Becoming a Patient — Being Explained by Others
On Diagnosis, Vulnerability, and the Right to Understand One’s Own Life
There is a strange relief in receiving a name for something that for a long time had no name. Something that has been scattered throughout an entire life suddenly takes shape. What once appeared as isolated incidents, misunderstandings, shame, exhaustion, strangeness, silence, laughter, overreactions, breakdowns, and masks can be gathered into a language. One receives a diagnosis. One receives an explanation. Perhaps, for the first time, one hears that life was not merely a series of personal failures.
There was something there.
Not as guilt. Not as stupidity. Not as moral failure. Not as lack of will. But as a different way of being in the world.
In this way, a diagnosis can be liberating. It can loosen old knots. It can give meaning to events that were previously only painful. It can make it possible to see the child, the young person, and the adult anew. Not as wrong, but as misunderstood. Not as difficult, but as vulnerable. Not as without feelings, but as overloaded. Not as cold, but as struggling. Not as stupid, but as a human being measured by codes no one had explained.
But a diagnosis also has another side. It does not come alone. It comes with a language, a system, a medical record, a form, an assessment, a professional judgement. It comes with words that can help, but also with words that can wound. It can open a room for self-understanding, but it can also place the human being inside someone else’s explanation.
This is how one becomes a patient.
Not only because one sits in a waiting room. Not only because one has received a referral. Not only because a professional asks questions and writes notes. One becomes a patient when life becomes the object of professional interpretation. When what was once one’s own life, one’s own story, one’s own pain, one’s own body, one’s own attempts to survive, is translated into professional language.
This may be necessary. It may be good. It may be right. But it is never entirely innocent.
To become a patient is to enter a relationship in which someone else is given a mandate to explain you. The other listens, asks, evaluates, compares, classifies, and concludes. The patient tells. The professional interprets. The patient remembers. The professional systematizes. The patient comes with life. The professional comes with concepts.
Sometimes these two meet in a good way. Then something beautiful can happen. The patient receives not only a diagnosis, but a language. Not only an assessment, but recognition. Not only an explanation from the outside, but help in understanding life from within.
At other times, something else happens. The human being becomes smaller while the explanation becomes larger. Life is pressed into categories that do not quite contain it. What was vulnerable is described as dysfunction. What was survival is described as symptom. What was a lifelong effort to function is described as deficit. What was a different path through the world is described as disorder.
For people on the autism spectrum, this can be especially demanding. Many have lived for a long time before the diagnosis arrives. They have already been explained by others: strange, difficult, unsocial, stubborn, distant, too intense, too quiet, too direct, too rigid, too sensitive, not sensitive enough. They have learned to mask. They have learned to compensate. They have learned to cope. They have learned to appear normal, at least long enough to get through the day.
The child with the dunce cap eventually became the young person with the clown mask. One mask had been placed upon him from the outside. The other he put on himself. Not because he wanted to be false, but because he had learned that the world could be handled better if he himself directed the laughter. If the others were going to laugh, they could laugh at the clown, not at him.
Later came the adult masks. The parent mask. The work mask. The social mask. The competent mask. The one who shows up, answers correctly, keeps himself together, and does what is expected. The masks made life possible. They made it possible to function in work, family, and community. But they cost energy. Much energy. Over time, a human being can carry more stress than the body will finally allow.
As an adult, he was diagnosed with Ménière’s disease, a chronic illness of dizziness and vertigo. This too made him a patient. Not a patient in his entire identity, but a patient in relation to a healthcare system that had to explain the dizziness, the hearing, the body, and the limitations. The diagnosis became a serious message: life could not continue exactly as before. He could no longer keep the same work. The body set a limit where the will had previously pressed on.
Then he had to think anew.
What did he want to use the rest of his life for?
The question was not theoretical. It was practical philosophy in its most concrete form. When life can no longer continue along the track one has followed, one must ask: What is possible now? What is true now? Where is there a room where I can live without breaking down?
