Kas_Can_Fly
Diamond Member
When I was 15 I was (mis-)diagnosed with Aspergers. I was initially referred to a counselling and psychiatric child specialists because my school attendance had gone from bad to worse. My mum (and school) requested the sessions but both her and by father attended them alongside myself. I dissociated though a lot of them, especially as my father would quite obviously (in retrospect) manipulate me, my mum and even the therapist. He lost his rag and got furious in one session because the therapist agreed with my Mum that I wasn't such a lost cause, so delusional and obviously crazy I needed a lot of medication and was otherwise beyond help. He was screaming and I ran out and waited by the car because I couldn't deal with it, they were in there for over 40 minutes after that. He didn't go back after that, but I did only once more and for the test.
The grounds that I was sent for a speech and awareness test were that they thought I had aspergers as:
*I was missing school
*I got no pleasure from friendships
*(except for a small few) I was terrified of not pleasing teachers
*I was emotionally numb
*I'd lost interest in all but a few escaping past-times
*I was depressed and constantly worried
*I was having nightmares
*I was having difficulty sleeping
*I would get angry/defensive for apparently no reason
They didn't know:
*I was having flashbacks and unwanted memories of some of the earliest abuse I suffered (before it got too bad, I didn't remember the rest until recently).
They knew had been extremely bullied at age 9 and at age 11, both ending with severe threat to my life. They saw my Dad's outrage when he lost control of the situation and they could see past him. They never asked to see me with only my mum or on my own.
During my speech and awareness test I was told I was really clever because I'd learned to understand things like sarcasm and idioms. I understood odd turns of phrase, colloquial sayings and tones of voice, in fact I often over reacted to angry and negative tones. I was repeatedly told this was because I was intelligent to have learned a way to get around them.
Quite honestly now I getting help with my problems, I'm surprised it wasn't noticed by either the specialists I saw or the school who requested in part I get seen. They also believed me when I came in with an enormous red mark on my face, but I didn't remember how I got it at the time and told them I didn't really know but I must have fallen down the stairs or something. I also avoided P.E because of bruises and when even when I wore my kit under my uniform so I never stripped off, my arms and legs still had bruises at the points of fingers.
I know I am partly to blame because I hid it all so well from my mum (abuse happened away from home), who honestly believed that I had inherited some of my fathers mental health issues (Manic Depression, OCD, GAD) or had my own, she even asked me if I was doing drugs (which infuriated me because I my abusers did, although I'm now aware I may have been drugged against my will, things are still patchy to say the least).
Am I wrong in being angry at them? I feel that they really made a massive mistake in overlooking my now officially diagnosed PTSD, is that unfair? I feel that it probably is but I can't help thinking that it probably isn't.
Sorry for rambling, I seem to be unable to keep it short!
AJ
xx
The grounds that I was sent for a speech and awareness test were that they thought I had aspergers as:
*I was missing school
*I got no pleasure from friendships
*(except for a small few) I was terrified of not pleasing teachers
*I was emotionally numb
*I'd lost interest in all but a few escaping past-times
*I was depressed and constantly worried
*I was having nightmares
*I was having difficulty sleeping
*I would get angry/defensive for apparently no reason
They didn't know:
*I was having flashbacks and unwanted memories of some of the earliest abuse I suffered (before it got too bad, I didn't remember the rest until recently).
They knew had been extremely bullied at age 9 and at age 11, both ending with severe threat to my life. They saw my Dad's outrage when he lost control of the situation and they could see past him. They never asked to see me with only my mum or on my own.
During my speech and awareness test I was told I was really clever because I'd learned to understand things like sarcasm and idioms. I understood odd turns of phrase, colloquial sayings and tones of voice, in fact I often over reacted to angry and negative tones. I was repeatedly told this was because I was intelligent to have learned a way to get around them.
Quite honestly now I getting help with my problems, I'm surprised it wasn't noticed by either the specialists I saw or the school who requested in part I get seen. They also believed me when I came in with an enormous red mark on my face, but I didn't remember how I got it at the time and told them I didn't really know but I must have fallen down the stairs or something. I also avoided P.E because of bruises and when even when I wore my kit under my uniform so I never stripped off, my arms and legs still had bruises at the points of fingers.
I know I am partly to blame because I hid it all so well from my mum (abuse happened away from home), who honestly believed that I had inherited some of my fathers mental health issues (Manic Depression, OCD, GAD) or had my own, she even asked me if I was doing drugs (which infuriated me because I my abusers did, although I'm now aware I may have been drugged against my will, things are still patchy to say the least).
Am I wrong in being angry at them? I feel that they really made a massive mistake in overlooking my now officially diagnosed PTSD, is that unfair? I feel that it probably is but I can't help thinking that it probably isn't.
Sorry for rambling, I seem to be unable to keep it short!
AJ
xx