If I don't have AS...then how will I define myself?

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anneurysm
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01 Jan 2011, 9:27 pm

I have been avoiding this board for a while for the reasons below...I know I have some messages to respond to but more than anything I have to get the following off my chest first.

I need your honest opinions on this very tough subject.

I am going for a psychological re-evaluation soon. The reason is, simply put, that I need an updated diagnosis that refers to my current situation rather than a past one. Family, friends, and even myself no longer feel that a diagnosis of AS applies to me, and that the behaviours I display are more indicative of an anxiety disorder.

I am strongly against compartmenalizing myself by a narrowly defined label or using it to gauge my identity, and will use an updated diagnosis to do neither of those things. I am simply concerned as I am becoming well known for my speaking endeavours. Since 16, I have spoken at countless schools, sessions and conferences across the province about my supposed AS, and have even recently presented with Temple Grandin...so I have already established some pretty good ground for myself on the condition that I have AS. If I am no longer considered to have AS, how will this affect my future prospects with these presentations? My mom keeps telling me to emphasise the areas where I was a kid...even suggesting I show clips from old videos where I acted totally AS, which is a good idea. Still, I am concerned about how I should portray myself if people choose to delve further.

The things that now debilitate me are the bits and pieces left behind once I conquered AS. Due to bullying, rejection and misunderstandings of me over my childhood and teen years by nearly everyone who came into contact with me, I have serious issues with trusting people and the "real world". I feel angry at everyone and long for escape, suffering from anxiety, depression,, implusivity and even substance abuse. I'm a great role model, eh? I can't teach people to move forward and like themselves for who they are if I don't even like or take care of myself. The image of me as a successful speaker, although it exists, is a huge and horrible irony.

A part of me, however, wonders if I was even borderline AS from the start. My diagnosis letter, given at 7 when I demonstrated prominent AS characteristics, is interestingly worded. I was diagnosed by one of the leading specialists in my area at the time, and apparently he found it difficult to come to a consensus over what I had.

The letter reads:

"...I found it difficult to make a firm diagnosis on A. The best I could do was very tentatively diagnose her with Asperger Syndrome. The reason for this is that she has already made appreciable progress and I figure that in a years time she may not fit the criteria of AS. In my opinion, A. would do best with highly individualized programming in a small class setting. There should be an emphasis on developing her socializing skills, although I realize that this could be a slow and challenging process..."

Interestingly though, it took me until my last year of high school to gain the skills and confidence to overcome my AS-like behaviours...but I did it. My social skills are now fine...people have described me as outgoing, cheerful and friendly as I have been able to put on a "front" for people to make me likeable. Although I am by no means the life of the party, I can fit in...I am very socially savy, understand jokes and sarcasm and am able to talk about a wide variety of topics. I also am a very "feeling based" person. I am driven by my emotions and experience immense empathy.

As well, I no longer have any of the hallmarks of AS, such as preferences for sameness and routine and sensory issues...however, thinking back to when I was a kid and even a preteen, these things were definite issues with me. The only things I have that would suggest AS are my people obsessions and interests that are unusual in topic but not in scope or focus. (I keep these private rather than go on about them, and only my closest family and my best friend know of them).

As well, when I hear people on the spectrum talk about how they experience the world, I don`t relate to them AT ALL as the person I am today, but can DEFINITELY relate to them as I think back to myself as a six, eleven or even sixteen year old. This makes it hard for me to fit in to the autism community at large. I feel like I'm too socially skilled to fall into this category because when I do meet people on the spectrum I unfortunately pick them apart and analyse them for social mistakes...and I am not saying that these things make the person flawed in any way, but it is because I have been trained with a hypervigilance to see such things in myself. This is something I try to stop myself from doing but unconciously do anyway. It's unfair to me because I am a huge supporter of neurodiversity and when I do this I feel like I am lying to people in a way.

In short, I feel like AS was something that defined me when I was much younger. I read over experiences on the boards here and think...that was definitely me at 6 or 12. I'm a completely different person now, and the issues I have are with other things entirely.

I still speak in order to help people who have AS, as well as their families and support systems, but I don't do it because it applies to me. I want to keep helping people because I care for them, but I don't want to keep lying about who I am. Can anyone help me negotiate this? Any input is valued and truly appreciated.


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Given a “tentative” diagnosis as a child as I needed services at school for what was later correctly discovered to be a major anxiety disorder.