He made a radical choice. He became a student. Later he became a college lecturer. In the academic environment, something happened that he had not expected. Here he felt at home. Here, the intense interest in language, meaning, theory, experience, and human life could find a place. Here, it was no longer simply deviant to think deeply, read deeply, write deeply, ask deeply, and immerse oneself. What had been too much in one room could become a strength in another.
The mask did not fall away once and for all. It rarely does. But it became less necessary. In this environment he could be more himself. Not because all difficulties disappeared, but because the room was wider. The academic world gave him a language, a work, and a form in which difference did not only have to be hidden. It could be used.
In this way, a diagnosis can sometimes become more than an explanation from the outside. It can become a break in life that opens a choice. The patient role can be heavy, but it can also force a new self-understanding. It can say: You can no longer live as you have lived. You must find another path. You must find a room where the body, the abilities, and the vulnerability can live together.
This good existence lasted for twenty years.
Then, around the time of retirement, came a new diagnosis. This time not Ménière’s disease, but Asperger’s syndrome, also called autism spectrum condition, ASC. The new diagnosis did not merely explain an illness. It cast light backwards over an entire life. It illuminated the child with the dunce cap, the young person with the clown mask, the adult masks, the exhaustion, the need for calm, the social effort, the intensity, the writing, the concentration, and the feeling of being different without knowing why.
The ASC diagnosis did not explain everything, but it cast a new light over almost everything.
The first diagnosis forced an outer life choice.
The second diagnosis opened an inner reinterpretation.
Ménière’s disease said: You must change course.
The ASC diagnosis said: You must understand the journey anew.
Both diagnoses made him a patient. Both involved being explained by others. But both also gave something back. They did not give the whole truth. They were not the whole human being. But they opened rooms in which life could be read anew.
Becoming a patient is therefore not only being reduced to a diagnosis. It can also mean receiving a language that makes change possible. The danger is to become trapped in another person’s explanation. The possibility is to use the explanation to come closer to one’s own life.
Yet the doubleness remains. For when an adult human being is told that he has an autism spectrum condition, or in more medical language a pervasive developmental disorder, the words can land in two places at the same time. The adult hears the explanation. The child hears the judgement.
The adult may think: Now I understand more.
The child may whisper: Then perhaps it was true. Something was wrong with me.
It is this doubleness that makes the diagnosis so powerful. It can liberate and bind. It can restore dignity and at the same time awaken shame. It can give a human being a new language, but also make that human being an object in the language of others.
Therefore we must ask gently: What happens to a human being when he receives a diagnosis? What becomes clearer? What becomes invisible? What is explained? What is reduced? What becomes possible to say for the first time? And what becomes more difficult to carry?
There is a before and an after in such lives. Before the diagnosis, a person may have lived with riddles. Why do I become so exhausted by something others tolerate? Why do I misunderstand what seems obvious to others? Why does my body react so strongly to sound, light, unrest, or sudden change? Why do I need so much predictability? Why can I write, think, work, and teach, but not always read a face quickly enough? Why can I understand great theories, but be thrown off by small social shifts?
Without a diagnosis, such questions can become moral. One does not merely ask what is happening. One asks what is wrong with oneself. Why can I not manage this? Why am I like this? Why am I not more like the others?
With the diagnosis, the questions can change form. They can become less accusing. The body receives a history. Childhood receives a context. The mask receives a reason. Shame receives a counter-story.
But the diagnosis is not the whole truth. It is an entrance. It is a map, not the landscape. It can point to patterns, but it cannot by itself tell who the human being is. It can explain something, but it cannot replace the life story.
A diagnosis can say something about functioning. It can say something about difficulties. It can say something about communication, social understanding, sensory processing, repetition, interests, the need for structure, and vulnerability to stress. But it does not say what it cost to be the child who was not understood. It does not say how it felt to be laughed at. It does not say what it did to the self-image to be called stupid. It does not say how it was to learn the role of the clown in order not to become the victim of others’ laughter. It does not say how much strength it took to be perceived as normal.
