Autistic Identity Is Not a DestinationAn exploration of Autistic identity inspired by the Embracing Our Autistic Selves courseThere is a particular weight to the sentence “I’m Autistic”. Not because it explains everything, but because it does something. For many of us, that sentence does not land in the intellect first. It lands in the body. It tightens the chest or loosens it. It brings relief, grief, steadiness, resistance, or something harder to name. Sometimes it feels different depending on who is saying it. Sometimes it changes across time. Sometimes it refuses to settle at all. That unsettled quality matters. Within NeuroHub, and woven throughout the Re-Storying Autism workbook, Autistic identity is not treated as a conclusion to be reached. It is treated as a relationship; one that shifts as we move through different environments, forms of belonging, stages of burnout and recovery, and moments of self-recognition. Autistic identity, in this framing, is not something you arrive at. It is something you live inside. From Definition To RelationshipMuch of the public conversation about autism focuses on definition. Diagnostic criteria. Traits. Thresholds. Explanations that promise clarity if we can just get the wording right. But for Autistic people themselves, identity rarely unfolds that neatly. For many, diagnosis comes late, carrying with it relief alongside grief. For others, diagnosis feels less important than what follows; the slow, sometimes painful re-reading of one’s own life. Memories reorganise. Sensory overwhelm is no longer framed as personal weakness. Social exhaustion stops looking like failure and starts looking like cost. This is why NeuroHub conversations consistently drift away from abstract definitions and toward lived patterns, energy, safety, masking, burnout, connection, dignity. Autism becomes less about what someone is and more about how they have learned to survive; and what becomes possible when survival is no longer the only goal. The Re-Storying Autism workbook reflects this shift deliberately. Rather than asking people to describe autism in the abstract, it invites them to notice how meaning has been shaped through experience. What did Autistic people learn to hide? What helps them cope? What parts of ourselves were muted to make the world tolerable? Identity, here, is not a label applied to a static self. It is a story that keeps rewriting itself. Identity That Is Allowed To MoveOne of the strongest threads running through NeuroHub is the refusal to force autistic identity into a single emotional shape. You do not have to love being Autistic. You do not have to frame it as suffering. You do not have to choose pride or pain. Many Autistic people hold contradictory truths at the same time. Autism can feel grounding and exhausting. Liberating and constraining. A source of clarity one day and confusion the next. These shifts are not treated as inconsistency or immaturity. They are treated as honest reflections of living in a world that is not built with us in mind. This matters because so many dominant narratives demand certainty. Autism must be tragic or inspirational, deficit or gift. These binaries are tidy, but they flatten real experience. Within NeuroHub, and throughout the workbook, identity is allowed to remain provisional. You are permitted to say “this is what autism means to me right now” without locking yourself into that meaning forever. Change is not framed as instability. It is framed as responsiveness. Belonging Comes FirstA recurring insight, often spoken quietly but felt deeply, is that self-acceptance rarely arrives on its own. Belonging tends to come first. Many Autistic people grow up learning to distrust themselves because the world repeatedly misreads them. Over time, that misattunement becomes internalised. Self-rejection is not a personality flaw; it is an understandable response to chronic misunderstanding. What changes that is not insight alone, but recognition. When Autistic people encounter others who share similar rhythms, sensory needs, communication styles, and contradictions, something shifts. Language emerges. Shame loosens its grip. Experiences that once felt isolating are revealed as shared. NeuroHub is built around this principle. It is a space where autistic identity is mirrored, questioned, and held. The Autistic identity course echoed this by encouraging people to notice where their stories softened; not because they tried harder to accept themselves, but because they were no longer alone in their understanding. Identity, in this sense, is relational. It grows where it is witnessed. The Body As A Site Of MeaningAnother quiet but radical move in this work is the shift away from purely cognitive understandings of identity. Rather than asking what autism means in theory, people are invited to notice what it does in the body. Does naming yourself Autistic bring calm or tension? Does it feel grounding or exposing? Does that sensation change depending on context? These questions disrupt decades of disembodied autism discourse. They acknowledge that identity is not just a story we tell, it is a physiological experience shaped by safety, threat, memory, and environment. The same word can feel radically different depending on where and how it is spoken. This tells us something important: meaning is not inherent. It is co-created. The Re-Storying Autism workbook repeatedly returns to this embodied perspective. Not to regulate people into compliance, but to honour the body as a source of knowledge. Autistic identity, here, is an embodied reality. Letting Go Of The “Acceptable” Autistic SelfAnother thread that runs through NeuroHub, often just beneath the surface, is the question of respectability. Many Autistic adults have learned to perform a version of themselves that is easier for others to accept; articulate, insightful, calm, productive, emotionally contained. This version is often praised. It is also often unsustainable. Over time, people begin to notice what that performance costs. Anger swallowed. Needs minimised. Joy rationed. Authenticity postponed. Re-storying autism involves questioning who that performance serves. It asks; Which parts of you were made invisible to keep others comfortable? What would it mean to stop negotiating your worth through palatability? These are not just personal questions. They are political ones. They point to systems that tolerate Autistic people only when they are useful, compliant, or inspiring. Within NeuroHub, identity is understood as shaped by power as much as by personality. Identity Without ClosurePerhaps the most important aspect of this work is its refusal of neat endings. There is no expectation that someone will reach a final, settled understanding of what being Autistic means to them. Not knowing, or knowing differently at different times, is treated as part of Autistic experience, not a failure to resolve it. This stands in contrast to models that frame identity work as something to complete. In NeuroHub, identity is allowed to remain open-ended. It changes as people unmask, burn out, recover, age, build community, or lose it. The Re-Storying Autism workbook is designed to be returned to, not finished. Its purpose is not to produce a polished narrative, but to support people in noticing how their relationship with autism shifts across time and context. A Living, Shared ProcessThese ideas did not emerge in isolation. They come from shared reflection, mutual recognition, and the slow building of trust. They are shaped by lived experience rather than imposed frameworks. NeuroHub is not a place where Autistic identity is defined. It is a place where it is explored; carefully, collectively, and without demand for certainty. The workbook does not stand apart from that community. It grows out of it. Autistic identity, in this space, does not need defending or justifying. It is something you are allowed to relate to in your own way. Not as a destination. But as an ongoing, human process of becoming. You're currently a free subscriber to David Gray-Hammond. For the full experience, upgrade your subscription. |
Thursday, 29 January 2026
Autistic Identity Is Not a Destination
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