do i have autism or trauma? (autism & cptsd/ptsd)

Published 2024-01-31
This video describes the similarities and differences between autism and trauma (complex ptsd and ptsd), as well as what to focus on if you want to dive further into understanding if you might have autism. There is a tremendous overlap, and we are still in the early stages of understanding autism and cptsd and ptsd.

I highly recommend watching this video and accessing Dr. Megan Neff's incredible work and visuals for more information, much of which I used in this video (especially from her graphics on ASD and PTSD)!    • Autism, PTSD and c-PTSD with Dr Megan...  

MY HEALING FROM EGGSHELL PARENTING COURSE will be posted later this month, and will also include a section on healing from Eggshell Parents if you believe you have Autism, as well as CPTSD.

For more information on my courses, please visit:

Dr. Kim Sage
www.drsagehelp.com/

Tik Tok. www.tiktok.com/@drkimsage
Instagram: www.instagram.com/Drkimsage/
Online courses: www.drkimsage.thinkific.com/

Links for this video:

neurodivergentinsights.com/misdiagnosis-monday?off…

scholar.google.com/scholar_lookup?journal=Autism+A…

ovidsp.dc2.ovid.com/ovid-new-a/ovidweb.cgi?T=JS&PA…

news.stanford.edu/2023/06/05/childhood-maltreatmen…

www.spectrumnews.org/features/deep-dive/intersecti…

www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10178446/

pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/28726442/

neuroclastic.com/is-it-trauma-or-autism-or-both/?a…

www.frontiersin.org/journals/psychiatry/articles/1…

journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1177/1362361320912143

attwoodandgarnettevents.com/autism-and-trauma/

All Comments (21)
  • I suffered trauma and severe depression since my teenage. Got diagnosed with cptsd. Spent my whole life fighting cptsd. Not until my wife recommended me to psilocybin mushrooms treatment. Psilocybin treatment saved my life honestly. 8 years totally clean. Never thought I would be saying this about mushrooms.
  • @ThunderSen
    I was mocked for being angry or dysregulated (crying as well), I am now unable to express emotions spontaneously. I have very intense emotions internally. I am faceless.
  • I was contemplating how I feel in social situations the other day and I literally wrote in my journal, “I don’t care what you think I just don’t want to misunderstand.”
  • 13 years of bullying and rejection that happened in the public school system due to undiagnosed autism gave me CPTSD. But again, I also had enmeshment trauma from my mom who had high narcissistic traits, so it all blended together. But the mean people were at school. Lots of things can be worked through, but not everything. Loud voices or yelling still really jar my system.
  • @grmpEqweer
    Oh yes, faking being ok. I learned how to do that as a kid. I obviously still do it, I have to quite often. It's why if I do lose my temper it seems so sudden. It's not sudden. I just hit my "faking it" limit.
  • @j.s.c.4355
    “More hyperarousal, more startle response, more insomnia, more anger…” It’s like you’re talking specifically about me.
  • @SScott-uv9is
    At 76 years old, I have learned that I am aspergers and cptsd. I am relieved to still be alive so that I know the WHY of who I have been all my life. There is sorrow for who I might have been, and anger over abuse I should not have had in my life. But this late in life, to have an exultant affirmation of what I knew more than 70 years ago gives me great peace and strength. I don't know when you put this video together, and I don't know how I happened to check your channel tonight, but the coincidence of it all is proof of connections which come to us as mysteries bringing wisdom and wonder. Thank you...
  • @GreenVeggie
    As someone with C-PTSD and not autism, I think this misses the mark on the biggest difference I see between the two. I am hyper aware of people’s facial expressions and am better than the average neurotypical person at reading body language and social situations. This is probably an adaptive skill from growing up in a very chaotic environment, where I needed to know how the adults around me were feeling at all times. There is a bit of discomfort in social situations, but it’s from a fear of rejection, and not from a fear of misunderstanding something or being misunderstood.
  • I don't want a label. I just want people to understand that I can't help it that I'm different. This feels like a death sentence.
  • @Amy_Yuki_Vickers
    I'm a 47 year old autistic woman with CPTSD. Thank you for helping me unravel all the various traits and aspects that come with this combination. I used to think of myself as very unusual and alone, and the more I learn, the more I see my experience as very typical and normal. It's so reassuring to not constantly feel like an outlier. Thank you again for putting this information out into the world.
  • @m.g.2926
    I'm being traumatized by psychologists who tell me they support an ASD diagnosis and then refuse to put it in writing so I cannot get disability benefits!! 😢
  • @Jennifer-bw7ku
    Psychedelics are just an exceptional mental health breakthrough. It's quite fascinating how effective they are against depression and anxiety. Saved my life.
  • @elisenieuwe4649
    I want to add that high sensitive people (HSP) also have some of these signs at the daily base line. For instance constantly being sensitive to stimuli or taking longer to regulate after a stressful event. So if someone is HSP and has early complex trauma, it is even more difficult to distinct it from ASD.
  • @z0uLess
