In many professions, small mistakes can usually be corrected without too much damage. A writer can fix a typo with a quick edit, an accountant can revise a wrong entry, and even a missed email can often be sorted out with a follow-up. But there are certain fields where even a seemingly minor error can have life-altering consequences. In medicine, especially, one incorrect diagnosis can send someone down the wrong path for years, affecting not just their treatment but their entire understanding of themselves.
That’s exactly what happened to a man named Tyler Barnett. In an emotional video, Tyler opened up about the overwhelming sense of peace and relief he felt after finally being diagnosed with autism and ADHD at 42. For years, he had been treated for conditions that never fully explained what he was experiencing, and the misdiagnoses only made things harder to navigate. Keep scrolling to watch the entire video.
Getting the right diagnosis can be life-changing, helping people better understand themselves and access the support they truly need
Image credits: prostooleh
A man named Tyler Barnett finally received an autism and ADHD diagnosis at 42 after years of unanswered questions
Image credits: tylerlbarnett
Overcome with emotion, Tyler shared the powerful realization that there was never anything “wrong” with him
Image credits: millennialdad
Image credits: millennialdad
Image credits: millennialdad
Image credits: millennialdad
Watch his full story here
@millennialdad Just got diagnosed with autism and adhd after 42 years of trying to figure out just what exactly was wrong with me. Feeling so much relief…but so much grief for little me who deserved to know. #autism#adhd#audhd#actuallyautistic#neurodivergent @autism speaks ♬ original sound – Millennial Dad
Image credits: tylerlbarnett
The scale of the problem becomes even more sobering when looking at emergency care. A report highlighted by The New York Times noted that as many as 250,000 people die every year due to misdiagnoses in emergency rooms, often because doctors fail to identify life-threatening conditions such as stroke, sepsis, or pneumonia in time. Data from the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality estimates that out of 130 million annual emergency department visits in the U.S., roughly 7.4 million involve inaccurate diagnoses, with 370,000 patients suffering serious harm as a result. These numbers reflect just how critical accurate diagnosis is; not only for physical health, but for emotional wellbeing and quality of life.
Thankfully, Tyler Barnett’s story did not involve those kinds of devastating medical outcomes. But the emotional toll of being misunderstood for decades is its own kind of pain. The public relations specialist spent much of his life trying to make sense of a brain that even he did not fully understand. In an interview with People, Barnett shared a deeply vulnerable reflection: “I was told I should be integrating with everyone else and something was basically wrong with me if I didn’t.” That message shaped much of his life. Over time, he learned to mask his natural instincts, carefully observing and mimicking the behaviors of others just to fit in. He described constantly adjusting himself to make other people comfortable, even when it meant suppressing who he truly was.
That pressure showed up early in school. Tyler explained that he managed to get by academically, but not in the way most people assumed. He told People that his success often came through instinctive pattern recognition rather than traditional learning methods. “Somehow, likely because of my strong autistic pattern recognition, I was able to pass every test by basically guessing the answers,” he shared. On the outside, everything appeared fine. He got good enough grades, didn’t outwardly stand out, and moved through school without raising concerns. But internally, he described feeling exhausted, confused, scared, and deeply isolated. It was a silent struggle hidden behind what looked like normalcy.
As he entered adulthood, that confusion only deepened. In his twenties, Tyler was treated for anxiety and depression, diagnoses that seemed to fit on the surface but never fully explained his experiences. The medications prescribed to help him did not align with the way his brain functioned. Instead of relief, he faced worsening mental health challenges and even struggled with addiction. Then, in his thirties, after reaching another emotional breaking point, he was diagnosed with bipolar disorder and placed on intense medications. Once again, the treatment path never quite matched what he was living through.
The turning point came from an unexpected source: his 10-year-old daughter. According to People, she regularly suggested that her father might have autism. He began researching, reflecting, and eventually sought formal evaluation. Finally, Tyler received an official diagnosis of Level 1 autism and ADHD. After decades of confusion, he finally had answers.
