I guess this is the best place for my question!
My wife and I have a young daughter who recently got diagnosed with sensory processing disorder. SPD is very common among people who have autism but you can have SPD and not be autistic. The first question my daughter's doctors asked us was, "does anyone in your family have autism?" We said no. We shared all of this information with my mother in law.
Last week my mother in law told me privately that my wife had been diagnosed autistic as a child. But my wife had never been told because the doctors back then said that she should never know. My mother in law wanted me to know because it could be part of the problems that my daughter is having. I told her on the spot that she had to tell my wife about the autism diagnosis or I eventually would. She agreed to by New Year's Day.
So a lot of issues here. Should my wife know she was diagnosed autistic? What can I expect when she finds out? Should I wait on my mother in law to tell her?
I've already informed my daughter's doctors. They haven't seen my daughter since this came out so I have no update if she might be autistic.
Wow. What a predicament. I guess it's hard to know what your wife's behavior would be once she hears the news.
She can say, "Really. No wonder I behave like this and that. That explains it."
or
"What do you mean I'm autistic? You're crazy! You're making that up!"
I'm a firm believer that the truth should always be known, but that's me. Good luck with whatever you decide.
_________________
One Day At A Time.
His book: http://www.amazon.com/Wetland-Other-Sto ... B00E0NVTL2
His blog: http://seattlewordsmith.wordpress.com/
I'm with the others. She should know.
I practice what I preach, too, and have informed close friends/family of their Autistic traits in the most tactful way possible. I'm still waiting for my closest friend to read the 20 pages I wrote months ago informing him of all of this about himself. I am a bit nervous about how he's going to react, but I feel his life will be better for knowing even if there's an "adjustment period," of stress that he goes through.
Once she's over the initial shock of the news, I highly recommend she reads "The Complete Guide to Asperger's Syndrome," by Dr. Tony Attwood. You should probably read it yourself, too, as it's a nearly complete crash course in all of this. You'll learn a lot and save a lot of time and frustration.
_________________
Just because you don't believe me doesn't make me a liar.
This is all very odd. In a way, the least odd thing is that your mother-in-law was advised by doctors not to reveal a diagnosis, and did what they told her. That was just the way of things until not so long ago.
One thing I find odd is that you make no mention at all of your wife having any behaviours which might suggest autism. This isn't like finding out that she was adopted. Autism is observable - that's how it's diagnosed, and it usually causes difficulty which lead to assessment or diagnosis.
The other thing, is that your daughter has be assessed and diagnosed with SPD. You seem to think that the news that your wife was diagnosed with autism as a child may mean that your daughter will receive a diagnosis of autism. If she wasn't diagnosable as autistic before then her mother's childhood diagnosis doesn't make her diagnosable now.
How your wife responds to the news will depend on a whole lot of factors.
One thing I find odd is that you make no mention at all of your wife having any behaviours which might suggest autism. This isn't like finding out that she was adopted. Autism is observable - that's how it's diagnosed, and it usually causes difficulty which lead to assessment or diagnosis.
The other thing, is that your daughter has be assessed and diagnosed with SPD. You seem to think that the news that your wife was diagnosed with autism as a child may mean that your daughter will receive a diagnosis of autism. If she wasn't diagnosable as autistic before then her mother's childhood diagnosis doesn't make her diagnosable now.
How your wife responds to the news will depend on a whole lot of factors.
Yeah, I was thinking something similar. When I first found out, it was due to a aside by somebody who was talking about their newly diagnosed son and how I should understand since I was also autistic..
My response: "I am not autistic.."
Normally it is pretty observable... everybody around me knew. On what grounds was your wife diagnosed?
_________________
AQ: 42, Aspie-Quiz: 140/68
It is odd for me to!
While I would describe my wife as "no drama" I would never have said autistic. She's a scientist who doesn't talk about emotions much. But she has them.
From my research on SPD, there is a huge overlap between ASD and SPD. And the doctors sometimes confuse the two. Which is why they asked us early on if anyone in our family was autistic.
Last week my mother in law told me privately that my wife had been diagnosed autistic as a child. But my wife had never been told because the doctors back then said that she should never know. My mother in law wanted me to know because it could be part of the problems that my daughter is having. I told her on the spot that she had to tell my wife about the autism diagnosis or I eventually would. She agreed to by New Year's Day.