    My autism developed into a special interest in the social sciences (especially the intersection between philosophy, sociology and psychology), which complicates things A LOT!
  • If you're autistic, or primed to epigenetically trigger as such, NPD or BPD parenting provide more than enough trauma to hide the autism or the CPTSD. I've always been moderately dyspraxic and highly sensitive. I didn't realize just how much the latter until my system reset to become even MORE sensitive after three and a half months of intensive chemotherapy. As a child, my mother was my most persistent bully, making fun of just about anything. The majority of her bullying in the early years was disatisfaction on her part with my development and physical quirks. I remember distinctly how harsh she was when I was seven, making fun of my bubble butt and telling me I walked like a girl. Around kindergarten, she put me in a swim class, which I enjoyed—until parents' day when she held on to me and took me to the deep end, dunked me repeatedly because I would supposedly have some sort of epiphany. Again, when I was seven, she used to throw me into the pool in our apartment complex to "sink or swim," so often that neighbors picked HER up and threw her in, which fortunately DID stop her from doing it to me. I couldn't whistle soon enough, or ride a bike soon enough, and I was too quiet most of the time. Only much later in life did she tell me that TWICE, entering 2nd and 8th grades, the teachers tried to convince her to have me skip a grade, which she declined because she thought I was too immature, completely missing the point that the teacher had been having to accommodate me by either sending me to read with a higher grade class, which made me stick out as the odd one, or work on my own on the periphery of the classroom. She didn't get ME at all, only that she thought I made her look like a bad mom for having a child that was different. Frankly, she WAS a bad mom, quite often. When she became a single mother, I became a latchkey child, and glad that I was; I had to endure her far less. Thank goodness my grandparents lived only a block away, though mind you, my grandmother was also NPD (covert, self-righteous). One very GOOD thing that unfortunately also masked my difficulties was that they were all highly regimented, my mom an army brat, and my grandparents raised Methodist/Salvation Army through the Dust Bowl. That regimentation kept me organized enough for me to excel in school, which slowly ebbed the longer I was only my own as an adult, until my difficulties with executive skills finally beat out what was left of my routines and living by my DayPlanner®. Sadly, rather than address my odd academic flubs from a humane angle to figure out underlying reasons, my mom instead got angry that the otherwise Straight A student f'ed up. So since I wasn't really hyperactive, my ADHD didn't get addressed whatsoever. I came to hate group assignments because I usually failed them or came close. Wow, I thought I just had a short blurb to tell. lol Alrighty, then. My point yet stands, that parenting probably makes an enormous difference for autistic kids in either limiting or grossly exacerbating the neurological trauma responses, depending on the ability of the parents to nurture while sussing out and learning to work around problem elements. Commanding rather than teaching works even less with autistic children than with neurotypical.
  • @puddlessir
    I wish all therapists were as honest as you. For 25 years they were confident in their misdiagnosis, never telling me or my mother they didn’t know.
  • I’m crying so hard. As I’ve healed trauma responses, my autistic and ADHD symptoms have significantly increased. I thought I was going crazy.
  • @shapeofsoup
    “You’re not a little bit autistic, you either are or you aren’t.” Thank you! This needs to be screamed from the rooftops. Also, what you mention in the beginning of this video—that if you think you might be autistic and have c-ptsd, you may well have both. This is insightful and I wish more mental health professionals understood and acknowledged this. Good luck with your autistic realization journey, btw. You say you’re not sure yet, but frankly, the fact that you already have a firm grasp of autistic experience tells me you probably are. Your professional experience plays a part, I’m sure; but in my experience, even well-educated and empathetic allistic mental health professionals struggle to describe monotropic experience in an actually relatable way.
  • The neurologist I sat in front of last year to be evaluated for neurodivergence finally just laughed at me and started explaining attachment. I would only have similar traits if I have significant trauma. I didn't receive any help. He didn't do a proper assessment. How awful can someone be? I'm so tired of trying to get the right treatment. I have for years. I have AuDHD AND CPTSD. With dissociative elements. 'Professionals' have told me all kinds of things over the years. From 'I just imagined my trauma' to 'I 'just' have trauma' It's awful. Yes, complex trauma traits can lighten with good work around them. But most days I wish I was deaf (eventhough I love music) because I'm SO sensitive to sound. That is very different to being startled/triggered by a sudden noise. I could have a wonderful day but the bright sun still feels like someone burning my eyes out with a torch. And the issues in social interactions. Ohhhhh. Don't even get me started. The symptoms might seem similar but the lived experience is very different. Of course one would have to properly listen to and believe the person in front of them to understand that.