In the now widely shared video documenting the moment, Tyler’s raw emotion was impossible to miss. There was relief, disbelief, grief for the years lost, and perhaps most powerfully, validation. Across social media, countless people resonated with his story because late diagnosis journeys like his are becoming increasingly visible. Many adults have spent years feeling like outsiders, struggling to understand why everyday experiences seemed harder for them than for everyone else. For many, receiving the correct diagnosis can feel like finally being handed the missing piece of a lifelong puzzle.
Tyler’s diagnosis also shines light on a term many people are only just beginning to hear more often: AuDHD. This community-driven term refers to people who are both autistic and have ADHD. While it is not listed as a standalone diagnosis in manuals like the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, it reflects a clinically recognized overlap. For many years, autism and ADHD were thought to be mutually exclusive. That changed in 2013, when modern diagnostic frameworks began allowing dual diagnoses. Studies now suggest that between 50% and 70% of autistic individuals also have ADHD, making this overlap far more common than once believed.
Living with AuDHD can often feel like existing in a constant internal contradiction. One part of the brain may crave structure, routine, and predictability, while another craves novelty, spontaneity, and stimulation. Even focus can feel conflicting. Autism may create deep, sustained concentration on specific interests, while ADHD can cause rapid shifts in attention and bursts of intense but inconsistent energy. Many describe it as living in cycles of intense productivity followed by exhaustion—a rhythm of bursts and crashes that can be difficult to explain to others who have never experienced it.
For Tyler Barnett, finally receiving the right diagnosis brought clarity that years of misdiagnoses never could. It allowed him to stop viewing himself through the lens of something “broken” and instead understand himself through a framework that actually made sense. His story is a powerful reminder that the right diagnosis can do far more than guide treatment; it can reshape identity, self-compassion, and healing. Technology and growing awareness around neurodivergence are helping more adults access these answers than ever before, but Tyler’s experience also shows how much work still remains.
At its heart, this is not just a story about diagnosis. It is about finally being seen clearly after years of misunderstanding. Sometimes the most life-changing words a person can hear are not “something is wrong with you,” but rather: this is who you’ve been all along, and there was never anything wrong with that.
People flooded the comments with support, celebrating that he can now move forward with clarity, and self-understanding
Many people online also opened up about their own late-diagnosis journeys
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After looking up Adhd burnout it sounds like the he11 that is menopause
When I was about 16, before I was kicked out, my (adoptive) mom told me after a fight that not long after I came into foster care at age 5, a mother of two autistic kids told her that I was likely autistic. I would have meltdowns in church, and the woman recognized the signs. My whole childhood I was told I just had "PTSD" from finding my bio mom d**d. When my mom told me that I might be autistic, I was angry and upset. I considered myself smart, and I didn't know much about autism or people with it. I pictured someone who was stupid, or "slow", and was deeply upset. But now I'm diagnosed, and I know how wrong I was. I just didn't know what autism really was, or that it would explain a lot of the issues I had. I'm so happy I have my AuDHD diagnosis. It s***s having it, but it's much better knowing what's different about me, that I'm not alone, and that there's nothing wrong with me for being autistic and ADHD.
After looking up Adhd burnout it sounds like the he11 that is menopause
When I was about 16, before I was kicked out, my (adoptive) mom told me after a fight that not long after I came into foster care at age 5, a mother of two autistic kids told her that I was likely autistic. I would have meltdowns in church, and the woman recognized the signs. My whole childhood I was told I just had "PTSD" from finding my bio mom d**d. When my mom told me that I might be autistic, I was angry and upset. I considered myself smart, and I didn't know much about autism or people with it. I pictured someone who was stupid, or "slow", and was deeply upset. But now I'm diagnosed, and I know how wrong I was. I just didn't know what autism really was, or that it would explain a lot of the issues I had. I'm so happy I have my AuDHD diagnosis. It s***s having it, but it's much better knowing what's different about me, that I'm not alone, and that there's nothing wrong with me for being autistic and ADHD.






























































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