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ASPartOfMe
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Joined: 25 Aug 2013
Age: 67
Gender: Male
Posts: 38,084
Location: Long Island, New York

21 Jul 2023, 7:30 am

Psychology Today
Jessica Penot, LPC, is a licensed professional counselor in Madison, Alabama, who specializes in treating trauma and autism spectrum disorder. She has over 20 years clinical experience in a variety of settings. She is the founder and director of Tree of Life Behavioral Health and has spoken and written about autism on platforms including The Art of Autism. Penot was diagnosed with autism in her 40s and has spent a significant amount of time working to understand the specific challenges and traumas women with face.

Quote:
If you walk into any autistic group, almost everyone in the group understands what it means to go into autistic shutdown or meltdown states. Even if they don’t know the proper words or terminology for these states, they respond viscerally.

In autistic adults, meltdowns are also a complete loss of control of behavior but that looks very different. In adults, it can look like crying, yelling, lashing out, suicidal ideation, self-harm, inability to talk, lack of ability to think, or rage.

According to research by Phung et al. (2022), autistic adults describe feeling out of control and they feel this with their entire body. They describe having blurry vision, muscles getting hot, cheeks getting warm, and shoulders bunched up. They have a diminished ability to think and sometimes difficulty finding words or remembering basic things. Autistic adults describe feeling completely out of control like everything is fuzzy.

Phung et al. (2022) also describes a stage called burnout, which can proceed meltdown in which the autistic person begins to feel fatigued, overwhelmed, slowed down, and has difficulty with cognition. This is a period where continued pressure and overwhelming sensory and emotional stress begin to erode the autistic person’s ability to function and perform daily tasks. Encouraging autistic people to decrease emotional and sensory pressure at this point can prevent meltdowns.

The Autism Research Institute says that meltdown is caused by central nervous system overload in autistic people. Recent research shows that autistic people have neurons that are more hyperconnected than neurotypicals. This explains why it is so much easier to overwhelm autistic people. Autistic people’s sensory systems are very different and when things are overwhelming, this can result in complete meltdown.

Almost every day I can celebrate autism and promote autism acceptance. I am autistic and proud, and I find autism beautiful. But, when I am in meltdown, every part of me wishes I could be normal.

I have recently gone through a prolonged period of autistic burnout as I have increased my workload. Yesterday, that burnout descended into meltdown. I couldn’t mitigate all the damage. An attorney would only communicate with me through group chats. Communication is usually one of my strong areas as an autistic adult, but I am completely unable to comprehend group chats. The attorney will only communicate with me in group chat format and the last communication I got triggered the meltdown. I didn’t understand what his group was doing or why. The conversation in the group chat might as well have been in Sumerian.

I could feel it in my body first. I didn’t want anything to touch me. My chest felt odd and tight. Everything was too bright and too much. I couldn’t think. I stuttered and forgot obvious words. I became clumsy and fell out of my chair twice. My hands were and are still shaking. I did send several angry emails to the attorney before I realized what I was doing.

I realized quickly what was happening and cut off contact. I canceled appointments and went home to my quiet place where I can avoid sensory overstimulation. I called people I could trust who talked to me and accepted my state. I explained to my loved ones what was happening, and they gave me the space and time I needed to reboot. I also began tracking the meltdown and all my physical symptoms. It is a fascinating event. In the moment of the meltdown, I feel like an entirely different person.

Teaching people how to deal with autistic meltdowns is one of the things I do the most in my practice and it is simple yet complex. First, take space. End all activities that contribute to the meltdown. Find a quiet place and find things that bring you peace. Accept the meltdown as it is. Bring safe people around you or stay alone as you prefer. Find sensory delights and surround yourself with them. If you can, sleep. This will help you reboot. After the meltdown, take time to note your triggers so you can avoid them in the future or at least plan for the meltdown. Take time off to alleviate burnout so you don’t melt down again.

Most of all, remember that all meltdowns pass. It is uncomfortable for everyone, but it won’t last forever
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Professionally Identified and joined WP August 26, 2013
DSM 5: Autism Spectrum Disorder, DSM IV: Aspergers Moderate Severity.

“My autism is not a superpower. It also isn’t some kind of god-forsaken, endless fountain of suffering inflicted on my family. It’s just part of who I am as a person”. - Sara Luterman