@aegisheart This was me
I was only diagnosed as autistic last year at age 48.
I was diagnosed with ADHD at ages 4, 28, and again last year at age 48. I'm finally on ADHD medication and finally able to regulate my emotions for the first time in my life.
I was subjected to numerous tests in kindergarten and 1st grade and labeled "highly gifted."
Now after the longest autistic burnout of my life, I regularly experience mutism and am currently on long term medical leave from work.
I'm currently in a clinic for trauma and burnout and doing a lot of reflection.
Things I wish my parents had done:
1) supported me as who I was, instead of trying to change my "sensitivity." Modeled emotional intelligence after educating themselves on this topic (they were not emotionally prepared or tuned in to themselves). Helped me understand that others may have different or less intense feelings.
2) Understanding I wasn't being "difficult", "perverse" (my mom's worst word for me), " a drama queen." My "tantrums" (another hated word) were likely meltdowns. I spent ages 11-20 dissociated and in shutdown mode and developed an eating disorder, sex/love addiction, and a unhealthy attitude towards work and physical activity as a direct result of trauma.
3) let me change schools when I was getting bullied and got me help with conflicts and social stuff in school. If the adhd medication I now take had been available, it would have helped me with the emotional stuff.
4) NOT put me in the gifted and talented program, as they recruited kids from the whole district, leaving me alone and floundering in middle school.
5) NOT "given up on me." (My mom's words)
6) some kind of sport that didn't involve balls, running, or mean coaches or pressure.
I understand society wasn't that far along and I am one of the lost generations, but I have a lot of grief around this. Probably the research that's being done now would have saved me from constant burnout over the course of my life.
Positive aspects:
1) I think more quickly than most people I know (except my younger kid who's being assessed for autism (at age 10) abs can grasp complex topics, process information, think laterally, and analyze ideas easily and at speed. BUT I need motivation and distraction, including opportunities to multitask.
2) as I found out in my assessment, my adhd and autism actually work together at times to give me useful skills like working extremely quickly and accurately
3) I'm extremely empathetic. This can be difficult at times but if I am calm and feeling safe I can really feel for and with others. I may not show it but it's there and I've had meaningful connections with people in my life.
4) the social justice aspect. I'm extremely aware of unfair and unjust situations, again, perhaps to a fault, but I can smell a rat long before others do. My son is like this too.
5) my intuition is incredibly strong, when I trust myself and am able to communicate effectively.
Hope this helps - you sound like great parents and your kid is lucky to have you! Remember that's a hard age too.