Exploring autistic adults’ psychosocial experiences affecting beginnings, continuity and change in camouflaging over time: a qualitative study in Singapore

Beatrice Rui Yi Loo*, Truman Jing Yang Teo, Melanie Jiamin Liang, Dawn-Joy Leong, Diana Weiting Tan, Sici Zhuang, Laura Hull, Lucy A. Livingston, Will Mandy, Francesca Happe, Iliana Magiati

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

6 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Camouflaging (or otherwise referred to as masking or passing) involves hiding one’s autistic-related characteristics and differences to get by in social situations in predominantly non-autistic societies. Very little is known to date about the course of camouflaging motivations and strategies over time or the psychosocial factors that may influence autistic people’s camouflaging choices and trajectories. In an exploratory qualitative study within an Asian sociocultural context, we interviewed 11 Singaporean autistic adults (9 males, 2 females, aged 22–45 years) about their camouflaging experiences to better understand (1) their camouflaging motivations and strategies over time, and (2) related psychosocial influences. Organised across four phases (pre-camouflaging, beginnings, continuity and change over time), 17 themes relating to camouflaging motivations and 8 themes relating to strategies were identified. The earliest camouflaging motivations were predominantly relational, linked to a negative self-identity that had been shaped by adverse social experiences. Camouflaging strategies became increasingly complex and integrated into one’s sense of self over time. Our findings highlight the role of psychosocial pressures precipitating camouflaging and emphasise the need for individual and societal changes, including moving towards enhanced acceptance and inclusion to reduce psychosocial pressures on autistic people to camouflage.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)627-643
Number of pages17
JournalAutism
Volume28
Issue number3
Early online date10 Jun 2023
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Mar 2024

Keywords

  • adults
  • autism
  • camouflaging
  • masking
  • mental health
  • well-being

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