So a lot of issues here. Should my wife know she was diagnosed autistic? What can I expect when she finds out? Should I wait on my mother in law to tell her?
I've already informed my daughter's doctors. They haven't seen my daughter since this came out so I have no update if she might be autistic.
A similar thing happened to me. I was diagnosed when I was 12 or 13, but I was never told this by anyone. My parents thought that the doctor didn't know what he was talking about and that I was just a little shy. Fast forward 10 years, and I was still having a lot of social struggles so my parents decided to tell me. Ironically enough, just before they told me, I had been seeing another doctor who also diagnosed me with mild Aspergers.
In the end I'm really glad that they mentioned it to me, it is much better than keeping secrets.
Does your wife show any signs of autism?
Yes you can have SPD and not be autistic and you can be autistic and not have any family members with it.
I was 15 when my mom told me a doctor thought I was autistic when I was a year old. I don't know of it was one doctor or more because my mom keeps saying they and then saying it was only that one doctor and I saw it in my old records when another doctor said he was concerned about autism. I wonder what I was even doing that made the doctor think I was autistic if my mom had just brought me in his office and he didn't even know my medical history before giving his opinion.
_________________
Titanic is a good diaper movie, lots of flooding
Last week my mother in law told me privately that my wife had been diagnosed autistic as a child. But my wife had never been told because the doctors back then said that she should never know. My mother in law wanted me to know because it could be part of the problems that my daughter is having. I told her on the spot that she had to tell my wife about the autism diagnosis or I eventually would. She agreed to by New Year's Day.
So a lot of issues here. Should my wife know she was diagnosed autistic? What can I expect when she finds out? Should I wait on my mother in law to tell her?
I've already informed my daughter's doctors. They haven't seen my daughter since this came out so I have no update if she might be autistic.
A similar thing happened to me. I was diagnosed when I was 12 or 13, but I was never told this by anyone. My parents thought that the doctor didn't know what he was talking about and that I was just a little shy. Fast forward 10 years, and I was still having a lot of social struggles so my parents decided to tell me. Ironically enough, just before they told me, I had been seeing another doctor who also diagnosed me with mild Aspergers.
In the end I'm really glad that they mentioned it to me, it is much better than keeping secrets.
Would it change things if you were in your mid 30's?
>Does your wife show any signs of autism?
She's a female geek who doesn't like to talk about feelings. But I know she has them. She shows love for me and the kids. But she has a hard time in social situations and isn't great at making friends.
To other people, even her own family, she can seem unfeeling. But I know that's not the case, she just doesn't know how to express herself to them.
I'm inside the loop, or I understand her better. To me she seems pretty normal. But outside that circle and people have a hard time understanding her. If that makes sense.
I know you weren't asking me, but: Yes. For the better. I didn't know until I was almost 29 going on 30. Then learning about it, reading the book I recommended etc, helped make sense of e v e r y t h i n g in my life up until that point & gave me the knowledge and tools to navigate life a whole lot better since.
Further to that, figuring out & treating the root cause of my neurological differences over the last several months has made things infinitely better than just knowing about them in the first place. Reducing/eliminating symptoms is far better than knowing about them and having to put up with them forever, IMO.
She's a female geek who doesn't like to talk about feelings. But I know she has them. She shows love for me and the kids. But she has a hard time in social situations and isn't great at making friends.
To other people, even her own family, she can seem unfeeling. But I know that's not the case, she just doesn't know how to express herself to them.
I'm inside the loop, or I understand her better. To me she seems pretty normal. But outside that circle and people have a hard time understanding her. If that makes sense.
That makes perfect sense since those are all pretty common traits of someone on the higher functioning end of the ASD spectrum.
_________________
Just because you don't believe me doesn't make me a liar.
>Further to that, figuring out & treating the root cause of my neurological differences over the last several months has made things infinitely better than just knowing about them in the first place.
I'm worried about a few things:
1-this will destroy the fragile relationship she has with her mother. Her mother expressed this concern as well
2-she will relapse into a depression - she has struggled with that in the past but it currently alright.
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