I got diagnosed at 8 years old, with Dyspraxia and mild AS. I have searched the forum on this topic, but the ones I found were either ''out of date''
, or not quite what I wanted. I know most people seemed to have been diagnosed in teens, early adulthood or even later on in life, but although they say it's better to be diagnosed as a young child (which it probably is), I still think that everybody felt differently about their diagnosis, whatever age they were diagnosed at. (Diagnosing toddlers - forget it!)
But anyway I just wanted to know how you felt when you were diagnosed. How did you think of it? Did you feel different afterwards? Did you feel relieved? Or confused? Or curious? Did you become obsessed, or did you use neurology as your special interest? Did you become excited? Or depressed? Or aren't you bothered? When I was first diagnosed I felt like I was the only person in the world with it (since I had lots of cousins and a sibling who are all NTs, and I went to mainstream school). I never knew one other person with it, and although I knew that there are other Aspies out there, it still felt like I was the only one.
From the age of 4 to when I was diagnosed, I always felt left out. I didn't really feel different as such, because I knew that all the others were children just like me, who liked playing the same as I did, and could read and write just like me (although I was a bit slower than most of the others), and my speech wasn't delayed or anything. But in some ways, I felt rather left out. I was always found playing by myself, although I did play with other children some of the time. Also I felt like I was younger than the rest of the children in my class, although I was the same age (my birthday is in April, so I was neither the youngest of the oldest). But I still felt, like, 4 years younger - not physically, but just emotionally. Everyone else seemed ahead of me at maths, reading, writing, and practical tasks. And they seemed to have got used to my reactions at loud noise and those social sorts of games we done in PE, and that was when I realised that something was wrong with me, since nobody else reacted to those. I was always crying too, just for no reason. And that was why I felt younger, because the others only cried if they hurt themselves, or if they didn't want eachother to play, or if they got told off, ect. But I reacted to everything (including those). Once I started crying because another child was sick.
Although I didn't think my social interaction was that bad (because I did participate in activities and talk normally), but something about me can't have felt right to them, due to the lack of friends I had (although I was liked).
But as soon as I was diagnosed, although I hated the diagnosis, I still felt it was an explanation to how I have been feeling. And then I didn't feel younger any more, and I got told by the doctors, therapists, helpers at school, and my mum, that I was just like any other child, except with a few difficulties and some anxieties about specific things, and that made me feel better, although I didn't really want to talk about it or bring it up to anyone - until just over a year ago, when I found WP and knew that there are others out there who face the same sorts of challenges I do.
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Female