests often look more socially acceptable — reading, animals, certain TV shows — so they don't trigger the same concern as more "unusual" interests.
The average age of autism diagnosis for women in the UK is significantly later than for men. (Loomes, Hull & Mandy, 2017; Bargiela et al., 2016)
One of the most common reasons autistic women go undiagnosed is being told they are "too empathetic," "too talkative," or "make too much eye contact" to be autistic. These are myths. Autism presents very differently across genders, and a skilled assessor will know this. (Bargiela, Steward & Mandy, 2016)
Masking is the process of suppressing or hiding autistic traits in order to appear neurotypical — to "pass" as someone whose brain works the way the world expects. It is one of the most significant and least understood aspects of autism in adults.
Masking takes an enormous toll on mental health. It is closely linked to anxiety, depression, and autistic burnout. (Hull et al., 2017; Cage & Troxell-Whitman, 2019) Many autistic adults don't even realise they have been masking their whole lives until they learn about autism.
Autism rarely travels alone. Many autistic people also experience one or more other neurodevelopmental or mental health differences.
Studies suggest up to 50% of autistic people also have ADHD, sometimes called "AuDHD". (Leitner, 2014) The two differ in important ways but share many traits — and having both significantly affects how a person experiences daily life.
Around 40% of autistic people have a diagnosable anxiety disorder. (van Steensel, Bögels & Perrin, 2011) This is often a direct result of navigating a world not designed for autistic people — rather than anxiety being a separate underlying condition.
Years of masking, not fitting in, and late diagnosis all contribute to higher rates of depression in autistic adults — research suggests around 40% will experience depression at some point. (Lever & Geurts, 2016; Lai et al., 2019)
These learning differences frequently co-occur with autism, affecting reading, writing, coordination, and spatial awareness.
Obsessive Compulsive Disorder can co-occur with autism. Repetitive thoughts and rituals can look similar in both — a professional with autism experience can help distinguish between them.
Many autistic people have significant differences in how they process sensory information — being over- or under-sensitive to sound, touch, light, taste, or movement.
For decades, the dominant view was that autistic people struggle to understand non-autistic people. But research by Dr Damian Milton in 2012 proposed the double empathy problem: when two people have very different ways of experiencing the world, communication breaks down on both sides. (Milton, 2012)
Non-autistic people are often just as poor at reading autistic people's emotions and intentions as the other way around. It is a mutual mismatch — not a one-sided deficit.
Studies show that autistic people communicate significantly more effectively with each other than with non-autistic people. (Crompton et al., 2020) In autistic-to-autistic spaces, communication flows more naturally, and people finally feel understood. This is why peer support is so powerful.
Much of the public narrative around autism focuses on difficulties. But autism also brings real strengths — not as a consolation prize, but as genuine characteristics of a different kind of mind.
The ability to dive deep into a subject and develop genuine mastery. This "hyperfocus" can produce exceptional work.
Noticing connections, inconsistencies, and systems that others miss. Many autistic people are exceptional analysts, coders, researchers, and problem-solvers.
Autistic people are frequently described as unusually honest and straightforward — a quality that builds real trust in relationships and workplaces.
A strong ability to notice fine details, spot errors, and ensure accuracy — invaluable in many professional contexts.
When an autistic person commits to something or someone, they tend to mean it deeply.
Thinking differently — outside conventional social and cognitive frameworks — often produces genuinely original ideas and approaches.
If you recognise yourself in any of the above and want to explore this further, seeking a formal assessment is the right next step.
Your first step is a conversation with your GP. Explain your concerns clearly, bring notes if it helps, and ask for a referral for an autism assessment.
NHS assessments are free but waiting lists in Hampshire are very long. Private assessments are faster but can be expensive.
Carried out by qualified psychologists or psychiatrists. They involve structured interviews, questionnaires, and sometimes input from someone who knew you in childhood.
A diagnosis can open doors to support, workplace adjustments, benefits, and most importantly — a much deeper understanding of yourself.
