Wandering_Stranger wrote:
MindWithoutWalls wrote:
My doctor indicated to me that Asperger's isn't a reason not to work, because she has patients who have it that work.
I wonder if she realises that Aspergers isn't the same for everyone.
Or the cost to those of us who did work! I worked for 27 years and wound up with so many health issues related to stress - which began right about the time I started school and progressed from there - that it took me years after early retirement to feel as if I've even halfway come to terms with them. A work life can hammer a lot harder on someone with Aspergers. On the one hand I think some of my work experiences were good for me. On other hand I very often wonder if I should have been on disability that entire time. I might be healthier now and live longer if I had.
I don't think anyone but the person experiencing Aspergers can make that determination, because so much goes on internally that we have difficulty expressing. Neither do I think one person with AS can make it for another. But of course the system isn't set up that way.
The current thread, "Why I Can't Work" (
http://www.wrongplanet.net/posts177916-highlight.html) makes me wonder if there needs to be a better solution to helping people get by who have high-functioning disabilities (of any kind), some kind of safety net, under which one can work, but also be able to fall immediately back on benefits when work becomes too much or not suitable.
During my entire work life - and I was successful in staying employed and getting promoted - I had high absenteeism, and a continuing gnawing fear that missing so much work (that I couldn't explain, since I didn't even know what AS was all that time) would get me into a bad position where I wouldn't have work. Honestly I spent that entire time terrified of becoming homeless. My dad, who I suspect had AS, had a terrible time keeping work. He did, but he also had high absenteeism, as well as a problem getting on with some people including a lot of his bosses. If my mom hadn't also worked, there were times when we would have been in serious straights. These problems were not because either of us didn't want to work, or were lazy. We both were hard working, wanted to have our financial independence, and felt that work was important. We didn't want to leech off the system, but it sure would have helped our stress levels if we'd known something was there to fall back on if we needed it.