Burnout Prevention at The Autistic Perimenopause ๐
Description
Dear Team Auti Peri,
Thanks for being here, your presence means the world to me!
Contents summary
* Why I am taking August off
* Things you might like to do to contribute at The Autistic Perimenopause
* Exciting plans for September on nervous system regulation in neurodivergent hormonal flux with sneak preview!
* Recap of the Autism Adapted Suicide Safety Plan with links to the Newcastle University document, and my previous video and audio step-by-step guide
* Bonus content only in this audio recording: A real life cat fight between Harry and Toby when my son accidentally let them into the recording room to tell me that Harry had knocked over a plant pot in the kitchen. With cat squeals and inaudible flying fluff! Note to self: go and clean up the plant pot mess. With any luck, the cats wonโt have peed on the soil/carpetโฆ ๐ชด ๐
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With reluctance, I have decided that I need to take some time off to focus on my own health and wellbeing. It wonโt be for long! A few weeks ought to do it. My little family is in desperate need of a holiday (vacation/break/total reset), and I havenโt taken any time off from The Autistic Perimenopause: A Temporary Regression since it launched in April 2024. So I am planning on taking off all of August for a personal mental health break.
This is a one woman show, and this one woman is at risk of cracking up entirely. I fear if I breakdown completely this time, I may be unable to piece myself back together. If you are familiar with my work, you will know that I am adamant that a neurodivergent menopausal transition can be a distressing and prolonged time for many of us. I donโt know about you, but every single time I spiral further downwards at an alarming rate, I wonder if I ever will be able to reverse these regressions.
I want so badly to make sense of my own menopause in the way aspirational writers do: the ones who tell us that this is an opportunity to live the second half of our lives with joy and purpose. They say, once we become empty nesters, we can invest our newfound time entirely in ourselves.
This theory of the menopause in no way aligns with my lived experience. Those of us who suddenly find ourselves in neurodivergent perimenopause, often only uncover our neurological differences alongside our childrenโs diagnoses. Our midlives are lived outside the norm.
We may not have an empty nest to look forward to.
We are often devoted parent carers: we prepare different meals for everyone in the home to ensure safe foods are always available; we monitor and despair at our kidsโ ever increasing screen time (just me?); many of us choose to homeschool - due to the failure of the mainstream schooling system, or from personal preference. For those of us who have neurodivergent kids in schools, we may find ourselves constantly meeting with teachers and special education needs coordinators (SENCOs), feeling belittled and blamed when our children naturally react to the school systemsโ inability to accommodate them all of the time.
And what about when our differently wired children grow up?
With their spiky profiles and asynchronous development, they may not be equipped to leave home at the same time as their non-disabled, neurotypical peers. Yes, we strive for them to be independent. We see their pure brilliance. We want them to be happy, and preferably not gaming into their 30s in our basements, needing regular reminders to clean their rooms of dirty dishes and even dirtier laundry. And - for goodness sake - canโt they just take a shower AND apply deodorant without being verbally badgered to do so?
Our families are often on a different trajectory entirely from regular families, which is why it cuts so deep when others have no awareness of the extra effort we put into helping our offspring assimilate into this world that does not have their best interests at heart, to say the very least. To be told that we are pandering, enabling and just plain parenting wrong is insulting. And it most often comes from those we love, rarely from the psychiatrists, therapists and support workers who are privy to the most intimate details of our volatile and tender day to day lives.
Well, I donโt know where that came from, because I went completely off topic. How cathartic though, ha ha!
Anyway, yes, I suppose I do need a break because of all the stressors above - perhaps you do too? - and also:
* Down here in Aotearoa New Zealand we are months into the depths of Winter, and my body hurts from the cold. It is hard to motivate myself to get outside and I am quite possibly depleted of Vitamin D. I havenโt looked into this, but I had a B12 injection last week and am hoping to recover some energy soon.
* My brain fog is absolutely off the charts, I can barely hold a conversation in person. I have loads of half written posts drafted, and not enough cognitive capacity to feel they offer you enough value to publish yet. I am extremely keen to get an article out to you on the topic of progesterone intolerance, but for the life of me I cannot remember what my lived experience of it has been. Which is ridiculous, as it is one of the reasons that I was recently approved for a hysterectomy! And I have no idea of the timescale for my upcoming surgery, which is very difficult to deal with as an autistic woman, especially with full time homeschooling parent carer duties and extremely limited respite and childcare options.
* I am being treated for mast cell activation syndrome (MCAS) which is definitely exacerbating the brain fog and have started the antihistamines (H1 and H2 blockers). My body is in a state of alarm at all times, and I need to learn about the histamine elimination diet that can help my body and mind recover from the onslaught it perceives from stress, my regular diet and lack of refreshing sleep. Ironically, the MCAS-induced brain fog precludes me from understanding the complex underpinnings of a low histamine diet, which may be the primary way to combat the brain fogโฆ But the MCAS is insisting that I rest, and I need to obey in order to reassure my nervous system that I am safe.
* I have recently realised that I am most likely hypermobile and am now highly symptomatic with pain flares, ongoing gastrointestinal issues and worsening proprioceptive challenges. I think this is all highly pronounced now that I am around nine months into a chemical menopause, although I was probably asymptomatic hypermibile until now. I have signed up to The Zebra Club app for community, hypermobile-friendly workouts, and hours and hours of presentations to try and understand how to soothe my nervous system and understand my bodyโs needs, strengths and limitations. I have an unstable shoulder joint, currently aided by kinesiology tape, and have just taken delivery of my new firm compression tops to help with stability and proprioception. Basically, I am having to unlearn everything I thought I knew about how to move, sit, stand and so on, and relearn where my body is in space, how to stop bracing my muscles, and keep my joints within their safe, painless range.
* If I were in a conventional employment arrangement, I would have statutory holiday leave entitlement. But itโs just me and my phone, and we are in a very compulsive, strained and unboundaried working relationship. Thanks to ADHD, I am โall or nothingโ. Rather than the default being all in on my work, I need to switch over for a short time into going all in on rest.
* The Substack gods are getting in my head, and I need to show them that I am in control of my own mind (which I am hoping turns out to be the case). My subscriber numbers are down, both free and paid, with paid rapidly approaching single digits. I need to stop checking the stats and break that habit. I love all my readers and subscribers, free and paid, and would find it extremely validating to find my paid subscriber numbers increasing. But I have zero control over that, and hope that people are finding value in my work regardless. I still offer everything for free and I would like to continue to avoid paywalling content that people may need and canโt afford to pay for at this time. Thank you to my paid subscribers for supporting all my hard work! ๐
* I know we are all crazy busy and super stressed - my troubles listed here are far from unique and pretty minor on the grand scheme of things. I donโt currently have any more Auti Peri Q&A interview posts to publish because I havenโt received any responses lately, which is totally understandable. I am always seeking more Auti Peri Q&A respondents (hereโs why), so please reach out if you are keen to participate.
* A personal goal is that I would like to launch a proper podcast about neurodivergent menopause, to interview experts and advocate on a larger scale. I have been lucky enough to free up a room in my house which will soon become my writing and podcasting room. It currently houses many of my houseplants, a lot of my LEGO sets and a dumping ground desk already cluttered with paperwork. It is far enough up the hallway from where my kids play online with their friends, screaming and laughing, to hopefully not pick up too much background noise. I need to somehow sort out some optimal acoustic panelling or something before I can get started though. Oh and find guests. And create an intro/outro, find music, c