Someone who will actually sit down and listen to you, to your findings, to your history, who is willing to do a real assessment and not just brush you off.
I don't need anyone to listen to me or my story.... I don't need therapy for it, at least not now.
I go to the GP with my brain fog, but will not tell him about the autism suspicions. I want him to focus on fixing the brain fog, not get diverted by all sort of other things. The brain fog must still be treated somehow, cause I cannot go on like this.
It seems like whatever my brain works like, it doesn't communicate effectively with whatever most people's brains are like, and vice versa.
With this thread, I hoped for advice on whether or not I should get a diagnosis, not for the sake of my health or because of maybe having other diagnosis. That is taken care of already. But because of the bias that people have. Most people think of autism as a lack of something, like a disadvantage. But most autists, seem to think that it is just a different way of being, like aliens and humans. There will be a lack of understanding, because communication is different, and the in-between-lines are different. For non-autists, the autists are the aliens. For autists, the non-autists are the aliens.
I loved the rest of your post. You have been through quite the journey, and you understand the frustration that comes with not being understood. I, however, get a "normal" pass. I am seen as smart, fun loving and successful.... Until I met my psychopath - the guy who traumatized me in 2013, I had had 18 years of marriage in a undramatic relationship. I have kids who do well in school, I have a nice place to live and I'm a director in an international corporation. I don't think anyone would know I struggle so much as I do. I don't look sick. Thus why some of the people I met think I am not. My issue is that I don't want to look weak, so I soldier on. I should probably take a break, have a sick leave. Relax. I'm about to burn out. The issue isn't my mood, but the damn brain fog. I spend my days looking like a socialite at work, taking care of everybody I work with, I come home and crash, as it takes so damn much will to push through the brain fog and seem like a smart person in meetings...
One other thing I'll mention is that learning to unmask takes time! Most people who know me personally (and I've been a member of this forum for about eight years, give or take, and I was around when we had live chat as well, heh) do not believe that I lack empathy. (I am also a very self-centered person, which I apologize for - it truly isn't intentional, I just have a very egocentric view of the world, much like a child. But that's why most of this has just been about MEEE.)
I didn't feel like you were egocentric at all!
1. I felt like you told a story that you know very well, and that I can draw information from, if I want. To me it seemed you did it out of care and interest (?)
2. You also seemed to spend a lot of attention to style and not hurting me. It was nice. You don't have to be that careful, but I feel I got to know you, it felt respectful, what you wrote.
3. You opened up to me, I interpreted that as you giving me trust, trying to reach me, caring to do that for me, and at the same time,
4. I could compare your experiences with my own experiences.
This is more than I get from most people, who don't seem to like this way of processing information. I just did the same in my answer to you above, and I don't see myself as egocentric at all. I realize others might see me that way, as I know how to mask this, and ask questions instead, but to be honest, I find it more rude to ask questions than to talk of myself.... I see myself as giving back what you gave, and I liked the exchange with you. Maybe that is childlike? But doesn't it seems to be both more authentic and more reliable than most information given online?
I saw care in your words, but you say you have no empathy? Are you sure you didn't care?
This isn't because they're invalidating me, it's because my mask has been welded to my noggin since I was 17. I would read articles online about how doctors approach bereavement and bedside manner in order to replicate sympathy efficiently. I don't want to say it was a lie, because my motivations for doing this were genuine - I wanted to be well-liked, I wanted to make people feel good and not bad, and I did not want to come across as callous and insensitive. (This is why I say my empathy isn't absent, it's just different - I wouldn't have these prosocial desires if I completely lacked all affective empathy).
oh, haha, yes, that. See. I think we have a similar way of processing this. Let me know what you think (based on what I wrote above)
Learning to present myself as I am, which is relatively neutral, limited emotional expression, etc, has taken time. It's so ingrained in me to rely on these masking behaviors that I often do them without thinking. You will most likely run into these issues as well, and you may encounter those who do not understand why your behaviors are suddenly changing. For me, the desire to unmask came with the realization that as long as I am not harming anyone, there is nothing wrong with my natural affect. It may make people uncomfortable to encounter a dude speaking in a monotone with no facial expressions, but that isn't actually hurting them - it's OK for me to be as I am.
This what you write here, is actually why I was so excited yesterday. Not so much the possible autism diagnosis, but realizing this what you just said.