This misdiagnosis caused me significant stress, which lessened upon finding out the truth about myself from my current and past long-term psychiatrists - that I am a highly sensitive person but do not have an autism spectrum disorder

My diagnoses - anxiety disorder, depression and traits of obsessive-compulsive disorder (all in remission).

I’m no longer involved with the ASD world.


Callista
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01 Jan 2011, 9:42 pm

You don't need labels to define yourself. But I think you know that.

You're talking about gaining skills, gaining confidence, learning things. You're talking about how you support neurodiversity, becoming a different person... etc. You've done a lot of interesting things, and you are most likely an interesting person. THAT, not some label, is who you are.

Regarding Asperger's and "growing out" of a diagnosis: It's a well-known phenomenon. What happened to you is something that happens to many people. You're on the border of diagnosis as a child. You get a good environment; you learn things; you work hard. Sooner or later, you don't qualify for diagnosis anymore because you don't fit that little criterion that says there has to be a significant impairment. You're no longer impaired; so you're no longer diagnosable. You've "grown out" of Asperger's. A diagnosis is a tool--and it's only needed when there's a problem. If there's not a problem, then there's no diagnosis.

What's still the same? Well, your personality's still the same. Your brain's still the same. You're still neurologically autistic--your brain uses those same autistic patterns it always has; only now you've learned enough that you're pretty efficient at it and don't need outside help anymore. And you're still culturally autistic, too; you support the neurodiversity movement and you hang out with autistics. You can explain that you aged out of the diagnosis, you can label yourself "broader autistic phenotype" or "Spectrum cousin". But autistic culture is not some kind of exclusive club where you have to show your neuropsychological evaluation report at the door. Diagnosable or not, you have a lot in common with autistics. And autistics are so diverse anyway that the variation required to make you non-diagnosable has less to do with your being different and more to do with the fact that you lucked out and got the skills and the friendly environment you needed to fully compensate for the gap between your skills and what's expected of the average neurotypical.


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AceOfSpades
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01 Jan 2011, 9:43 pm

Well, don't let AS define you. I'm actually a lot different than most of the members here and I've never had a problem with that. Don't put other people on a pedestal and don't be overly dependent on others. You gotta stand on your own two feet and be comfortable in your own skin.



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01 Jan 2011, 9:56 pm

I'm currently in the same predicament as the OP. Ultimately I would like to spend time helping people with social problems because I used to be there myself.
However..
I try to be mindful of the fact that a single unfortunate event could send me crashing back down to earth at any point. I'm still fairly young and if the s*** hits the fan in the future I would like to still have a diagnosis of AS



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01 Jan 2011, 10:09 pm

I've heard that some girls and women with ASD are able to teach themselves social skills so well that others don't realise they're autistic. Females are especially good at mimicry and some women become so good at it that over time they no longer realise that they're doing it. It's for this reason that it's believed that up to 50% of women on the spectrum are NEVER diagnosed and simply fly under the radar. So it could be that you've become so socially adept that your AS is now barely detectable -- but it is probably still there. It sounds like you were lucky to get a diagnosis at all because you could have easily - like so many girls and women - flown under the radar and not had your AS picked up. Congratulations on overcoming all of your AS challenges by the way. :) I hope that my daughter with ASD ends up as lucky as you in that regard.


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01 Jan 2011, 10:27 pm

Is Templin Grandin not autistic because she happens to be an excellent public speaker?

I think AS is a way of processing and thinking, and I think those underlying processing will always be present. I can present as quite socially adept on occasions when I know what is expected of me but it's always a bit of a chore and my thought process is still much the same as it always was. I've learned to "do as the Romans" so to speak, but I'm still not a Roman.



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01 Jan 2011, 10:58 pm

The fact that you may have adapted or may have been misdiagnosed doesn't have any effect on who you are. A professional diagnosis may affect the ways you attempt to understand your own thoughts and behavior but they don't change your inherent behavioral tendencies. Removing a diagnosis would also not change said inherent behavioral tendencies. Regardless of how you may be classified, you are still the same person you were yesterday, and still the same person you were when you were six years old.

If you believed yourself to be autistic and were diagnosed as such and gave speeches based on that belief and were later found to not be, then you were acting under the most reasonable assumption at the time and you didn't do anything wrong.

Also if you actually are autistic but have adapted to the point where you can no longer be identified as such then you didn't do anything wrong.

