Everyone's got their shit, though. Just some may be more overt and able to be labelled/compartmentalized moreso than others. Not to mention, there are tons of quasi-functional people out there who have all kinds of addictions, psych issues, or diseases they never seek treatment for.
I realize I'm not like, telling you anything you don't already know.. & I'm not trying to diminish how much it hurts to hear or just acknowledge every day- that you will have more trouble simply doing everyday things people take for granted. Senz is right, though. Good to try to work with what you got even if it sucks.
I have some chronic issues- the most directly debilitating have been more related to my physical health- and even that realm of medicine is a bit of a trial & error process for diagnosis & treatment. Knowing you may have to grapple with a problem for the rest of your life can weigh you down before you even give yourself a chance to start, if you let it. It gets difficult to hang on to hope for better things, but I mean.. medicine (including psych) has come such a long way, & it seems to be advancing exponentially over the years, so I think our generation's got some good chances of perhaps finding better and better treatments for this crap, as time goes on. I try to remind myself of little factors like that when things feel endlessly terrible/burdensome, or when I feel generally defective.
Having friends who give a damn, and pull me out of my head is a big help, too, though it can be difficult to ask for that kind of emotional support, directly. I don't always recognize when I've slid into that hopeless tunnel vision; it can impair my judgement. Trusted friends can provide clarity when it's hard to provide it for yourself, simply by giving feedback about anything on your mind. There are people here who do care a lot about you, & would always be willing to talk with you. Or not talk, if you preferred that, as well.
And clinical diagnoses- whatever they may be- physical ailments, psychiatric issues.. they're not who you are. Not by a long shot. I know this sounds like canned motivational-poster BS, but there's truth in it. And that said.. you're awesome. Having clinical abnormalities doesn't make you any less so, either. I sometimes remind myself just with one phrase, corny as it might sound: I am more than this.