clay5 wrote:
SocOfAutism wrote:
I'm assuming this got lost in the baba ji posts. I would also like to know the answer to this. Mostly because in my own research I am actively promoting these narratives- autistics who are either not having problems or are effectively dealing with any problems successfully with their own coping mechanisms. So...bump!
If they don't have problems I don't see why they would have landed in a mental health professional's office to get their diagnosis in the first place.
I've seen an "invisible autist" who coped very well socially etc - from what I could tell from the outside. He was probably diagnosed as a child or teen and received the right kind of support.
Some people don't bother to ever get a formal diagnosis, because they aren't having problems per se. Like, I have red spectrum hair. I have to wear SPF 50 sunblock whenever I go outside to avoid sunburns and I can't dye my hair because it comes out clown orange no matter what color I try. I don't consider these actual problems, just nuisances. Some people look at autism the same way. Minor difficulties, but not enough to require seeing someone or much discussion about it.
Another issue that is some people may not incorporate autism into their personal identities, but have autistic mannerisms that are picked up by other people. So they may be treated differently (given help they don't ask for, or discriminated against).
And yet another way in which people can be invisible is that people can misunderstand what it is to be autistic. You may have problems and strengths in certain areas but other people repeatedly try to attribute your strengths and weaknesses in OTHER areas. You know, like when people hear "autism" and think you're Rain Man.