Fnord wrote:
Ahh ... but how did you find out?
You cannot know someone is on the spectrum until your suspicion is confirmed -- you can only suspect that someone is on the spectrum until then.
Knowledge and suspicion are not the same thing. If it was otherwise, then every person suspected of murder would be executed before even going to trial.
In the case I mentioned above, it came out in conversation. I mentioned my autism, and she told me about hers. In a few other cases, I've heard from other people who knew the person better, or the person was very forthcoming and told me. In one weird case, I noticed a woman on the train. We got off at the same station, walked to the same hospital--and waited to see the same autism specialist.
95% of the time it remains unconfirmed--but of that 5%, I've been 100% right.
I avoided the word "suspicion" because that has a negative connotation--as in that "murder" example.
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"Donkeys live a long time. None of you has ever seen a dead donkey."