The information on this page is for awareness and education only. For a formal assessment or clinical support, please speak to your GP or contact a qualified professional.
It is important to be honest about this: NHS autism assessment waiting lists in England are very long. As of late 2025, over 200,000 people were waiting nationally. (NHS Digital, Autism Statistics July 2024–June 2025) In Hampshire, waits of one to three years are not uncommon.
Write down specific examples of how autistic traits show up in your daily life. This is invaluable evidence when your assessment comes.
Reading about autism — especially first-person accounts by autistic adults — can be transformative even before formal diagnosis.
You do not need a formal diagnosis to ask your employer for adjustments. A GP letter noting you are awaiting assessment can support a request.
Local autism groups don't require a diagnosis to join. See the Hampshire support section.
Private assessments are done much faster — sometimes within weeks. A private diagnosis is recognised by the NHS and employers.
Don't be afraid to contact your GP surgery to check the status of your referral. Referrals can sometimes go missing.
Being diagnosed with autism in your 40s, 50s, 60s or later is far more common than most people realise. For many, it comes after decades of feeling different, misunderstood, exhausted — or after a child or grandchild receives their own diagnosis and something suddenly clicks.
Many older adults grew up when autism was poorly understood and rarely diagnosed — especially in women, girls, and anyone who masked effectively. Decades of coping strategies can make the signs invisible to everyone, including yourself.
One of the most common responses to a late diagnosis. Understanding why you've always experienced the world differently — why certain things were always harder, or why you never quite fitted in — can be genuinely transformative.
Many late-diagnosed adults go through a period of grief — for the support they never received, the years of unnecessary struggle, or the version of themselves that might have existed with earlier understanding. This is a completely valid response.
A diagnosis later in life still opens doors — to workplace adjustments, to finally understanding your own needs, to community, and to peace of mind. Age is never a reason not to seek answers.
Everything you've built — every coping strategy, every achievement, every relationship — was real. A diagnosis doesn't rewrite your history. It just helps explain it.
The process is the same as for anyone else — speak to your GP and ask for a referral. You deserve answers at any age. See the Getting diagnosed section for the full process, and Private assessments below if you don't want to wait.
With NHS waiting lists stretching to several years in many parts of England, many people choose to pursue a private assessment. A private diagnosis from a suitably qualified professional is fully recognised by the NHS, employers, and educational institutions.
A private assessment typically includes a detailed clinical interview about your history and current presentation, standardised questionnaires, and sometimes a separate interview with a family member or close friend who knew you as a child.
Most private assessments can be booked within weeks rather than years. The assessment itself usually takes between 2 and 4 hours, sometimes split across two appointments.
Private autism assessments in the UK typically cost between £500 and £2,000, depending on the provider, location, and level of report detail. Some providers offer payment plans. (NAS, 2024)
Your assessor should be a registered clinical psychologist (BPS), psychiatrist (GMC), or appropriately qualified specialist. Always check their registration before booking.
Verify your assessor is registered with the British Psychological Society or the General Medical Council. An unregistered assessor's report may not be accepted.
Confirm whether the fee includes a full written report, a feedback session, and any follow-up questions. A detailed report is essential for workplace adjustments, benefits, or educational support.
Gather school reports, old diaries, letters from family members about your childhood, and a written summary of how your traits affect daily life. The more evidence you bring, the stronger your assessment will be.
Inform your GP that you've had a private assessment. Ask them to add the diagnosis to your NHS medical record so it's recognised across all future healthcare interactions.
The National Autistic Society's adult diagnosis guide includes a directory of accredited private assessment providers.
Under the Equality Act 2010 (Equality Act 2010), autism is recognised as a disability — meaning you are entitled to protections and adjustments in work, education, healthcare, and public services, whether or not you have a formal diagnosis.
Your employer is legally required to make reasonable adjustments. This could include flexible working, written instructions, a quieter workspace, or adjusted deadlines.
