this post was submitted on 26 Dec 2025
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Autism

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If anyone else has experienced something like this, I would love to know.

So my sister and I have an excellent relationship. We rarely fought as kids, and hardly disagree now. She is two years younger than me. The thing is, our relationship has been hindered all our life due to me being autistic.

I’ll start from the beginning. As a child, I was in special education, and my mother referred to me as a “spec ed kid.” I wasn’t aware until middle school, when she told me I had Autism. My parents constantly hovered over me, forcing me to do well in school, B’s weren’t going to cut it, as they said I had to do well, for “I was in the big leagues now.” I got my report card back for the first semester, with all A’s and a B, but was less than pleased. My parents were all excited and said I should be proud of myself, but the only reason I did well was because they were constantly nagging and hovering over me until my work was perfect, and made sure my special education teachers hovered over me and did most of the work. This continued until last year, when I went to college. My parents still insist I need extreme accommodations, but I rarely use them, and am doing well when I’m there.

When I was in seventh grade, however, my sister began dealing with depression, hearing voices, etc. One day, my mom and I were in the car, and out of nowhere she said in a sad voice that my sister had been crying to her the night before, saying how sad she was that I got all the attention (because my parents were constantly on my ass about schoolwork). My mom said she felt awful about it. Later, she and I got into an argument for whatever reason, and she said that she was going to spend ten minutes talking to my sister about her day. This made me feel terrible inside.

I ended up forgetting about this whole thing for years, up until a few months ago. My mom and I were talking about things my sister says that bother me, and my mom said that she just lets my sister talk, because if she were to say, “Let’s not talk about this now,” it would make her sad and feel how she was treated and neglected in the past. This broke me, and I ended up apologizing to my sister. She honestly didn’t care too much, And told me that that it wasn’t my fault. But I know deep down, it is. But I’ve made tons of progress since my parents allow me to be more independent and go to college, and my sister gets much more attention now.

That’s where my issues come in. I ask my parents for attention, But often times They tell me they don’t know how to spend time with me because we have very little in common. My family likes movies, But pause the movie every time I get up to grab something or go to the bathroom, and insist that I am “running off on them.” I like shopping, but not clothes shopping, which my mom is obsessed with. My family and I love board games, but we rarely play them because my dad works third shift and needs to sleep. It’s the same with video games, except my mom doesn’t know how to play. My parents and sister are obsessed with the TV shows “Stranger Things,” “From” and “Fireforce,” but I just don’t like that stuff. I’m more interested in little children stuff, like SpongeBob and shows on TLC. I am also very young for my age and don’t understand today’s slang.

My mom also has a tendency to tell me To drop certain topics when I’m upset, And to just “let it go.” She spends a lot of time with my sister now, And tells all her friends and myself amazing she is. For example, A few months ago, she got her driver’s license, My mom was on the phone with her coworker. They were talking about driving. She stated, “I wish my younger daughter was confident enough to drive herself to school, She’s actually really a driver. My older daughter needs a bit more practice.” Let me just clarify something: I’d probably be a better driver if my parents let me take the driving test (I got waved due to Covid).

My mom has also referred to me as entitled lately (she asked if I would be sad if I got one present, and gave me the mom look when I said it would be fine). Has anyone else experienced being favored over a younger sibling/feeling left out? Sorry if this is just a big rant.

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[–] webghost0101@sopuli.xyz 8 points 4 days ago (1 children)

NTA

You said you feel like this is your fault, but really how would it be. You are just a kid trying to make sense of your life and survive.

And so is your sister.

Your mother sounds overworked and ridden with self doubt. But what i am missing here is some general knowledge about autism.

It seems your treated as different, “the special one” but autistic reality is that were all just different combinations of individual brain modules.

Do those modules mostly work like most other people, you’re neurotypical. Do they work differently you’re neurodivergent.

But you don’t develop autistic brain-functions out of nowhere. Parts are almost certainly inherited. You might have a mix that enhances some aspects but i can guarantee you’re are in a family of neurodivergent. Unofficially but helpful you may privately consider your family members to be “different kind of autistic” rather then “normal” incl your mom.

Your mom panicking about your sister is a big tell, she seemed spooked. It is possible your sister is going trough depression, which may be a side effect of underlying neurodivergence which she might need help for.

Your parents would need to break the stigma and treat both you and your sister as equals who can grow themselves with each their own proficiencies and challenges and needs.

This probably means trusting you with some more independence, and allowing your sister to express that she needs extra care. A possible angle to suggest something is a dokter once told Me “What works for autistic people often works for everyone” you don't have to discuss wether or not they are autistic (people get really upset if you do that) but you can affirm that she needs some of the care that they give you, while you want the space to grow to not need it anymore.

Good luck!

[–] Marycat1@lemmy.zip 2 points 3 days ago (1 children)

Thank you for your advice! My mom is neurodivergent, she has ADD, but not Autism. I was officially diagnosed when I was 14, but I do not have ADD.

[–] webghost0101@sopuli.xyz 2 points 3 days ago

ADD and autism are one stone trow removed from each other most people that have one have a little of both.

From a neurodivergent perspective they are all the same bigger spectrum that includes dyslexia, cdc, ocd..

I think its very likely your mom is overworked partly because she is also juggling her own challenges between it all.

You didn’t mention a lot of details about your dad but same kinds stick togetger so i am highly suspecting there is no one in your family that isn’t or wasn’t a “special kid”

[–] Australis13@fedia.io 6 points 3 days ago

She ... told me that that it wasn’t my fault. But I know deep down, it is.

Your sister is right. It's not your fault. You're not responsible for the actions of your parents; it was their job to make sure both you and your sister got the attention and support you needed growing up.

I did not experience this imbalance to anywhere near the same degree as you growing up. I certainly felt the pressure to achieve academically as I was the academically-inclined one of the family and my siblings would sometimes compare themselves to me in this regard, even though our parents weren't pushing us into any particular course of study or career. But most of the friction between myself and one of my siblings was more due to my inadequate social skills during my teens. These days I get along well with my siblings and all of us have different careers and qualifications.