Navigating autism and loneliness with Kaelynn Partlow
54K views
Mar 29, 2025
Kaelynn Partlow shares her story about life with autism, ADHD, and dyslexia, and how finding the right diagnosis helped her embrace her neurodivergent identity.
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0:00
When have you experienced a profound sense of disconnection from others, and what did you learn from it
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I don't know, since I gained consciousness, I think, it feels like I spend more time dissecting the human experience than having one myself
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my name is Kaylin Partlow I'm an author I'm an autism advocate I'm a content creator and I'm a
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registered behavior technician we came prepared we have three fidget toys how could you possibly
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screw up if you have three fidget toys you could not all the anxious thoughts from the brain travel
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down the arm and into the hand and into the object and they no longer live in the brain
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I think I like balloon dog the most. What do you imagine other people assume about you
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I think people in person think that my life is easy and it is free from pain or significant issues
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And I don't think they realize that I'm intelligent to the degree that I am
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Is there a voice in your head that tells you how bad you are that says you're selfish, you're spoiled, you're stupid
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Whose voice is that? And when was the first time you heard that? I think when I was little, my perception of myself was that I was stupid
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It meant I was stupid. And even if I didn't have a name for it, I felt stupid because I was failing the third grade
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And how do you fail the third grade and have a good self-esteem, you know? You kind of can't do those two things at the same time
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And so when I got assessed it was pretty disappointing I think on everybody behalf that we got autism we got ADHD we got dyslexia we got dyscalculia we got dysgraphia dyspraxia You know getting diagnosed it kind of put a word to it so instead of stupid I was dyslexic
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which helped a little, not a lot, but a little, just to have a word for it that wasn't dumb or wrong
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If someone doesn't understand you, what are you making it mean about you
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In an ideal world, if somebody didn't understand you, they would just say, I don't understand that
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but traditionally that's not how most people communicate. They, I don't know, give me a normal
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person example. What do the normies do? Yeah, sometimes they just stop communicating. They don't
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tell you, oh, I didn't understand that. They just are done with you. When I was little, I was really
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obsessed with dogs and it wasn't enough to just play with my dog. And so for a very long time
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I said that I was a dog. You know, my name is Kaylin and it starts with a K and I was nine years
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old and so therefore I was a canine. I think sometimes if I got lucky, you know, little kids
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at the age of nine would bark back and they would play dogs with me, but eventually they would get
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bored. They'd be like, no, that's weird. We don't want to do that. And that just didn't make sense
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to me. What action do you want to take, but don't feel ready yet? My first thought was I need a new
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car and I don't want a car payment, but then like in consideration for what this activity is
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Probably the answer we're looking for is that I've not prioritized interpersonal relationships
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If I'm in a social situation, I have to think about looking at people's faces
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intentionally listening to their words and filtering out my own brain noise. I have to think about my own facial expression and body language and posture
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to make sure that I don't send the wrong message. And so when you're faced with attempts that don't work or attempts that don't feel worthwhile
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then it really difficult to motivate yourself to continue when you know that you not likely to encounter success What are you most afraid will never change about yourself or your life and why
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I guess what if my interpersonal issues never get better? Feeling big emotions and feeling
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them very strongly and by my own metric being just a little bit neurotic to live with
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being lonely. Like I'm pretty satisfied with how I am, but like you're meant to grow and change
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And so I guess I'd be afraid that I'd stay like this forever
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My relationship with loneliness is it's worse nights, weekends, and holidays. The loneliness kind of creeps back in because I'm no longer needed in a professional capacity
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And, you know, I've got people who more or less need me in a personal capacity
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But when those people don't need me or are busy, that's when the loneliness kind of starts to set in and you start to kind of look around and realize, well, wait a minute
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Everything has stopped. Where did everybody go? Everybody else is out living their life
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Everybody else is out doing things with other people. And I'm sitting here thinking about what things I might do at work next time
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Sometimes I write when I feel that way. And I'm a pretty good writer
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And when I'm in a bad mood, I'm a really good writer, unfortunately. When I am sad or upset, I go inside my closet and close the door, and it's incredibly dark, and it's very quiet, and there's just nothingness in there except for all of my feelings, which kind of fills up the closet and maybe then some
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And I kind of channel that, I guess, through my fingers and into the words that I write until there's nothing else left, and sometimes I fall asleep
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What personal strength are you most reluctant to acknowledge, and how has it impacted your life
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When you get diagnosed with multiple disabilities you don get the luxury of ignoring your personal weaknesses And also you really cling to your personal strengths And so when you spend a large
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portion of your childhood unsuccessful in academic environments, you come to the
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conclusion that I can't do this and I have evidence to support why I can't do
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this because every time I've tried it's failed and I could pull out all the paperwork that says that I have. But when I started with Project Hope, they gave me
6:00
tasks and activities that I could be successful with. I saw areas in my life in which I was
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successful and without a whole lot of help and it's really kind of empowered me to take advantage
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of other opportunities I've been offered as a result of that. When did you truly feel celebrated? Probably when I was on Netflix and then we had the viewing party
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when it came out. Hello. Hi. My name is Kaylin. I'm 24 years old and I'm single and I'm looking
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for a boyfriend. To have such a large attendance at my viewing party, it was co-workers, it was
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casual friends, it was acquaintances, it was just a bunch of people who I knew. Everybody showed up and I thought that that was particularly special. You know the whole thing
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where they say, do it scared? I realized just how capable I was of doing it scared. So I
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very quickly in my own mind became someone who thrives under pressure. What do we think about
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the fingerprint as the new symbol for autism? And the idea that I could be a public speaker was
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not a thing that I thought I could achieve. It was maybe a thing that I was interested in doing
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but I didn't think it was possible. But with the newfound knowledge of me thriving under pressure
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I could pursue things that were difficult. Not only could I tolerate them, but I could pursue
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them and I could be successful with them. Please bring light, bring hope to those who need it
#Anxiety & Stress
#Depression
#Mental Health