GOV.UK — Reasonable adjustments →Universities and colleges must make reasonable adjustments — extra time in exams, note-taking support, or a separate examination room.
EHRC — Student rights →Healthcare providers must adjust how they communicate with you. You can ask for written information, longer appointments, or a quieter waiting environment.
NHS — Reasonable adjustments →It is unlawful to treat you less favourably because of your autism — in recruitment, employment, service provision, or education.
EHRC — Types of discrimination →The government's Access to Work scheme can fund workplace adaptations, support workers, specialist equipment, and travel to work.
GOV.UK — Apply for Access to Work →Depending on your support needs, you may be eligible for PIP, Universal Credit, or other benefits. A diagnosis significantly supports these applications.
GOV.UK — Check PIP eligibility →This is a general overview — not legal advice. For specific guidance, contact Citizens Advice, ACAS, or the Equality and Human Rights Commission.
Autistic people can be exceptional employees — bringing deep focus, attention to detail, and honesty. Yet only around 22% of autistic adults are in any form of employment, the lowest rate of any disability group. (ONS, 2021; Buckland Review of Autism Employment, 2024)
Precision and accuracy, pattern recognition, deep expertise, reliability, honesty, creative problem-solving, and strong ethical standards.
Sensory overload in open offices, ambiguous instructions, social politics and unwritten rules, interview anxiety, and inconsistent management.
Written instructions, flexible hours, working from home, noise-cancelling headphones, advance notice of changes, and clear feedback.
You are never legally obliged to disclose your autism to an employer. However, disclosing is often the only way to access the adjustments you need.
Knowing you're entitled to adjustments is one thing — knowing how to ask for them is another. Here's how to do it effectively.
Email your line manager or HR department. State clearly that you are autistic (or awaiting diagnosis), that autism is a disability under the Equality Act 2010, and that you are requesting reasonable adjustments. Keep a copy of everything.
Don't just say "I'm struggling." Say "I need written briefs for meetings in advance" or "I need a quieter workstation away from the main floor." Specific requests are harder to refuse and easier to implement.
Contact ACAS (free, confidential advice) or Citizens Advice. Unreasonable refusal to make adjustments is unlawful under the Equality Act and can be pursued through an employment tribunal.
The government's Access to Work scheme can fund specialist equipment, a support worker, travel costs, and workplace adaptations. Apply directly — your employer doesn't need to be involved in the application.
Autistic people form deep, meaningful, loving relationships. They may communicate differently or need more time to themselves — but that doesn't prevent genuine connection. In many ways, autistic people love deeply and loyally.
Autistic people often prefer direct communication and may struggle with ambiguity or unspoken expectations. Clarity and honesty are strengths, not weaknesses.
Needing time to decompress after social interaction — even with a partner — is not a sign of not caring. It's a genuine neurological need for recharge.
Sensory sensitivities can affect physical intimacy. Open communication about what feels comfortable is especially important.
Research suggests autistic people are significantly more likely to have autistic or neurodivergent partners — meaning shared understanding of communication styles and sensory needs can come naturally. (Nordsletten et al., 2016)
Dating apps can feel easier than in-person approaches — they allow processing time and remove the ambiguity of reading body language. It's okay to suggest low-sensory dates, to disclose early, and to leave if overwhelmed. The right person will understand.
Reading romantic interest from subtle cues can be genuinely difficult. It's completely reasonable to ask directly — many autistic people find relationships work better with explicit communication on both sides rather than hinting and guessing.
Many autistic adults develop their own strategies for managing daily life — often without realising that what they're doing is a form of self-accommodation.
Creating consistent daily routines reduces the cognitive load of decision-making and the anxiety of unpredictability.
Noise-cancelling headphones, sunglasses, comfortable clothing, and controlling your environment can make a significant difference to daily functioning.
Recognising that social and sensory activities consume limited energy, and planning rest time accordingly.
