Well, I guess I could start by saying that I have read hundreds of descriptions of Asperger's Syndrome, read hundreds of forum posts and related articles and have also read The Complete Guide to Asperger's Syndrome by Tony Attwood and am now convinced that I have Asperger's. Nothing has ever come so close to describing and explaining my life. Tony Attwoods book was the final decision for me. I checked his book out from the library because my 3.5yrs daughter is "suspect" for some manner of PDD (probably AS or PDD-NOS). I read the entire 347 pages (sans the glossary and index) in less than 48 hours. I couldn't put the book down. After reading the book, I decided to purchase a copy. I sat down with a highlighter and proceeded to highlight all of the passages that had particular meaning for me and then revisited each passage in the context of the DSM-IV criteria. I immediately realized that I not only met, but exceeded the criteria for the syndrome. That would make me a self diagnosed individual. Realizing that I am not actually qualified to diagnose myself, I took the book to my therapist and began to explain to her that I think I have Asperger's and that I need help to determine if my symptoms are causing a "qualitative impairment" and are "clinically significant". These are obviously highly subjective terms and require clairification. Clearly, I feel that I meet these criteria, but diagnosis is ultimately dependent upon the perception of the clinician. This is what I know thus far...
I am a stay-at-home-mom to a 3.5yrs old little girl. I also have a 16yrs old daughter. My 16yrs old daughter has ADD and I suspect also has issues with sensory integration/perception. My toddler toe walks, has severe sleep issues, shows signs of AD/HD, talks non-stop and has clear issues with routines/rituals, aggression, empathy and conversational "give and take". Her father also shares characteristics of AS.
I met my husband online. Our "letters" to each other read like resumes. He is an engineer and I am a scienctist. We don't have 5 friends between us and both choose to stay home and research our interests and engage in our hobbies. He makes beer, tinkers with computers (Linux), follows politics and keeps up to date on new technologies and engineering. I sew, quilt, garden and read non-fiction "text" about my favorite topics (UFO's, aliens, bigfoot, ghosts, pagan religions and science). Both of us are accuesed of having one track minds and being antisocial (yet friendly). Our teenager seems more average while our toddler seems more like us. Our toddler retreats to her room and her immagination. She is interested in keys/locks, putting babies and animals "to bed" and building bridges and gates. She also "scripts" everything and would make an excellent director for a movie or a play. You do not play with our toddler, you take detailed instruction from her and then act out your role in her drama. I was exactly like her when I was little. I never really played with other children because they were to difficult to deal with. Most other children didn't understand or appreciate my vision of how the "scenario" should play out. I spent most of my outdoors time in the summer pretending to be a hunter/gatherer and often built shelters and made clothing from brown paper bags (carefully softened by hand and sewn with yarn). I also would spend a good deal of time pretending to be Chinese, Japanes and Indian (from India). I insisted on dressing in the style of each culture and eating the foods associated with that culture. This is how I became interested in religions (specifically pagan religion). I could go on, but I should stop as to not lose reader interest.
Sound familiar to anyone or am I just over reacting?