Functioning has to do with the outer stuff. So anyone with career/work, relationships, friendships, hobbies, health, etc would qualify someone as high functioning. Low functioning or non functioning means someone isn't able to do these things.
I like how you said outter stuff as that's exactly what it is. I work so therefore my insurence calls me functional however I drop to the fetal position when I need to go get milk from a store because of my extreme fear of people (thus one reason I am training a service dog). But that would not be functional in my book.
The purpose of the thread is to share ideas about how improving the quality of day-to-day life
Which is a wonderful idea for a thread but
The articles defined "high functioning" by the criteria I shared in the first post.
I feel it is dangerous to strive to meet a standard which is one person's opinion of what high functioning is. The article isn't accounting that I can meet all of those standards, be "high finctioning" but still be a train wreak inside.
Ideas on how to improve day to day life I am totally on board with 100%. But, can we not try to meet one person's
opinion of what "high functioning" is? I will never meet many of those standards no matter how hard I try and that causes defeat, loosing the will to move at all, depression, lower self worth, etc.
And would that take into account that I have and need a service dog? Or would "high functioning" be not needing the help of a service dog? You see where I am getting at? By one person's standards, the fact that I need a service dog's help and will for many years to come likley (as it wasn't in the list but I get the feeling they were writing that the person achieve this alone without help like a service dog) is not being "high functioning" in their opinion. But with him I am going more places, actually sometimes meeting people. I used to leave my curtians drawn and sit in my house and go nowhere but work. And I stay numb at work which is how I can work. I had family living with me for the entire time of starting therapy (which ended my denial and started the larger symptoms) and they would go shopping for food. I refused to go. Now they are gone, I am alone and I have no problem going to buy groceries or anything else for that matter and that is all due to having a service dog. My therapist tried MANY things that all failed before we decided together a service dog would be best.
My point is, training a service dog has pushed me foward in huge ways. But to those standards, I am assuming that if you need a service dog, you are not "high functioning".
I am not trying to derail the thread or take it off topic. I just fear that trying to meet someone's standards is dangerous and instead we should look to improve our lives however that maybe without trying to meet a standard. That's all.
I'm sorry if I am taking the thread off topic and I am happy to not post in here if that's what's wanted. I just felt I needed to say this.