Muttly
Diamond Member
@Reflections thank for the suggestion. I couldn't do that. I think hearing the others would freak me out. I think some of them sound very different than me (their voice, intonation, etc). I did email my T and say I didn't remember and she told me the basics. Bleh. Not sure I wanted to know, but suppose it's part of the work.
@Bkinder (great name by the way) I think there is a difference between stating that some people fake ptsd or any other illnes and asking someone to prove their ptsd is real. I can understand how this is a charged conversation.
I have seen this conversation occur in a variety of ways about a variety of ailments/disorders. I understand why the suggestion that people faking can be upsetting and would never ask anyone to prove their diagnosis. As someone who has been diagnosed with DID, when I first read @anthony's replies I felt defensive and almost targeted. I understand that wasn't his intent. The first time around I wasn't able to see around that, and left this thread. This time, as the conversation evolved, I was see what he is getting at. So, I do see how talk about "fakers" can feel like a denial of those with valid diagnosis.
At the same time, I can see the harm those pretending to have a disorder they do not. I will use a different example. For a time, dyslexia was a thing everyone seemed to identify with. A lot of people would say "Oh, I'm dyslexic" over random things. Dyslexia seemed to constantly be represented by people seeing or writing things backwards. As someone with significant issues with dyslexia and dysgraphia it drove me crazy. It made it so much harder for people to understand my issues. I got a lot of, "well, if you see things backwards can't you...." and that's not at all what dyslexia is. And for they younger me, people saying, "oh I must be dyslexic" when they had some issue, that appeared to me, slight felt dismissive in it's own way. And some of these folks I knew. I knew enough of their story to know they hadn't had the same struggles as I. They hadn't spent years being called retard and having teachers write them off. They hadn't spent years in special education classes and practiced and practiced and practiced so that they could function at school. And on and on.
I also believe I was misdiagnosed as autistic at one point. Yes, I have some of the traits. Yes, my mind is not wired correctly. But the autistic traits can fit under existing issues I have. I wasn't intentionally faking. I didn't know about the DID (assuming I have that). I didn't understand the impact my childhood had on me. I didn't know enough about my learning disabilities. The label explained so much about myself. And I don't think it was horrible that I went through a phase where I thought was right, because it allowed me to learn about myself and feel less bad about myself. It allowed me to explore and accept those traits that do fit under the autistic bubble. As I wasn't getting any sort of benefits (in terms of money/resources) I hope I didn't take away from the autistic community. Did I do damage by falsely (although unintentionally) representing myself? Maybe. Because for those I shared my label with, maybe I presented in ways that don't truly represent autistic folks. If so, I am sorry, but I also can't change what happened. I wasn't trying to "fake". I wasn't trying to get attention. I was merely trying to understand why I am the way I am.
I think I've been around long enough that these conversation typical don't bother me. I have seen these "faker" conversations happen in a variety of contexts. I have seen the ... for lack of a better term... popularity of various disorders and illnesses. Labels can be wonderful because they give us a way to communicate and understand but they are also limiting. This applies to the term faker too. What I've found, watching these arguments happen is that both apparent side is generally coming from a place of wanting to be understood
And with that, I've gone on more than long enough.
@Bkinder (great name by the way) I think there is a difference between stating that some people fake ptsd or any other illnes and asking someone to prove their ptsd is real. I can understand how this is a charged conversation.
I have seen this conversation occur in a variety of ways about a variety of ailments/disorders. I understand why the suggestion that people faking can be upsetting and would never ask anyone to prove their diagnosis. As someone who has been diagnosed with DID, when I first read @anthony's replies I felt defensive and almost targeted. I understand that wasn't his intent. The first time around I wasn't able to see around that, and left this thread. This time, as the conversation evolved, I was see what he is getting at. So, I do see how talk about "fakers" can feel like a denial of those with valid diagnosis.
At the same time, I can see the harm those pretending to have a disorder they do not. I will use a different example. For a time, dyslexia was a thing everyone seemed to identify with. A lot of people would say "Oh, I'm dyslexic" over random things. Dyslexia seemed to constantly be represented by people seeing or writing things backwards. As someone with significant issues with dyslexia and dysgraphia it drove me crazy. It made it so much harder for people to understand my issues. I got a lot of, "well, if you see things backwards can't you...." and that's not at all what dyslexia is. And for they younger me, people saying, "oh I must be dyslexic" when they had some issue, that appeared to me, slight felt dismissive in it's own way. And some of these folks I knew. I knew enough of their story to know they hadn't had the same struggles as I. They hadn't spent years being called retard and having teachers write them off. They hadn't spent years in special education classes and practiced and practiced and practiced so that they could function at school. And on and on.
I also believe I was misdiagnosed as autistic at one point. Yes, I have some of the traits. Yes, my mind is not wired correctly. But the autistic traits can fit under existing issues I have. I wasn't intentionally faking. I didn't know about the DID (assuming I have that). I didn't understand the impact my childhood had on me. I didn't know enough about my learning disabilities. The label explained so much about myself. And I don't think it was horrible that I went through a phase where I thought was right, because it allowed me to learn about myself and feel less bad about myself. It allowed me to explore and accept those traits that do fit under the autistic bubble. As I wasn't getting any sort of benefits (in terms of money/resources) I hope I didn't take away from the autistic community. Did I do damage by falsely (although unintentionally) representing myself? Maybe. Because for those I shared my label with, maybe I presented in ways that don't truly represent autistic folks. If so, I am sorry, but I also can't change what happened. I wasn't trying to "fake". I wasn't trying to get attention. I was merely trying to understand why I am the way I am.
I think I've been around long enough that these conversation typical don't bother me. I have seen these "faker" conversations happen in a variety of contexts. I have seen the ... for lack of a better term... popularity of various disorders and illnesses. Labels can be wonderful because they give us a way to communicate and understand but they are also limiting. This applies to the term faker too. What I've found, watching these arguments happen is that both apparent side is generally coming from a place of wanting to be understood
And with that, I've gone on more than long enough.