this post was submitted on 20 Aug 2024
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Am I crazy to assume that, if I tell one person but don't specify any particular privacy settings, they would leave it to me to decide when I disclose it to others?

I guess I should get specific here. I was officially diagnosed a couple of weeks ago, as having autism spectrum disorder level 1. I have so far only told my mom, who I live with, and my best friend, who I suspect is also autistic. Today, I overheard my mom talking loudly on a video call to my brother and his wife, catching up and sharing their latest news. Apparently her latest news included the fact that I have been diagnosed with ASD. I hadn't yet decided how to go about having that conversation with my brother, and now I'm pretty upset that I don't get to make that decision. While I'm venting, she also mentioned that I've been less conversational lately, which she attributes to my diagnosis and to me no longer wanting to make the effort necessary to talk to neurotypical people (in reality, my chronic fatigue has been playing up lately, which always leaves me with less energy for conversation - she knows my chronic fatigue has been playing up lately, but apparently thinks I'm just choosing not to bother).

Am I crazy to think she was way out of line to share my diagnosis with someone without running it by me?

I'm also not sure how to move forward with this information in any way without it seeming like I was eavesdropping - which I wasn't intentionally doing, she was in the living room / kitchen area, I was heading down there to make myself a cup of tea (which I do every night at that time, in the room that she was talking in) and froze halfway down the hallway when I heard her sharing my confidential information. I didn't know how to deal with the situation so I just stood there for a bit and then returned to my room without making the cup of tea. If she had directly told me that she had told my brother about my diagnosis, or that she was bothered by me being less conversational, it would give me an opportunity to provide input on these matters, but as it is I don't feel comfortable raising the subject, or noticeably increasing my level of masking (to accomodate her apparent discomfort with me not doing so), without the eavesdropping issue potentially becoming part of the conversation and complicating matters.

I'm also bothered because I have a tradition of once a year going to stay with my best friend for a while, and typically stop off with my brother for a few days when I pass through his city. Last year unexpected travel complications left me burnt out, so when I made the bookings a couple of months back for this year's trip, I made it as simple as possible, including skipping the stay with my brother. I haven't yet told him, and now I'm worried that he's going to take it as me no longer socializing with neurotypical family members (even though the arrangement was made before my diagnosis). The whole thing is complicated and no longer under my control because my mother decided to share my diagnosis and her thoughts about my behavior behind my back.

Anyway, I guess I'm venting, and looking for input on whether this is as infuriating as it seems, and maybe advice on how to approach the situation.

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[–] [email protected] 0 points 2 months ago

sometimes, when we get older, we discover that things that seemed normal were toxic manifestations of a unhealthy relationship.

this especially happens when a person is going on a path of self realiziation.

the reason is that you are becoming more confident, and thus are trusting more and more your own judgment, while building up borders. others arent menat to cross.

people that only know your old complacment self cant accept that.

  1. listen to people. they tell you who they are.
  2. mark how often a person doesnt accept you saying no.
  3. trying to change your mind by convincing you of advantages you dont even want is not okay
  4. you have to follow up your no by consequences
  5. keep attention how many times a person puts you in a bad position
  6. take notes with arguments for yourself if you have to. just for your own vizulization

I had notes on my bathroom mirror how an when and in which way my friend took advantage of my naivity.

it was shocking how many times i let that slide because i just wasnt sure if i understood the situation wrong.

same goes for family. i blocked my mom, that why i write this whole thing in the first place.

ok good luck

ps. dont discuss it with your mom. do what you did, tell friends or seek help with other people.

dont make an issue about it. just take note, write the incident down somewhere, and what you think about it. then wait for the next incident, and write that down. see if there is a pattern.

youre autistic for a good reason, embrace that. analyze the situation, be aware that your mom has a perfectly logical reason why she is acting this way. but she sure doesnt want to hear that reason. so thats for you to figure out. if you have it figured out, you can deal with it, because it is a system.

[–] [email protected] 0 points 2 months ago

I had a conversation with a friend about this exact kind of thing awhile back. We realized we had opposite expectations. She was under the assumption that people just kept stuff she told them secret unless specifically told that they could share it. I operate under the opposite assumption: that nothing is a secret unless the person sharing it specifically says not to share it (that applies to myself as well).

Regardless of which assumption one operates on currently, it's much safer to operate under the latter one (I highly recommend it).

Family can be even more complicated, because in my experience even if you tell a family member to keep something a secret, that usually means, to most people, "keep it a secret from strangers" and you can bet that your other family members will find out about whatever it is you told that person.

[–] [email protected] 0 points 2 months ago

I mean eveyone in my family knew telling my mom something was akin to telling everyone my mom knows something.