The diagnosis explains. But life bears witness.
This is why the patient must be allowed to be more than a patient. The one who is explained by others must still be allowed to explain himself. The one who receives a name for his condition must not lose the right to name his own experience. The one who receives a medical record must not lose his story.
In medicine and psychology, simplification is necessary. The professional must look for patterns. Questions must be asked. Assessments must be made. Things must be written down. Conclusions must be drawn. Without such processes, many would never receive help. A diagnosis can open rights, support, accommodation, treatment, understanding, and self-acceptance. It can be a door out of shame.
But the same door can also lead into a new role. The patient role has its own expectations. One is expected to tell in a certain way. One must describe difficulties. One must answer questions. One must fit into criteria. One must be clear enough to be understood, but not so complex that the system loses its grip. One must be vulnerable, but cooperative. One must be honest, but understandable. One must be oneself, but in a language the system can use.
This too is a form of masking.
The patient quickly learns what counts. What is asked about. What is written down. What is interpreted as relevant. What does not fit into the form. One learns to translate one’s life into symptoms, descriptions of functioning, burdens, and coping strategies. One learns to speak the private in a clinical way. One learns to make one’s own life recognizable to the system.
This may be necessary. But it can also be alienating.
For there is a difference between saying: I become exhausted by social interaction, and saying: After a day of conversations, I need silence as medicine. There is a difference between saying: I have difficulties with social communication, and saying: I have spent an entire life reading the room before the room had time to judge me. There is a difference between saying: I have sensory vulnerability, and saying: Sounds could come towards me like a wall.
Professional language is precise in one way. Life language is precise in another. Both are needed. But if professional language receives all the power, the human being loses something of his own truth.
This is not a criticism of professionals who try to help. It is a reminder that help always has an ethical side. The one who helps receives power. Not necessarily brutal power, but definitional power. The power to say: This is a diagnosis. This is a symptom. This is a functional impairment. This is a resource. This is a limitation. This is realistic. This is wishful thinking. This is treatment. This is accommodation.
Such power can be used well. It can lift a person out of self-blame. It can bring order where life previously felt incomprehensible. It can give legitimacy to needs that were once dismissed. It can say: You do not need to be ashamed. This has an explanation.
But it can also be used too narrowly. It can lock the person inside a description. It can make the diagnosis larger than the person. It can make the professional believe that once the condition has been named, the human being has been understood.
But a human being is never understood merely because he has been diagnosed.
This is also true when the diagnosis comes late. Perhaps especially then. For the person who receives an autism spectrum diagnosis in adulthood does not come to the assessment as a blank sheet. He comes with an entire life. With work, family, love, defeat, knowledge, strategies, pride, shame, masking, and survival. He comes with a story that has already been interpreted many times, by teachers, parents, classmates, colleagues, professionals, and by himself.
When the diagnosis is then given, it is not placed upon an empty space. It is placed over everything that is already there.
Therefore it can both explain and disturb. It can bring calm, but also grief. It can give meaning, but also open old rooms. One may think: Why did no one know this before? Why was the child punished when he needed help? Why did the mask become necessary? Why did so much of life have to be spent pretending? Why did I have to believe that I was stupid?
This is the grief of diagnosis. Not grief over being autistic. Not necessarily. But grief over having been misunderstood for so long. Grief over having carried the wrong explanation. Grief over having been measured by the wrong standard. Grief over the child who did not receive the language when he needed it.
But the diagnosis can also become a place of reconciliation. Not a simple reconciliation, not a sentimental story in which everything suddenly falls into place. But a slow reconciliation in which one begins to see one’s own life with less hatred. One can return to old scenes with a new gaze. The classroom. The laughter. The cap. The special class. The clown mask. The adult masks. Ménière’s disease. The studies. The academic room. The ASC diagnosis. The exhaustion after social contact. The need for calm. The intense writing. The strong concentration. The deep interest in meaning, language, philosophy, and human life.
