B19 wrote:
I am delighted to hear you are feeling a bit better. (Have you read the book "Neurotribes" by Steve Silberman? We have a few threads on it here, most easily found by googling "neurotribes Wrong Planet forums".)
I have! And I liked it much better than the other autism histories I've read (John Donvan'sand Caren Zucker's "In a Different Key" was published at the same time, I think, and I didn't like it one bit). Have you read Neurotribes or In a Different Key? I'll google the threads, I'm curious to see what other people think about it.
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Hey Lea,
Joined myself today
as I started my formal diagnosis journey about a year ago, and received my diagnosis documents a week ago
Hey Moshe Ben Yehuda,
Thank you! And that's quite interesting that you mention reading other people's blogs and writing. I love reading other (autistic) people's blogs, it's much easier for me to understand (and hopefully one day accept) aspects of myself that are ... quite autistic I believe. I haven't heard of Samantha Croft, I'll check her out, thank you!
Also, if you don't mind me asking, what's your native language?
And thank you for welcoming me with so much enthusiasm and vigour.
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I got my bachelor's in speech pathology and English.
Are you up to dissertation level yet?
What do you mean by dissertation level? I'm only in my first year... I graduated with a MA in English Literature in July and have moved on to a PhD (I knew I wanted to do a PhD and found my own little niche topic while I was writing my MA thesis). I'm doing my PhD in Germany so the system might be a bit different?
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Welcome to WP.
You'll find a lot of other academic types here with graduate degrees of various kinds. There's a thread over here that might encourage you:
viewtopic.php?t=200144
Thank you, Darmok! And thank you for the link, that thread sounds super interesting.
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Diagnoses: Asperger's Syndrome, Epilepsy