[–] [email protected] 0 points 2 months ago

I've found out with other things that family needs to be told to keep personal details private from other immediate family. My brother has gotten better about respecting my privacy regarding things like GSM stuff by default, but still assumes similarly queer friends are free to be told (and I believe giving a lot of personal details related to that, not just the label; tbh, I'm actually fine with that, but it still feels like something he should have asked first about).

With autism I'd especially assume no privacy unless explicitly requested because I'd assume people already knew anyways. A diagnosis doesn't really change that.

[–] [email protected] 0 points 2 months ago* (last edited 2 months ago) (1 children)

I'd like to echo everything Cagi said, and add that it's genuinely possible this conversation with your brother was more of a "they finally got the diagnosis," sort of conversation rather than a revelation for your brother, because everyone probably already suspected you have autism. It sounds like your mother is happy that you have clarity on this and wanted to share your good news.

If I tell my mother something, it's free game for her to tell anyone she knows about it, because she wants to tell other people what's happening with her children. If I don't want her sharing something about me, I could ask her explicitly not to share, and she won't.

Regarding your concern that your brother is going to think you're no longer socializing with neurotypical people, you're waaay overthinking that. You can call up your brother at any time to talk to him if you want to. Next time you want to go visit, almost guaranteed his door will be open for you and nothing will have changed.

[–] [email protected] 0 points 2 months ago

That's fair, although the tone of the conversation definitely involved her being less happy with my behavior now than before the diagnosis (as I mentioned, she attributed my recent lack of conversational energy to the diagnosis). It felt like it was at worst "complaining" and at best "concerned", with "celebratory" not really being in the ballpark.

I guess from a combination of what I've read in the past about people struggling with autism disclosure, and the fact that my mom is a retired GP who should have a handle on how sensitive a diagnosis might be, led me to assume that it was understood to be a sensitive subject.

Anyway I guess I'll calmly broach the subject with her tomorrow, prefacing it with a mention of my usual tea-making habits, segueing into what I heard, then mentioning a) how I'd prefer to handle my own disclosure, b) that my conversational reticence is not a result of a newfound distaste for neurotypicals, and c) that maybe she should discuss that sort of thing with me instead of just guessing and then telling other people how I feel.

[–] [email protected] 0 points 2 months ago (1 children)

Overhearing people talk is not eavesdropping. Listening more closely because the conversation is a break in your trust is natural, if they try to pull a "but you were eavesdropping!" tell them if they want a private conversation then to have it in a private place, not a communal area in earshot of the hall outside your room.

Did you make it clear this was confidential, or was it just assumed? If you explicitly told them to keep it secret and they did not, then say just what you said here. You happened to be coming down for a cup of tea when you overheard a betrayal of your confidence. Of you are frustrated, let that give a backbone and set a firm boundary, but don't let it put words in your mouth and start saying things that will make them defensive. As soon as someone puts their guard up, the conversation is not going to go anywhere productive.

If you didn't explicitly tell your mom this was to be kept under wraps for now, then lesson learned. You need to have a polite conversation with her and everyone she told that this is personal info not to be shared. Always explicitly set boundaries, assumptions never work, even doctors and therapists sometimes eff up and assume someone knows more than you want them to and spill the beans.

No matter what, your family loves you and only wants you to succeed in life. Spilling your tea was likely done out of an effort to help you in the big picture, misguided or not. For me, once I was comfortable sharing my neurodivergence with my family, life got easier as they were able to take that into account in our relationship. But I understand it's your call, and if you need to come to terms with diagnosis first, that's perfect reasonable and those in the loop should be made aware of how hurtful it is to betray that trust. Nothing a polite but firm conversation can't solve.

[–] [email protected] 0 points 2 months ago (1 children)

Thanks for the reply, there's a lot of good thoughtful input there which I'll think about.

I was going to just upvote and not reply, but I had an amusing moment while reading your comment (and then felt that if I was going to reply at all, I should first acknowledge that this is some good substantial advice). I'm usually pretty good about understanding figurative language, but when you said "spilling your tea", there were several seconds of confusion and rereading, with me thinking "but I didn't spill my cup of tea, I didn't even get around to making it". I understood eventually, but kind of a funny autistic moment.

[–] [email protected] 0 points 2 months ago

Ha ha ha, I actually spent some time considering whether or not to use that expression at all. I was going to make more obscure pun about spilling tea incorporating your quest for tea, but then I remembered what sub this is and decided to sit the split the difference and use it in a way the context will hopefully give it away. I'm glad I didn't go with my instinct for terrible jokes and muddy the message!