Does it help to tell people you have ASD?
Gentleman Argentum
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Joined: 24 Aug 2019
Age: 53
Gender: Male
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Location: State of Euphoria
Or does it not help because people don't know enough about autism to understand what you mean? Does it just add to the miscommunication? Or does it make it worse because they think you're making excuses, or even lying?
I forgot the name of a black man I work with but only see once every four months or so. I was afraid he would attribute my lapse to racism, which is such a trendy thing to do these days, so I told him I'm not good at remembering names. I remember faces, not names. I also said I'm better with computers than I am with people. All of that is true. I think that is enough information, no need to go into the whole spectrum business.
The main thing is to disarm people who will otherwise take things personally and assume you are racist or one of the other -ists on the list of Boogeymen in society. You tell these people things to inform them that it is not personal. You are the same way with everybody.
Or does it not help because people don't know enough about autism to understand what you mean? Does it just add to the miscommunication? Or does it make it worse because they think you're making excuses, or even lying?
_________________
"I'm bad and that's good. I'll never be good and that's not bad. There's no one I'd rather be than me."
Wreck It Ralph
In the last few months, I've been saying something along the lines of "I often have a harder time understanding non-verbal cues because I am likely on the autism spectrum [just got the confirmation today!], so if you need something from me and I'm not picking it up, feel free to tell me to my face. It won't hurt my feelings and will make both of our lives easier."
In dating, this has especially been helpful. I recently got a girlfriend and I've found this allows our communication to work in a manner that allows us both to understand what the other wants and needs. I suppose time will tell if this strategy really works, but so far, this is the most connected I have ever felt in a relationship.

_________________
"I'm bad and that's good. I'll never be good and that's not bad. There's no one I'd rather be than me."
Wreck It Ralph
Oh I get that too! People can't see that I have chronic fatigue so they think I'm just being lazy. Lots of my work colleagues thought that when I was at work. Then when I got pregnant I just couldn't function so I think they realised then how weak my body was.
CFS *and* autism is serious isn't it. Not only do our bodies not work 'normally', our minds don't work 'normally' either. A double whammy.
I also have had other problems on and off, with strong emotions, anger, sadness, not getting along, feeling scared and lonely, and they really flared when my first ex dumped me 15 months ago, and it's been a harrowing time. Though my therapist and psychiatrist missed it, my sister suspected that I could have Borderline Personality, and I think she's right. So now that it's reared its head because of this stressor, it's by far the worst of my problems.
Or does it not help because people don't know enough about autism to understand what you mean? Does it just add to the miscommunication? Or does it make it worse because they think you're making excuses, or even lying?
Have you had mostly good reactions? Or do you just accept that sometimes people won't understand and are able to let it go?
Or does it not help because people don't know enough about autism to understand what you mean? Does it just add to the miscommunication? Or does it make it worse because they think you're making excuses, or even lying?
I forgot the name of a black man I work with but only see once every four months or so. I was afraid he would attribute my lapse to racism, which is such a trendy thing to do these days, so I told him I'm not good at remembering names. I remember faces, not names. I also said I'm better with computers than I am with people. All of that is true. I think that is enough information, no need to go into the whole spectrum business.
The main thing is to disarm people who will otherwise take things personally and assume you are racist or one of the other -ists on the list of Boogeymen in society. You tell these people things to inform them that it is not personal. You are the same way with everybody.
Or does it not help because people don't know enough about autism to understand what you mean? Does it just add to the miscommunication? Or does it make it worse because they think you're making excuses, or even lying?
Have you had mostly good reactions? Or do you just accept that sometimes people won't understand and are able to let it go?
_________________
"I'm bad and that's good. I'll never be good and that's not bad. There's no one I'd rather be than me."
Wreck It Ralph
usually the response is..you cant be autistic you drive a bus!"
You're autistic, not a pigeon!
_________________
"Donkeys live a long time. None of you has ever seen a dead donkey."
usually the response is..you cant be autistic you drive a bus!"
_________________
"I'm bad and that's good. I'll never be good and that's not bad. There's no one I'd rather be than me."
Wreck It Ralph
I also have had other problems on and off, with strong emotions, anger, sadness, not getting along, feeling scared and lonely, and they really flared when my first ex dumped me 15 months ago, and it's been a harrowing time. Though my therapist and psychiatrist missed it, my sister suspected that I could have Borderline Personality, and I think she's right. So now that it's reared its head because of this stressor, it's by far the worst of my problems.
Oh!! ! I didn't know your long term boyfriend died in 2015 and the first boyfriend was a boyfriend! I thought the man you were upset about was just a good friend.
That explains it all! Massive shocks like that either cause or exacerbate ME/CFS. For sure. The emotional shock throws the physical body out of balance.
When my dad died, my mum was only 43 and her periods stopped forever. She reckoned it was the huge shock of his death. And similarly, my periods didn't start for many years after that, I was 16 when they finally did. That is very old for them to start, everyone else in my family started around 12 or 13. We always wondered if the huge shock of my dad's death reverberated in our physical bodies.
I wish the Western medical sector would realise that emotional and physical sides are connected and can't be separated. We seem to have conventional doctors treating physical conditions and alternative therapists treating mental conditions. They need to merge and work together!
In my own life telling people of autism as almost always lead to them reacting poorly for some while others just completely change how they treat me in a weird way that I can't explain. I don't tell people anymore- too many bad experiences. I have found most people are going to create a fictional version of you based on their own biases whether you tell them you are on the spectrum or not. Maybe I have the wrong approach I am not sure- I just know I will not meet or align with their expectations of what they expect regardless.
I can remember one specific series of events where I was working in the warehouse of goodwill where I did such and later ended up in the mental hospital because of the bullying and strange mind games they tried to play on me.
In my experience it can be dangerous and troublesome to explain yourself to others- better to let them think you're just an idiot or odd so far in life.
I wish the Western medical sector would realise that emotional and physical sides are connected and can't be separated. We seem to have conventional doctors treating physical conditions and alternative therapists treating mental conditions. They need to merge and work together!
There's just so much that medical doctors and mental health practitioners just don't know. Everything is connected in some way but it's hard to know exactly how, or how to deal with it. I do think my ME/CFS did get noticeably worse over the past year. And for a good while I was losing my hair. Not so much that you could see the hair loss on my head (unless you really looked), but there was hair on the floor, all around the house.

_________________
"I'm bad and that's good. I'll never be good and that's not bad. There's no one I'd rather be than me."
Wreck It Ralph
There's just so much that medical doctors and mental health practitioners just don't know. Everything is connected in some way but it's hard to know exactly how, or how to deal with it. I do think my ME/CFS did get noticeably worse over the past year. And for a good while I was losing my hair. Not so much that you could see the hair loss on my head (unless you really looked), but there was hair on the floor, all around the house.
I think that must have been it: the shock. Even the doctor was shocked that my mum went through the menopause at 43 years old. That is extremely young.
That sounds like you were definitely in shock if your health got worse and your hair fell out.
The medical field needs to somehow unite and work together. I think Eastern practises are way ahead of the West because they have known for centuries how mental and physical health are linked and can't be separated.
I'm pretty much an open book, but I don't generally tell people.
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ASD, most likely have dyscalculia & BPD as well. Also dx'd ADHD-C, but don't think it's accurate.
RAADs: 104 | ASQ: 30 | Aspie Quiz: 116/200 (84% probability of being atypical)
Also diagnosed with: seasonal depression, anxiety, OCD
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