When determining your future actions in regard to speaking on the subject, I would make sure that whoever you go to to reevaluate you is a highly qualified specialist in autism spectrum disorders, because it may be very difficult for a psychologist to differentiate a highly adapted autistic person from a neurotypical person, and if you go to a psychologist claiming that you were misidentified as autistic the psychologist may be biased in favor of agreeing with you, especially if they are not highly familiar with autism spectrum disorders. Any biases or desires of your own, or of any people who go with you to be interviewed may also influence the person doing your assessment, so it would probably be useful to bring as many people as possible who were familiar with your behavior when you were younger, from the time you were born through the time you were in school.

I would also make sure that regardless of the outcome you identify your own beliefs about your diagnosis to anyone who asks you to give a public speech. It is important to not misrepresent your own beliefs, and if you never have misrepresented your beliefs no one has good reason to fault you as if you had.

If you find out that you are autistic and are just highly adapted, you can continue to speak as you have been about the subject.

If you find out that you were misdiagnosed, then at least you have the training to speak, and you may give speeches about your new position in regard to autism spectrum disorders and possible advocacy or you may be able to expand and give speeches about some other interests.



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01 Jan 2011, 11:05 pm

Why don't you define yourself by who you are? Anything else would be a lie anyways.

According to Tony Attwoods book, 20% of people who are diagnosed as children, would not meet the criteria for a diagnosis as an adult. Its a developement disorder, either they developed out of it or they came up with good coping mechanisms along the way. So what your saying isn't that odd. Your part of the 20%.

So if you we're to give a talk. You can talk about this is what I was like as a child. This is what i am like today. And this is the road how I got there (whatever that is). I think people would find a talk about your journey from A to Z to be very informative.



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01 Jan 2011, 11:10 pm

I think that by the time I was about 16 until recently (I will come back to this) I would not have met the criteria for AS( I just turned 26 years old). This is despite the fact that I was diagnosed at age 13 and there was no doubt in the diagnostician’s mind when at the time that I did in fact have AS. From the time I was 16 until now, anyone who I mention that I have AS to (with the exception of a friend from an ASD support group and a counsellor who I have told numerous stories about my childhood) fervently insist that I was misdiagnosed. I don't have many discernable odd mannerisms, I make eye contact and use gestures, and can have a reciprocal conversation. I can converse about several different topics as well, and although I have always had very intense interests I was able to hide them quite well (even from my mother who I was quite close to. I understand sarcasm (almost always) and have strong empathy (although I have been told that I have a "selfish empathy" i.e. imagining how I with my particular characteristics would respond to as a situation and assuming others will respond the same way). I can even give advice to friends regarding emotional/relationship problems.

As embarrassing as this is for me to admit now, I was very ashamed of this diagnosis when I got it and especially a few years later. Around the time I was 16 I was very interested in primatelogy and in Jane Goodale in particular. Anyways I read a lot about animal behaviour and I remember reading a lot of material that would claim something to the effect of "what makes us as human beings distinct from other animals is our capacity for language and our ability to empathize with other people". Since autism supposedly meant an impairment in these very things, I decided that I was an inhuman monster! I became very obsessed with not having AS and set about to systematically eliminate my symptoms I might have (any semblance of the disorder). I made myself eat a different food every single day.....I became rigid about not being rigid!! I went to noisy crowded malls and tried to desensitize myself to sensory stimuli. This did work to some extent! Soon afterwards I had a particularly severe bout of depression and subsequently was reassessed. The psychologist who reassessed me understood that I very much did not want the AS diagnosis to be reaffirmed. He wrote up a very long convoluted report that said I was diagnosed with AS at one point, and met the criteria for the disorder at that time. He said that” at this time (the time of re-assessment) I displayed very few symptoms of AS but after working with me for x length of time he could "not rule out the diagnosis of AS ".

Anyways I have struggled with anxiety and depression over the years. My skewed perception of what it meant to be autistic did not help!!
A couple years ago, after being married (very briefly) and divorced I returned to university (after having dropped out after 2 years when I was 20 due to another episode of anxiety/depression. This time I decided to major in Psychology, which I became intensely interested in. I FINALLY begun to accept and even embrace my AS as I read about it. Over the years I had become quite paranoid about things like my eye contact and gestures, and although I fit in social interaction was quite exhausting. Accepting that I had AS was such a relief. During periods of time when I experience depression or increased anxiety my repetitive behaviours temporarily return. Recently I had one of these periods in my life (of increased anxiety) and I reverted back to some off my rituals, sameness and stimming (the same stims I had as a child/pre-teen). However this time the behaviours have persisted for over a year. I now want to be assessed for the third time to see if I meet the criteria at this point. I am similarly worried about what the assessment might say. I now identify strongly with AS and have become VERY interested in it. I am doing an undergraduate thesis related to AS, and other papers on the topic. After all this time I would be very upset if I was told I did not have AS!



