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Adaption and Masking!!

GHA

Well-Known Member
Adaptation and Masking — The Shared Reality
I’m an NT with a neurodiverse son. For decades, I’ve watched his journey — through bullying, misunderstanding, and difficult schooling. There were times when the world tried to measure him by standards that didn’t reflect his true abilities. But I didn’t give up, and neither did he.
Over the years, I’ve learned that adaptation and masking are not experiences unique to neurodiverse people. NTs do them too — at work, in social situations, in moments where the stakes are high. The difference is that NTs tend to do it selectively, for short periods, and then return to their natural state. Because it isn’t constant, it doesn’t drain them the way it can for a neurodiverse person who feels pressure to maintain it all the time.
Masking, in particular, is often misunderstood. It’s not just “acting a bit differently.” It’s running two versions of yourself at once: the one the world sees and the one you keep inside. Every gesture, every word, every reaction runs through an extra filter — Will they take this the wrong way? Will they misunderstand? Am I standing out too much? Doing that all day, every day, takes a huge toll.
This is why my son’s biggest breakthrough came with selective adaptation. He didn’t stop adapting — he learned when it was worth doing and when it was not. That shift meant his energy wasn’t consumed by constant self-monitoring; it was channelled into his work, his ideas, and the things that truly mattered to him.
Adaptation and masking will always exist, for everyone. But for a neurodiverse person, the key is to make them tools you choose, not armour you’re forced to wear every hour of the day. When used on your terms, they stop being an energy drain and become part of your strategy — a way to navigate the world without losing yourself, and a way to let your abilities speak for themselves.
 
You have remarkable insights for a NT observing a ND. concerning masking etc. Mostly in my experiences NTs are normally too self absorbed to take time to develop your insights .
Inspite of your having vested interests in seeing the development of your son. Even my mother had never developed such insights ,even with having tried to raise 2 autistic children.And 2 NT children.
 
You have remarkable insights for a NT observing a ND. concerning masking etc. Mostly in my experiences NTs are normally too self absorbed to take time to develop your insights .
Inspite of your having vested interests in seeing the development of your son. Even my mother had never developed such insights ,even with having tried to raise 2 autistic children.And 2 NT children.
Thank you so much for appreciating. I dedicated my life to my son. No book or Psychologist could teach me, what I learned holding his hand and walking his path.🙏
 
Adaptation and Masking — The Shared Reality
I’m an NT with a neurodiverse son. For decades, I’ve watched his journey — through bullying, misunderstanding, and difficult schooling. There were times when the world tried to measure him by standards that didn’t reflect his true abilities. But I didn’t give up, and neither did he.
Over the years, I’ve learned that adaptation and masking are not experiences unique to neurodiverse people. NTs do them too — at work, in social situations, in moments where the stakes are high. The difference is that NTs tend to do it selectively, for short periods, and then return to their natural state. Because it isn’t constant, it doesn’t drain them the way it can for a neurodiverse person who feels pressure to maintain it all the time.
Masking, in particular, is often misunderstood. It’s not just “acting a bit differently.” It’s running two versions of yourself at once: the one the world sees and the one you keep inside. Every gesture, every word, every reaction runs through an extra filter — Will they take this the wrong way? Will they misunderstand? Am I standing out too much? Doing that all day, every day, takes a huge toll.
This is why my son’s biggest breakthrough came with selective adaptation. He didn’t stop adapting — he learned when it was worth doing and when it was not. That shift meant his energy wasn’t consumed by constant self-monitoring; it was channelled into his work, his ideas, and the things that truly mattered to him.
Adaptation and masking will always exist, for everyone. But for a neurodiverse person, the key is to make them tools you choose, not armour you’re forced to wear every hour of the day. When used on your terms, they stop being an energy drain and become part of your strategy — a way to navigate the world without losing yourself, and a way to let your abilities speak for themselves.
Is being in the (Gay) closet the same as being masked 24/7? "Every gesture, every word, every reaction runs through an extra filter —Doing that all day, every day, takes a huge toll." If being in the (Gay) closet is being masked 24/7, then are there similarities between being on The Spectrum and being Gay? Are Gay people NTs? Or something else?
 
Is being in the (Gay) closet the same as being masked 24/7? "Every gesture, every word, every reaction runs through an extra filter —Doing that all day, every day, takes a huge toll." If being in the (Gay) closet is being masked 24/7, then are there similarities between being on The Spectrum and being Gay? Are Gay people NTs? Or something else?
Being gay is considered a form of neurodivergence. You didn't just wake up one morning and decide "You know what, I want to be gay.". What you are attracted to is hard wired, it's how you were born and nothing can change that. It's not a case of psychology, it's a case of neurology.
 
Being gay is considered a form of neurodivergence. You didn't just wake up one morning and decide "You know what, I want to be gay.". What you are attracted to is hard wired, it's how you were born and nothing can change that. It's not a case of psychology, it's a case of neurology.
So, if being Gay is neurology----and not everyone would agree with this statement----and being neurodivergent is as well, then it would stand to reason that these two neurodivergences are similar?
 
There's certainly more than just a few parallels including your description of masking. Also, there's a much higher percentage of gay and gender dysphoric people amongst the autism community than there is in the general population. So yes, there is some type of relationship there.
 

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