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Thank you again @Swift. I need that validation so much! My favourite nurse here validated me, but my pdoc/psychiatrist asked me, what I deem the stupidest question, as did her cohort, who she sent in on Thursday, to analyse me and "help her out" with me, and I can't get my head around it, especially coming from a psychiatrist, which was "Does it matter?" like, does it matter if I'm autistic?Thinking of you mums.
One trick I use with (stupid) doctors is ask them to do the test first and argue with me about the results afterwards.
Worked to great effect on a male Doctor who wouldn't organise a urine sample because apparently, my kidney infection that I'd been hospitalized for was "psychosomatic."
A bacterial infection.
I was like "dude, you may totally be right, but do the test and then we can argue about psychosomaticism.... "
Is there a reason your doc doesn't want to start the process of an Aspie diagnosis?
Just, there might be. They may think your weeks in hospital are better spent working on trauma, which is an idiotically one-eyed view if your Asperger's is part of it. Or, they may not have the expertise or experience and be afraid of cocking it up for you.
The other magic words with doctors are "what else could explain it? What could it be?"
Ie differential diagnosis but don't say that or they'll accuse you of having watched too many med shows.
Thirdly - does the medical establishment need to diagnose you in order for you to understand and accept yourself as having Asperger's and for that to be a useful way to look at things for you?
Like I'm not pro- self diagnosis by a long shot, but for something with so much grey as an understudied population and with other complicating factors, it may still be useful to run with it.
I have an Autistic friend (his preferred language) who is blind. He can't get a f*cking Autism diagnosis because he is blind. He's autistic, though, and quite proud of it.
But yeah. Sometimes the criteria are uselessly narrow and the doctors can't make a call because the criteria demand a high level of positive symptoms before they can say "yep this is what you have, 100%, definitely, we're sure."
I believe you, we all believe you. We see you.
Hang in there.
That's all very well with heaps of different kinds of therapists and psychologists, as they offer specific treatment and approaches and have a particularly domain of therapy that can be of assistance in all kinds of psychological difficulties, they tend to treat the symptoms rather than pathologise the person.Maybe - but I am just guessing here - maybe they meant does it matter if you don't have a diagnosis because you already know you are autistic?
My old therapist did systemic therapy with me and never diagnosed her patients because she didn't think that this would help them. She used a different approach and it worked very well for me. I believe that everyone is different so if you feel you need a diagnosis don't give up yet! Maybe for you it has a lot to do with validation of your struggles? If so, you could maybe tell that your pdoc ?
Yes I am aware of that, before I started my psychology and neuroscience study program I did an internship in a psychiatry for mentally ill children and it was horrible there. Doesn't have to be this way everywhere, but the factory-like fashion of diagnosing and giving them medication was not helping at all, it just made everything worse. They sometimes left being even more mentally ill than before. That is why I preferred to not go by diagnoses, but that is just my personal preference.If they can't drug it, chop it, sew it, kill it, or label it, they often get a bit lost with how to treat things, as they don't often employ holistic approaches or multidiciplinary or mixed modality approaches.
Sorry that I misgendered her. So weird, I only remembered the word "pdoc" and basically assumed that she was male, maybe its because in german some words are feminine or masculine and for me pdoc sounds quite masculine?My psych is a "she" snd she's quite good at what she does. I do like her.
I need the right diagnosis to validate my difficulties.
I understand - like I said, I thought that it has a lot to do with validation you've been missing throughout your life.I want to be legitimised, which is not something I've had very much, certainly, not something I've felt very much, at all, in life.
I am sorry that feel like you have to give up. Don't be too hard on yourself, its really not that long ago that you discovered this about yourself, give it some time, I am sure something will eventually come up that will help you :hug:I've tried to talk to her about it and, basically, have given up.
Makes me happy for you! It means you are getting it out, processing, working thru, insert whatever words you like best here. You are allowing yourself to grieve, which is also a role model for me that grief is doable and can be felt and no bad things will happen. :hug:". So I've been.a snivelling, wailing, sooking, crying mess for a lot of this week.