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There is a version of autism that gets talked about a lot, and it usually looks like a particular kind of struggle with social difficulties, sensory sensitivities, and a need for routine. It is sympathetic, fundable, and for the most part, considered safe to discuss in polite company.

Then there is the version that does not get talked about nearly enough. The Autistic person who has also developed a dependency on alcohol or drugs. The one who has experienced psychotic episodes. The one whose trauma has shaped into something clinicians label a personality disorder. This version makes people uncomfortable, and that discomfort, that turning away, is doing serious harm.

I want to talk about it directly, because this is not a niche issue. It is one of the defining, unspoken crises in Autistic mental health.

Why Autistic People Are Disproportionately Affected By Complex Mental Health Conditions

The research is increasingly clear: Autistic people experience mental health difficulties at significantly higher rates than the general population, but it isn’t just the rates that matter, it is the nature of those difficulties. Autism and mental health do not intersect in simple, clean-edged ways.

Studies consistently find that Autistic people have higher rates of anxiety and depression, but also of conditions that carry far more stigma; psychosis, post-traumatic stress disorder, eating disorders, and substance use disorders. These are the downstream effects of a society that was not built for us, and of a mental health system that still doesn’t know how to hold us.

The Role Of Trauma

To understand why complex mental health presentations are so common in Autistic communities, you have to understand how much cumulative trauma many of us carry. Autistic children are significantly more likely to experience bullying, social exclusion, physical and emotional abuse, and medical neglect. Many grow up in environments where their needs aren’t just unmet, they are actively pathologised. They are told there is something wrong with them before they have the language to push back, and they internalise those ideas, believing them to be true.

That kind of sustained, relational trauma shapes the nervous system; it shapes how we regulate emotion, how we interpret threat, how we relate to our own bodies. It creates the conditions from which psychosis, personality disorders, and addiction can grow.

The Consequences Of Masking

Masking (the practice of suppressing or concealing Autistic traits in order to pass as neurotypical) is exhausting, chronic, and corrosive. It is not a harmless coping strategy. Rather, a prolonged act of self-erasure that accumulates across years and decades. The mental health cost is enormous; high rates of Autistic burnout, dissociation, identity fragmentation, and a persistent sense that the person you present to the world is not really you.

For many Autistic people, substances become part of the masking toolkit long before addiction becomes visible. Alcohol reduces social anxiety; Cannabis dulls sensory overload; Stimulants help with executive function. The use is rarely recreational in the way it might be for a neurotypical peer, it is functional, adaptive, and deeply rational given the circumstances. That doesn’t make it safe, but it does mean we are framing it entirely wrong when we treat Autistic addiction as a moral failing rather than a survival response.

Delayed Diagnosis And Its Cost

The average age of Autistic diagnosis in the UK remains shockingly high, particularly for women, non-binary people, and people of colour. Many Autistic adults will have spent years or decades seeking help from mental health services for difficulties that were rooted in being unrecognised Autistic people in a world that made them suffer.

Those years matter; undiagnosed, unsupported, and misunderstood people develop coping mechanisms, some of which become problems in their own right. They receive diagnoses that fit the symptoms but miss the cause. They end up in mental health systems ill-equipped to see them whole. Their bodyminds are medicalised even though their mind is reacting adaptively to extreme duress.

How Stigma Compounds The Harm

Mental health stigma is not a uniform experience. There is a hierarchy to it, and Autistic people with complex needs often find themselves at the bottom.

Addiction carries stigma that other mental health conditions do not. It is still, in many professional and public contexts, treated as a choice (as a character flaw) rather than as a health condition with biological, psychological, and social roots. For Autistic people, this is especially damaging, because the pathway into addiction is so often a direct response to unmet need and unrecognised neurodivergence.

Psychosis is similarly stigmatised. The fear, the cultural othering, the way psychotic experiences are treated as fundamentally unknowable or frightening; this shuts down compassionate engagement before it can begin. Autistic people who experience psychosis frequently report being dismissed by services as “too complex” or bounced between mental health teams who cannot agree on a primary diagnosis.