Many autistic adults find written communication easier than verbal — it allows processing time. Don't be afraid to ask for things in writing.
Working alongside another person — even on different tasks — can help with focus and task initiation.
Keeping a journal of situations that cause overload helps you identify patterns and plan around them.
Sensory differences are one of the most significant — and least understood — aspects of autism. The autistic brain processes sensory information differently, and for many people this affects every single part of daily life.
Sensory differences can go in either direction: hypersensitivity (over-responsiveness — the world feels too loud, too bright, too much) or hyposensitivity (under-responsiveness — seeking more stimulation, higher pain tolerance, not noticing when you're cold or hungry). Many autistic people experience both, in different senses, at different times.
Hyper: Background noise feels overwhelming; overlapping conversations become unbearable; certain frequencies cause physical distress.
Hypo: May not notice someone calling their name; seeks loud music or noise for stimulation.
Hyper: Clothing labels, seams, or certain fabrics cause intense discomfort; light touch feels painful; strong aversion to being touched unexpectedly.
Hypo: May not notice bumps or bruises; craves deep pressure (weighted blankets, tight hugs).
Hyper: Fluorescent lighting causes headaches, nausea, or overwhelm; strong contrast is painful; struggles in bright or flickering environments.
Hypo: May seek bright, flashing, or visually stimulating environments.
Hyper: Certain smells are intolerable; strong food aversions based on taste, texture, or smell; public spaces can be overwhelming.
Hypo: May not notice strong smells; craves intense flavours or textures.
The sense of what's happening inside your own body — hunger, thirst, pain, temperature, needing the toilet. Many autistic people find this sense muted, meaning they may not notice they're unwell, exhausted, or haven't eaten until it becomes urgent.
The sense of your body's position in space and movement/balance. Differences here can lead to clumsiness, difficulty with coordination, or a strong need for movement (rocking, spinning, jumping).
Noise-cancelling headphones, sunglasses indoors, choosing clothing for comfort over appearance, controlling lighting at home, identifying "safe" sensory environments, and being honest with others about your needs can all make a significant difference. You don't need to justify them.
Difficulties with food and eating are extremely common in autistic people — yet they're rarely talked about openly. For many autistic adults, eating challenges were dismissed as "fussiness" in childhood and never understood as a genuine neurological difference.
Avoidant/Restrictive Food Intake Disorder is significantly more common in autistic people — research finds autism occurs in over 16% of people with ARFID, around 15 times the general population rate. (Sader et al., Int. Journal of Eating Disorders, 2025) It involves a persistent restriction of food intake based on sensory characteristics — texture, colour, smell, temperature — rather than body image concerns.
The feel of food in the mouth is processed differently by many autistic people. Certain textures — mushy, slimy, crunchy, mixed — can trigger an intense physical aversion that isn't possible to simply "push through."
Many autistic people have a small repertoire of trusted "safe" foods — predictable, consistent, and manageable. This is a coping mechanism, not a lifestyle choice, and it deserves respect rather than ridicule.
Restaurants, canteens, dinner parties — the combination of unfamiliar food, unpredictable environments, sensory overload, and social pressure can make eating out genuinely overwhelming.
Due to differences in interoception, many autistic people don't reliably feel hunger or fullness in the typical way. This can lead to forgetting to eat, not noticing they're full, or missing mealtimes without realising.
Predictability matters — the same meals on the same days, food prepared in a specific way. Changes to food routines (a restaurant changing its menu, a favourite food being discontinued) can cause genuine distress, not just inconvenience.
If eating difficulties are significantly affecting your quality of life, speak to your GP and ask for a referral to a dietitian or eating specialist with experience of autism. The ARFID Awareness UK website has helpful resources for autistic adults and families.
Sleep difficulties are one of the most common — and least talked about — experiences of autistic adults. Research suggests that between 50% and 80% of autistic people experience significant sleep problems, compared to around 10–30% of the general population. (Hollway et al., 2013; Richdale & Schreck, 2009; reviewed in Hollway & Aman, 2020)
The quiet of the night removes all the sensory input that kept the brain occupied during the day. For many autistic people, this is when the mind finally — and overwhelmingly — starts processing everything that happened.