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01 Jan 2011, 11:20 pm

Sorry for my previous post rant, I have wanted to rant about this for some time!!

Anyways, anneurysm, I agree with the following and all the other posts that expressed similar sentiments as they apply to both of us:

Cash__ wrote:
Why don't you define yourself by who you are? Anything else would be a lie anyways.

According to Tony Attwoods book, 20% of people who are diagnosed as children, would not meet the criteria for a diagnosis as an adult. Its a developement disorder, either they developed out of it or they came up with good coping mechanisms along the way. So what your saying isn't that odd. Your part of the 20%.

So if you we're to give a talk. You can talk about this is what I was like as a child. This is what i am like today. And this is the road how I got there (whatever that is). I think people would find a talk about your journey from A to Z to be very informative.



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02 Jan 2011, 12:40 am

I would be interested to know how you behave in totally new environments. It seems to me you have found a positive comfort zone in which to operate. This is not a bad thing at all, but it could mean that you have put together a package of specific skills that work very well only for the activities that are prominent in your life. What happens if these skills don't generalize to all situations? Will you again more overtly display autistic traits?


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02 Jan 2011, 2:17 am

anneurysm wrote:
I have been avoiding this board for a while for the reasons below...I know I have some messages to respond to but more than anything I have to get the following off my chest first.

I need your honest opinions on this very tough subject.

I am going for a psychological re-evaluation soon. The reason is, simply put, that I need an updated diagnosis that refers to my current situation rather than a past one. Family, friends, and even myself no longer feel that a diagnosis of AS applies to me, and that the behaviours I display are more indicative of an anxiety disorder.

I am strongly against compartmenalizing myself by a narrowly defined label or using it to gauge my identity, and will use an updated diagnosis to do neither of those things. I am simply concerned as I am becoming well known for my speaking endeavours. Since 16, I have spoken at countless schools, sessions and conferences across the province about my supposed AS, and have even recently presented with Temple Grandin...so I have already established some pretty good ground for myself on the condition that I have AS. If I am no longer considered to have AS, how will this affect my future prospects with these presentations? My mom keeps telling me to emphasise the areas where I was a kid...even suggesting I show clips from old videos where I acted totally AS, which is a good idea. Still, I am concerned about how I should portray myself if people choose to delve further.

The things that now debilitate me are the bits and pieces left behind once I conquered AS. Due to bullying, rejection and misunderstandings of me over my childhood and teen years by nearly everyone who came into contact with me, I have serious issues with trusting people and the "real world". I feel angry at everyone and long for escape, suffering from anxiety, depression,, implusivity and even substance abuse. I'm a great role model, eh? I can't teach people to move forward and like themselves for who they are if I don't even like or take care of myself. The image of me as a successful speaker, although it exists, is a huge and horrible irony.

A part of me, however, wonders if I was even borderline AS from the start. My diagnosis letter, given at 7 when I demonstrated prominent AS characteristics, is interestingly worded. I was diagnosed by one of the leading specialists in my area at the time, and apparently he found it difficult to come to a consensus over what I had.

The letter reads:

"...I found it difficult to make a firm diagnosis on A. The best I could do was very tentatively diagnose her with Asperger Syndrome. The reason for this is that she has already made appreciable progress and I figure that in a years time she may not fit the criteria of AS. In my opinion, A. would do best with highly individualized programming in a small class setting. There should be an emphasis on developing her socializing skills, although I realize that this could be a slow and challenging process..."

Interestingly though, it took me until my last year of high school to gain the skills and confidence to overcome my AS-like behaviours...but I did it. My social skills are now fine...people have described me as outgoing, cheerful and friendly as I have been able to put on a "front" for people to make me likeable. Although I am by no means the life of the party, I can fit in...I am very socially savy, understand jokes and sarcasm and am able to talk about a wide variety of topics. I also am a very "feeling based" person. I am driven by my emotions and experience immense empathy.