Personality disorder diagnoses carry perhaps the heaviest stigma of all within clinical settings. They are often deployed (consciously or not) as a way of explaining away difficult behaviour rather than understanding its origins. For Autistic women in particular, complex-PTSD and emotionally unstable presentations have historically been misdiagnosed as personality disorders, with all the therapeutic nihilism that label can attract.

When a person’s distress is named as a disorder of character rather than a response to circumstances, we stop asking the most important question; what do you need?

This stigma does not only live in the general public. It lives in consulting rooms, multidisciplinary team meetings, and the policies that govern who gets access to specialist support. Autistic people with complex mental health needs are often told they are too Autistic for mental health services and too mentally unwell for autism services. They fall through the gap because no one has taken responsibility for bridging the gaps.

A Rights-Based Frame: Complex Needs Are Not Disqualifying

A rights-based approach to Autistic mental health insists on something simple but radical; having complex needs does not make you less deserving of care. It does not make your experiences less valid. It does not make you a lesser Autistic person.

Complexity is not a character flaw, it is, more often than not, the accumulated evidence of how hard a person has had to fight to survive in an ecosystem that was overtly hostile for them. Addiction, psychosis, trauma responses, these are not disqualifying conditions; they are part of the full picture of a human life, and they deserve the same compassion, curiosity, and clinical rigour as any other presentation.

The neurodivergent rights movement has rightly pushed back against narratives that frame autism as tragedy or deficiency. That same push-back needs to extend to how we talk about Autistic people with complex mental health needs. We do not get to celebrate neurodivergent identity selectively, embracing the parts that are comfortable and quietly excluding those who are struggling most.

What Neurodivergent-Affirming Complex Care Could Look Like

Genuinely affirming care for Autistic people with complex mental health needs is a design problem, and design problems have solutions. It starts with clinicians who understand autism not as a checklist of behaviours but as a different cognitive and sensory architecture., professionals who know that Autistic burnout can present like psychotic depression. Those who understand that self-medication is not the same as addiction in its neurotypical form, and that withdrawal and recovery need to account for sensory sensitivities and executive function differences. Those who do not apply personality disorder frameworks without first asking whether the person has ever had the opportunity to know who they really are.

It means peer support that is genuinely Autistic peers people with lived experience of addiction, psychosis, and complex trauma; not as cautionary tales, but as guides. People who can say; I have been where you are, and I found my way through, and here is what helped.

It is also essential that we create services that stop gatekeeping on the basis of complexity. Dual diagnosis (the co-occurrence of substance use and mental health difficulties) is not the exception in Autistic populations. It is common enough that it should be the expected frame, not the surprising complication that gets a person turned away.

We must also challenge language. Asking what happened to someone instead of what is wrong with them, treating Autistic burnout, monotropic split, and sensory crisis as the legitimate mental health presentations they are. Refusing to pathologise distress while simultaneously refusing to abandon people in it.

We Are All Of It

Autism and mental health are not separate conversations. They are the same conversation; one that needs to include the parts that are hardest to talk about.

Autistic people with addiction histories deserve compassionate, knowledgeable care. Autistic people who have experienced psychosis deserve to be believed and supported, not othered and discharged. Autistic people whose trauma has shaped their nervous system in ways that attract clinical labels deserve the story behind the label to be heard.

Complex needs are not a disqualification from the neurodivergent community. They are part of what it means to be Autistic in a world that wasn’t built for us; and they are exactly where our advocacy needs to go.

Author

  • David Gray-Hammond

    David Gray-Hammond is an Autistic, ADHD, and Schizophrenic author. He wrote “The New Normal: Autistic musings on the threat of a broken society” and “Unusual Medicine: Essays on Autistic identity and drug addiction”.

    He runs the blog Emergent Divergence (which can be found at https://emergentdivergence.com ) and is a regular educator and podcast host for Aucademy.

    He runs his own consultancy business through which he offers independent advocacy, mentoring, training, and public speaking.

    He has his own podcast “David’s Divergent Discussions” and can also be found on substack at https://www.davidsdivergentdiscussions.co.uk

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One response to “Autism, Complex Mental Health, and the Right to Be Fully Human”

  1. Deborah Gray avatar

    Brilliant words about the complex side of mental health and What Neurodivergent-Affirming Complex Care Could Look Like.

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