Many autistic people have a naturally delayed body clock — feeling most alert late at night and finding early mornings extremely difficult. This isn't laziness; it's a neurological difference in circadian rhythm.
Bedding textures, temperature regulation, light sensitivity, and sound can all prevent sleep onset. Many autistic people find it impossible to sleep without specific conditions being met exactly.
Transitioning from wakefulness to sleep requires the brain to disengage — something many autistic people find genuinely difficult. The brain doesn't have a natural off switch in the same way.
Poor sleep dramatically worsens sensory sensitivity, executive function, emotional regulation, and masking ability the next day — creating a difficult cycle where tiredness makes everything harder.
Some research suggests autistic people may produce melatonin differently or at different times, contributing to sleep difficulties. (Tordjman et al., 2012) Speak to your GP if sleep problems are significantly affecting your quality of life.
A consistent wind-down routine, blackout curtains, white noise or earplugs, weighted blankets, keeping the same sleep and wake time even at weekends, avoiding screens for an hour before bed, and reducing sensory input in the bedroom. Some autistic people find a short period of low-stimulation activity (a familiar TV show, a simple game, light reading) helps bridge the gap between alertness and sleep. If sleep problems are severe and persistent, ask your GP about a referral — sleep disorders are treatable.
Stimming (self-stimulatory behaviour) refers to repetitive movements, sounds, or sensory experiences that many autistic people use to self-regulate. Rocking, hand-flapping, humming, tapping, fidgeting — these are all examples.
For a long time, stimming was treated as something to be suppressed. This is now widely understood to cause significant psychological harm and contribute directly to burnout. (Kapp et al., 2019)
Stimming helps regulate emotions, manage sensory overload, express feelings, and maintain focus. It serves a genuine neurological function.
Stimming often increases during periods of stress, anxiety, excitement, or sensory overload. It's a signal — not a problem.
Being forced to suppress natural stims — particularly in childhood — is a significant contributor to anxiety, burnout, and psychological harm in autistic adults. (Kapp et al., 2019)
Autistic burnout is a state of physical and mental exhaustion caused by prolonged masking, sensory overload, and the relentless effort of navigating a world not designed for autistic people. It can last weeks, months, or even years.
During burnout, autistic people often lose abilities they had previously — ability to speak clearly, manage tasks, tolerate sensory input, or socialise at all.
Not just tiredness — a bone-deep exhaustion that doesn't lift with rest. Basic tasks feel monumental.
A need to retreat completely from people, noise, and responsibility. This can look like depression from the outside, but it's the nervous system protecting itself.
Sensory sensitivities that were previously manageable can become overwhelming during burnout.
For many people, understanding that they are autistic is itself the beginning of recovery. (Raymaker et al., 2020)
Research shows up to 66% of autistic adults have experienced suicidal ideation. (Autistica, 2024) If you are struggling, please reach out: Samaritans 116 123 (free, 24/7) · Text SHOUT to 85258 · 999 / A&E
Autistic people are significantly more likely to experience mental health difficulties — research suggests up to 80% of autistic adults will experience a mental health condition at some point. (Autistica, 2024)
Years of masking, late or missing diagnosis, sensory overload, social isolation, and navigating a world not designed for autistic people all take a cumulative toll.
Standard mental health approaches don't always work well for autistic people. Ask specifically for a clinician with autism awareness.
Many talking therapies assume neurotypical patterns of emotional processing, eye contact, and social interaction. CBT in particular can feel rigid or irrelevant if adapted poorly. Look for therapists who are autism-informed, who offer flexibility around communication, and who understand masking. The book The Autistic Survival Guide to Therapy by Steph Jones (in the books section) is an excellent starting point.
