I had lunch with a friend today. We meet up every few weeks. Thankfully they work in an office just across the road from mine so it's easy. Also, the Japanese place in the food court next door is pretty good. We've bonded over bento boxes. Honey soy chicken for them, spicy Bulduk chicken for me. They were champing to provide some information.
"Well, I have news."
"Good news, I hope? All's well with the cat?"
"Yes, he's great, and I have a story about him, but I'll tell you my other news when we sit down."
We found a table and sat, stripping our chopsticks of their paper shroud, cracking our cans of Coke Zero.
"It's big news."
"Get on with it." They weren't looking me in the eye, but that was normal. Neither of us are that fantastic with eye contact.
"Well, with the encouragement and blessing of my partner, I went to seek a diagnosis."
"A diagnosis, I take it, for whether you're a match for the autism spectrum?"
"Yep."
Not so strangely, we clicked almost immediately at work a while ago. They were there when I was filling out the paperwork to get my diagnosis. We talked a lot at the time about they whats, whys and wherefores of searching for answers at the time. They mentioned that in your fifties, what's the point of getting diagnosed as you've worked most of it out.
"And? How did you go?" I asked, chasing some of the roast vegetables around the box.
"Umm. Well, I'm AUDHD. With a few other letters just for me."
"Like me, but with a few more bits to you, which you can keep. I'm very proud of you," I told them. "How do you feel?"
They smiled. "Vindicated. Heard. Stronger. I'm getting a better understanding of myself. It's like somebody's replaced the light bulb in a dark room."
"Yep."
"And looking back, all the patterns were there."
"Yep"
"And you work out that a heap of your good friends are probably on the spectrum."
"To paraphrase Lewis Carroll, the best people are bonkers." I smiled at them. "I've found this neurodiversity journey very rewarding."
"I know. You helped give me the impetus to seek out the diagnosis. Thank you."
"You're welcome. It's all a part of the toolbox. It helps that we're in our fifties, what the old guard would call high functioning, and self-aware."
And we talked more about the ins and outs of being fairly recent converts to this rather strange neurodiversity club, which gives us some superpowers, and some challenges - as well as a lot of understanding.
"Oh, one thing," I told them, "You might find that the people that you click with might just be in the same boat."
"I'm seeing that already."
"But how good does it feel that the strange little kid, that had few friends, and loved science and dinosaurs, and still thinks going out is one of the most difficult things in the world, and who only eats ice cream with a teaspoon..."
"You only eat ice cream with a teaspoon?" They were incredulous.
"You'll find out about neurodiversity and cutlery - it's a big thing. Actually, sensory stuff - you know your own quirks - not that you think there's anything strange..."
"Okay..."
"It's a journey. I think you'll like it."
"I think I will too."