As well, I no longer have any of the hallmarks of AS, such as preferences for sameness and routine and sensory issues...however, thinking back to when I was a kid and even a preteen, these things were definite issues with me. The only things I have that would suggest AS are my people obsessions and interests that are unusual in topic but not in scope or focus. (I keep these private rather than go on about them, and only my closest family and my best friend know of them).

As well, when I hear people on the spectrum talk about how they experience the world, I don`t relate to them AT ALL as the person I am today, but can DEFINITELY relate to them as I think back to myself as a six, eleven or even sixteen year old. This makes it hard for me to fit in to the autism community at large. I feel like I'm too socially skilled to fall into this category because when I do meet people on the spectrum I unfortunately pick them apart and analyse them for social mistakes...and I am not saying that these things make the person flawed in any way, but it is because I have been trained with a hypervigilance to see such things in myself. This is something I try to stop myself from doing but unconciously do anyway. It's unfair to me because I am a huge supporter of neurodiversity and when I do this I feel like I am lying to people in a way.

In short, I feel like AS was something that defined me when I was much younger. I read over experiences on the boards here and think...that was definitely me at 6 or 12. I'm a completely different person now, and the issues I have are with other things entirely.

I still speak in order to help people who have AS, as well as their families and support systems, but I don't do it because it applies to me. I want to keep helping people because I care for them, but I don't want to keep lying about who I am. Can anyone help me negotiate this? Any input is valued and truly appreciated.


I reread you post a couple times and I want to say I am a nobody. Someone who you wouldn't even recognize on the street and my opinion may not count for much and it really shouldn't, but it seems that you are rationalizing why you don't have AS.

Some people "just get it" and some people have to learn a way to adjust and fit in, thus I think would explain the hypervigilance. Having to scan your environment and mentally have to figure out what you should do next would be exhausting and make anyone anxious. You pointed out that you analyze others for their social mistakes, I am sure you do this to yourself also. Thus the anxiety and depression in the forever changing world. It would seem you would never get a break. Plus, I would think acquiring more knowledge and experiences would make it where you have a whole lot more information to go through and decide what is what and how to respond. So I would contribute the stress, depression and anxiety to the AS, even if you have been managing the typical traits. I would also ask myself, why am I angry at these "people"? Is it because you feel you have to question yourself? Does this contribute to your anxiety? And substance abuse I would call "self medicating". Impulsive can mean a lot of different things to other people, but I would ask if you are being "impulsive" because you are really overwhelmed and this is the way you dealing with it? Mind you, I could be WAY off base.

Anyway, what do you want? To me reading this post sounds like you know or believe you really did have AS, but are trying to justify why you don't now? Do you feel that if a person has been diagnosed with AS he/she forever has to act a certain way? I really don't think there is a person out there that doesn't change over time. What do you feel having a different diagnosis means? Will you be happier? Will it get you to where you need/want to be? How will you view yourself and how do you believe others will view you with the DX or without? If I were to post what you posted, what would you tell me using your experiences? What would you tell your best friend?

The other thing, in case I am off base above, is how do you see using your past experiences which are at similar to those with AS as lying? You said that you felt you DID have those traits when younger. Why can't you use your experiences to inspire others? As an example, you said you were bullied, many with AS are and I am sure you could relate regardless of a "diagnosis". I would like to point out that there are many people with AS that have other dx's also. Just because one fits you better now wouldn't mean what you had when you were younger wasn't real. Or that the experiences that you went through weren't real. I hope these questions don't seem rude. I really am not meaning it that way.

Anyway, you sound very introperspective and very conscientious. Whatever happens I hope you find peace in the outcome. Happy New Year!! !



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02 Jan 2011, 2:31 am

wavefreak58 wrote:
I would be interested to know how you behave in totally new environments. It seems to me you have found a positive comfort zone in which to operate. This is not a bad thing at all, but it could mean that you have put together a package of specific skills that work very well only for the activities that are prominent in your life. What happens if these skills don't generalize to all situations? Will you again more overtly display autistic traits?


I was wondering the same thing reading that. If it's necessary to develop a "front", then you've probably still got the underlying way of perceiving the world that you always had. While you by no means should have to define yourself by a label, I'd caution you against throwing away "autism" too quickly. This is all working for you right now in the situation you're in. What if the situation is one you're less prepared for? What if you end up with an overwhelming number of responsibilities later in life and you have no more extra energy to keep up your front or function in other important ways? What if as you age, experiencing the small cognitive losses that come with aging unmasks what was always there underneath? What if you find that social issues aren't the only way you're affected after all?