If you've found this page because you're wondering whether a partner, family member, or friend might be autistic — you're in the right place.
If someone shares that they think they might be autistic, take it seriously. Don't dismiss it with "but you seem so normal." That response — however well-meaning — causes real harm.
Reading about autism together, watching documentaries, or listening to autistic voices can help you both understand what autism really looks like.
If someone needs quiet, less stimulation, or to leave a busy environment — this is a genuine neurological need. Supporting it makes a real difference.
Autistic people may need more time to process, may communicate more directly than expected, or need information in writing. This isn't rudeness — it's a different style.
"You don't look autistic." "Everyone's a bit like that." "You were fine last week." "You just need to try harder." These phrases — even when well-intentioned — are dismissive and painful. If in doubt, ask how you can help rather than offering an opinion.
Autistic partners often communicate differently, need more alone time, and may find spontaneity or change stressful. This isn't a lack of love — it's a different operating system. Clear communication, agreed routines, and mutual understanding of each other's needs are the foundations of a strong relationship.
Autism isn't a problem to solve. The goal isn't to make an autistic person act more neurotypical — it's to understand and support them as they are. Trying to "correct" autistic behaviour causes lasting harm.
Supporting someone who is struggling — whether pre-diagnosis, in burnout, or navigating a system that isn't built for them — can be exhausting. It's okay to seek support for yourself. The NAS has guidance for families.
For partners specifically: many autistic adults receive their diagnosis after a partner notices the signs. Understanding autism together — rather than framing it as a problem to fix — dramatically improves relationships.
Language around autism has evolved significantly. Words matter — they shape how autistic people see themselves and how others see them.
Many autistic people prefer "autistic person" (identity-first language), viewing autism as a core part of who they are. Some prefer "person with autism." When in doubt, follow the individual's lead.
These labels are widely criticised for being misleading. "High-functioning" can mask genuine struggles; "low-functioning" can mask genuine strengths.
Many autistic people and advocacy groups prefer "autistic" as an adjective rather than saying someone "suffers from autism."
This phrase is increasingly considered outdated and patronising. "Support needs" or naming the specific adjustment needed is more respectful.
As a Hampshire Autism Ambassador, connecting people with local support is central to what I do. Here are the organisations and services right here in Hampshire.
Many autistic adults find healthcare settings overwhelming — sensory overload in waiting rooms, difficulty communicating experiences under pressure, and clinicians who don't understand autism can all create barriers.
You can ask for a longer appointment, written information, a quieter waiting environment, or advance notice of what the appointment will involve.
It can help to state clearly: "I am autistic. I need direct, clear communication. I may take longer to process information."
Autistic people often find it difficult to recall their experiences under pressure. Bring a written list of what you want to discuss — or send it to the surgery in advance.
You are entitled to bring a trusted person to any healthcare appointment to help you communicate or feel less overwhelmed.
The National Autistic Society has a free "Hospital Passport" document you can fill in and take to appointments.
Autistic people are significantly over-represented in the criminal justice system — both as victims of crime and, in some cases, as defendants.
Autistic people are up to three times more likely to be victims of crime than non-autistic people — including fraud, exploitation, and hate crime. (Weiss & Fardella, 2018; NAS, 2024) Autistic people are specifically targeted by those who exploit naivety, trust, and a desire to please.
Research consistently shows autistic people are more likely to come into contact with police, be arrested, and be imprisoned than the general population. (House of Commons Library, CBP-10232, 2025; Chaplin & McCarthy, 2021) This is often due to autistic behaviour being misread, rather than actual criminal intent.
Autistic behaviour — difficulty with eye contact, flat affect, literal responses — can be profoundly misread by officers without autism awareness training.
Autistic defendants and witnesses often struggle with court processes. Reasonable adjustments are available but not always offered.
The National Autistic Society's criminal justice guidance is a useful starting point if you or someone you know is involved in the criminal justice system.