What once lay scattered and fragmented can slowly become a pattern.
Like a puzzle. Not because the human being is missing a piece. Not because autism makes a person incomplete. But because life is often understood in pieces. Only later can some of the pieces be placed beside one another. Then one can see that what appeared to be random failures may have been parts of the same life pattern.
The child who was called stupid did not become stupid because of the words. But the words could do something to his self-understanding. The young person who became a clown was not false. He was trying to make laughter less dangerous. The adult with Ménière’s disease was not only ill. He stood at a crossroads. The student and college lecturer was not someone who had fled from life. He had found a room where life could be lived more truthfully. The older man who received the ASC diagnosis was not only someone explained by others. He was also someone who began to explain his own life anew.
This is practical philosophy. Not because it stands above life and explains it from the outside, but because it asks how we can live truthfully with what is true about us. How can a human being receive a diagnosis without becoming trapped by it? How can one acknowledge vulnerability without making it the whole identity? How can one say “I have an autism spectrum condition” without the sentence becoming “I am wrong”?
There is a decisive difference between having a condition and being a problem.
A human being can have a diagnosis. That does not mean that the human being is the diagnosis. A human being can have difficulties. That does not mean that the human being is a difficulty. A human being can need help. That does not mean that the human being is helpless. A human being can be a patient in a particular relationship. That does not mean that all of life is patienthood.
This must be said again and again, because systems have a tendency to make roles larger than people. One becomes pupil, patient, user, client, case, medical record, diagnosis, deviance, resource, problem, need for intervention. The roles may be necessary. But they are not the whole human being.
Becoming a patient can therefore be both a danger and a possibility. The danger is to be explained once and for all. The possibility is to receive help in understanding oneself anew.
The good helper knows this. The good helper does not use the diagnosis as a wall, but as a window. Not as a final judgement, but as the beginning of a conversation. Not as a replacement for the person’s own story, but as a language that can help the story come forward.
A good diagnostic practice should therefore be dialogical. It should not only ask: Which criteria do you meet? It should also ask: What has life been like for you? What has this cost? What strategies have you developed? What have others misunderstood? What have you misunderstood about yourself? What do you need in order to live more truthfully, less masked, less burdened by shame?
Then the diagnosis becomes not only an explanation from the outside. It becomes part of self-understanding from within.
This requires humility from professionals. For the patient is not only the one who lacks knowledge. The patient is also the one who knows something no one else knows. He knows how it feels from the inside. He knows what sounds do to the body. He knows what social exhaustion costs. He knows what it is like to smile when he would rather disappear. He knows what it is like to be praised for mastery when no one sees the price. He knows what it is like to write clearly and still feel stupid. He knows what it is like to be explained by others while searching for his own voice.
To be an expert on one’s own life does not mean that one always understands everything correctly. No one does. But it means that lived experience must have a place in understanding. Without it, the diagnosis becomes poorer. Without it, professional knowledge can be precise and still humanly inaccurate.
For it is possible to be right about the diagnosis and still miss the human being.
This is one of the great ethical challenges in all helping work. The professional can see the pattern, but not the pain. He can see the functional difficulty, but not the dignity. She can see the symptom, but not the strategy. She can see the diagnosis, but not the life struggle beneath it.
Therefore the patient role must always be opened from within. The human being must be allowed to return in his own explanation. Not as a protest against professional knowledge, but as its completion. For professional knowledge without the person’s own voice easily becomes too narrow. And the person’s own voice without a good language can become too lonely.
It is in the meeting between these two that understanding can arise.
Perhaps this is what separates a good explanation from a poor one. The poor explanation closes. It says: Now we know what you are. The good explanation opens. It says: Now we can begin to understand more.
The poor explanation makes the human being smaller. The good explanation makes life more readable.
The poor explanation puts a full stop. The good explanation puts a colon.
After the colon, the human being himself can begin to speak.
