SammichEater wrote:
Well, if you think you can use logic and reason to convince people, especially those who think they are educated, you're profoundly mistaken.
You don't use just logic and reason to do this though. You use your personal experience of living as an autistic person your whole life, and this can work if you are autistic. It also only works if you are autistic. You don't mention the DSM criteria and match yourself to some list that a bunch of non-autistic people came up with, don't really understand, and change every once in awhile. That doesn't work for headshrinkers who believe that they are educated and you are not. You tell them what their education has not told them. You mention how you personally experience everything, what is going on in your mind as you are doing whatever you are doing your way, and that gives the headshrinkers a chance to realize how different your thoughts and behaviors are from theirs and those of most of their patients, and that gives them a chance to (1) consider autism as your diagnosis and (2) observe and probe your thoughts and behaviors to rule out other diagnoses.
If you say, "I do not like to be interrupted", then they will say, "Well, a lot of people don't like to be interrupted, that's totally normal".
If you say, "I do not like to be interrupted, because when I am interrupted, it feels like I am being dragged off to be hanged, drawn, and quartered right after I was shaken awake from the most awesome brilliant dream ever in which I was just about to find out the answer to life, the universe, and everything, and this interruption discombobulates my brain and shuts down any intelligent functioning for the rest of the day", then they will stare at you like they have never heard such a thing before, which they probably haven't.
If you describe all your experiences in this explicit language that cannot be dismissed as just another normal thing, then they will have no choice but to evaluate you for autism. Because you are autistic, everything you describe this way will make sense and be consistent with each other, and none of it will be an exaggeration, because this is just what it is like, in this case, to be interrupted from hyperfocus.