If you were diagnosed with AS at the age of seven, your maximum age right now is early twenties. I almost knew that before I calculated though. It's usually in young adulthood that people become convinced they've totally "overcome" their autism and they have it all together. But having watched it happen to so many other adults -- you're too young to know all the things that life could throw at you that could unmask whatever cognitive/perceptual/social issues got you diagnosed. You just can't know until you've experienced a lot more of the world, how your brain will react to all the new situations.

I remember a 40-year-old I know who wrote her autobiography. In her late teens and early twenties she thought she'd licked her social and communication issues by putting up a really good front. She wrote something like, "I keep running into teens and young adults who found this strategy on their own. I don't know what to say to them. They're in for a rude awakening.". She found that after several years in the real world her strategies cracked wide open. She discovered she lacked skills that she never knew she would need until she had been in the adult world for a long time. She acquired other disabilities that dropped her energy level too far to function like a nonautistic person. You don't want to know some of the horrible things she went through as a result. She almost died from lack of services. I know lots of people like her.

I hope you're right. But I think you need to prepare in case you're not. Is it really important to get the diagnosis officially removed? What good would that do that you couldn't accomplish by ignoring it and not giving it out to people who didn't need to know? You can always form an identity without it but keep it in your back pocket in case your life changes. I'm just worried because I run a mailing list for autistic adults with daily living issues which means I see what happens to lots of people after the "front" doesn't make their issues go away in the long run. It can get really bad 10, 20, 30 years or more down the line when people find out that an autistic person who learns to pass is usually still an autistic person underneath. (I mostly avoided this issues as my autistic traits get more intense not less. But I have seen too many others..)


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02 Jan 2011, 11:44 am

Callista wrote:
Sooner or later, you don't qualify for diagnosis anymore because you don't fit that little criterion that says there has to be a significant impairment. You're no longer impaired; so you're no longer diagnosable. You've "grown out" of Asperger's. A diagnosis is a tool--and it's only needed when there's a problem. If there's not a problem, then there's no diagnosis.

What's still the same? Well, your personality's still the same. Your brain's still the same. You're still neurologically autistic--your brain uses those same autistic patterns it always has; only now you've learned enough that you're pretty efficient at it and don't need outside help anymore.


I think I am just worried about the technicalities of everything. I try not to define myself with a label, but my career, speaking and mentoring fully depend on me having it, so I get concerned. Often I get questioned if I'm even autistic at all...people have even repeatedly questioned it on this forum. I would have to say that yes, I still do have significant impairments, but I no longer believe that AS could best summarize these impairments. I, however, believe that I would definitely qualify as being BAP as I have things that could definitely suggest AS, but I longer have the full picture of traits. As well, I believe that although my brain is still inherently hard-wired for autistic like behaviours, that yes, I have become so efficient at un-learning them that I no longer require assiatance with the things I needed when younger, and that there is no way I could revert back to being fully autistic as many of my learned bahviours have become so natural.


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Given a “tentative” diagnosis as a child as I needed services at school for what was later correctly discovered to be a major anxiety disorder.

This misdiagnosis caused me significant stress, which lessened upon finding out the truth about myself from my current and past long-term psychiatrists - that I am a highly sensitive person but do not have an autism spectrum disorder

My diagnoses - anxiety disorder, depression and traits of obsessive-compulsive disorder (all in remission).

I’m no longer involved with the ASD world.


anbuend
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02 Jan 2011, 11:57 am

anneurysm wrote:
As well, I believe that although my brain is still inherently hard-wired for autistic like behaviours, that yes, I have become so efficient at un-learning them that I no longer require assiatance with the things I needed when younger, and that there is no way I could revert back to being fully autistic as many of my learned bahviours have become so natural.


There's also no way you could know this for sure at this time in your life. It may seem true for now but what about after decades of work and other responsibilities take their toll? You just can't be so sure.


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"In my world it's a place of patterns and feel. In my world it's a haven for what is real. It's my world, nobody can steal it, but people like me, we live in the shadows." -Donna Williams


Mysty
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02 Jan 2011, 1:16 pm

I think you are still qualified to speak about AS. You remember what it was like, and you still have some traits. As far as how to describe yourself, in advertising these talks, I think it depends on who you are talking to, and what you are talking about.


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not aspie, not NT, somewhere in between
Aspie Quiz: 110 Aspie, 103 Neurotypical.
Used to be more autistic than I am now.