Autistic people have specific rights when in contact with the police. You have the right to an Appropriate Adult — a trained person who must be present during police questioning if you are autistic, have a learning disability, or have a mental health condition. You can and should ask for one before any interview begins. You also have the right to ask for everything to be put in writing, to have a solicitor present, and to request breaks. You do not have to answer questions under pressure. If autism-related behaviour (such as avoiding eye contact, flat affect, or giving literal answers) has been misread by officers, this can and should be raised with a solicitor.
Whether you're on a waiting list, newly diagnosed, or simply exploring — books and podcasts by and for autistic people are one of the most valuable resources available.
The definitive modern guide to masked autism — what it is, why it happens, and how to begin unmasking. Essential reading.
The essential guide to autism in women and girls — covering diagnosis, lived experience, masking, and life across the lifespan. Written by an autistic diagnostician.
Winner of the Royal Society Science Book Prize 2020. Autistic biochemist Camilla Pang uses science to decode human social behaviour — funny, illuminating, and deeply original.
A practical, honest guide to understanding and reducing autistic camouflaging, written by an autistic researcher with a PhD in the subject.
Written by a non-speaking autistic teenager, this remarkable book offers a rare first-person insight into the autistic mind. A Sunday Times bestseller.
Written by a late-diagnosed autistic therapist, this book helps autistic adults navigate therapy and find the right professional support.
Wide-ranging episodes covering autism in adults, diagnosis, mental health, and employment — delivered by the London Autism Group Charity.
A podcast for neurodivergent women hosted by clinical psychologists — covering autism, ADHD, and everything in between.
Dan Jones is autistic with diagnoses of Asperger's, ADHD, and OCD. Weekly episodes on autism, life tips, and mental health — one of the largest autism communities worldwide.
The BBC's weekly podcast about disability and mental health — life stories and practical insight with a warm, accessible approach.
Books are also available from Waterstones, Foyles, and your local library. Podcasts are free — tap the links above to listen directly.
These are trusted, UK-based organisations that can provide clinical guidance, community support, legal advice, and further information about autism in adults.
The Autism Ambassador Scheme for Hampshire, Portsmouth, Southampton and the Isle of Wight trains people to spread autism awareness in their daily lives. Ambassadors come from all walks of life — teachers, healthcare workers, employers, parents, and autistic people themselves. You don't need to be an expert — you just need to care.
Ambassadors act as everyday agents for change — raising autism awareness with colleagues, friends, and communities, identifying where adjustments can be made, and signposting people to the right support.
Find out more & apply → ascambassador.org.ukThe scheme is a joint project between Hampshire County Council, Portsmouth City Council, Southampton City Council, Isle of Wight Council, Hampshire Autism Voice, Autism Hampshire, and the South Hampshire Branch of the National Autistic Society.
Have a question, want to get involved in autism awareness work in Hampshire, or just want to reach out? I'd genuinely love to hear from you.
✉ thinkdifferent@mail.co.ukPlease note: I am not able to provide clinical advice, assessments, or diagnoses by email. For clinical support, please contact your GP or one of the organisations listed above.
Sources & references
National Autistic Society (2024). What is autism? autism.org.uk
NHS Digital (2025). Autism Statistics, July 2024 to June 2025.
Autistica (2024). Mental health and autism. autistica.org.uk
House of Commons Library (2025). Autism policy and services. CBP-10232.
Equality Act 2010. UK Government legislation.
Autism Act 2009. UK Government legislation.
DHSC & DfE (2021). National strategy for autistic children, young people and adults: 2021–2026.
Raymaker, D.M. et al. (2020). Defining autistic burnout. Autism in Adulthood, 2(2).
Kapp, S.K. et al. (2019). Autistic adults views and experiences of stimming. Autism, 23(7).
ONS (2021). Outcomes for disabled people in the UK: 2021.
Buckland Review of Autism Employment (2024). Report and recommendations. DWP.
NICE (2020). Autism spectrum disorder in adults: diagnosis and management. NICE Guideline NG142.