For the one who receives the diagnosis late, this can be the beginning of a new work. Not the work of becoming someone else, but the work of seeing oneself more justly. It can mean giving the child restoration. Saying to him: You were not stupid. You were not evil. You were not without feelings. You were not lazy. You were not wrong. You were a child who was not understood.
It can also mean giving the young person gentleness. Saying to him: You needed the clown mask. You needed the laughter you could direct yourself. You needed the role that made it possible to be accepted. That does not mean the role was all of you. It only means that you found a way to survive.
It can also mean giving the adult gentleness. Saying: You needed the adult masks. You needed the work mask, the parent mask, the competent mask. You needed the strategies. You needed the control. You needed the withdrawal. You needed to sharpen pencils, write, read, think, walk, rest, be alone, begin again. It was not weakness. It was a way of holding life together.
And it can mean giving the patient dignity. Saying: You were not only a diagnosis. You were a human being at a crossroads. Ménière’s disease forced you to change course. The ASC diagnosis helped you understand the journey anew. Both were painful. Both gave language. Both opened another question: How can life be lived onward, more truthfully than before?
But gentleness does not mean self-deception. It does not mean that everything should be explained away. One can still have responsibility. One may still need to apologize. One may still need to learn. One may still hurt others. The diagnosis does not free the human being from ethics. But it can make ethics more truthful. Responsibility without understanding becomes harsh. Understanding without responsibility becomes empty. A human life needs both.
To become a patient should therefore not mean becoming less of an actor. On the contrary. The best help makes the human being more able to act, not less. It gives language, not merely labels. It gives direction, not merely categories. It gives the possibility of choosing, not only of being assessed.
The patient is not only a product of other people’s definitions. The patient is also an actor in his own understanding. He can receive the diagnosis, but also interpret it. He can use professional language, but also translate it into the language of life. He can say: This explains something, but it does not own me. This gives meaning, but it is not the whole meaning. This is part of me, but not all of me.
Perhaps this is where liberation lies.
Not in rejecting the diagnosis. Not in romanticizing it. Not in hiding it. Not in making it the whole identity. But in allowing it to find its proper place. It should not stand as a judgement over life. It should be a light over the landscape. A light that makes it possible to see paths one did not know one had walked.
When a human being is explained by others, he must be allowed to answer. Not necessarily with resistance, but with his own voice. Yes, this is true. No, this is too narrow. Here I recognize myself. Here I disappear. This helps me. This hurts. This gives meaning. This needs another language.
In such a conversation, the patient can become more than a patient. He can become a co-interpreter of his own life.
And perhaps this is precisely what is needed after a life of masking. Not yet another role to be played correctly. Not a new way of being a good patient. But a room where the human being can appear with both vulnerability and strength. A room where the diagnosis is not used to close the story, but to open it.
For there is a danger in being explained. But there is also grace.
The danger is to lose oneself in the concepts of others.
The grace is to receive one’s own life back with a language that can finally carry it.
Perhaps this is how one can slowly return to the child in the classroom. Not to remain there, but to bring him out. Not with the dunce cap on his head. Not as the one the others laughed at. Not as the one who was wrong. But as a child who carried more than a child should have to carry, and who nevertheless found ways to survive.
One can also return to the young person with the clown mask. Not to tear the mask from him, but to thank him. He did what he could. He found a role that gave access to the community. He paid a high price, but he kept life going.
One can return to the adult with Ménière’s disease. Not only to see the illness, but to see the choice. Where the body set a limit, life opened another path.
And one can return to the older man who received the ASC diagnosis. Not to close life with a label, but to understand why so much had been as it was. Not everything. Never everything. But enough for shame to lose some of its power.
Becoming a patient can then become more than being explained by others.
It can become the beginning of explaining oneself with greater gentleness.
That is not a small thing.
It can be a form of dignity.
Becoming a patient can then become more than being explained by others.
It can become the beginning of explaining oneself with greater gentleness.
That is not a small thing.
It can be a form of dignity.
This essay is mine, but it is written in a conversation with OpenAI/ChatGPT, which also made the illustration.