Well, I've been on here for about two weeks and I've yet to properly introduce myself. So, I should do so right now.
I am a 24-year-old young man who graduated from college last year with a B.S. in Psychology and is going to be going to graduate school in Tennessee next August to obtain a M.A. in Experimental Psychology and hopefully move on somewhere else to obtain a PhD so that I can become an academic professor and conduct research pertaining to autism, gender dysphoria, and possibly other disorders. Currently, I am attending a Pharmacy Technician program at a community college nearby so that I can secure possibilities for future employment; it's a good, constructive way to pass the time I guess. Right now my recreational activities include going online, playing games on my computer and Dreamcast, editing mp3s, and talking to people online. I don't have any preoccupying interests outside of what goes on in my head (a lot of things do).
I was diagnosed with AS when I was 16, going-on-17. While I can see a grain of truth to the diagnosis, I have never really felt that it described my problems all that well and that in fact some of what I have is in actuality contradictory to the diagnosis. Unfortunately, I was basically the only one in the whole world who believed this for a very long time and as such it caused a whole lot of drama for me, especially concerning family matters (just imagine what it would be like to have a label that you know for a fact is not true forced on you by just about every important person in your life; it's psychological rape, basically). While my family still maintains that I have AS, I have sort of moved on knowing that I know far more about autism and AS than they do and as such I would be more qualified to know whether or not I have it.
I can't stand those who self-diagnose. I'm sorry, I just can't. Mostly because I don't understand why somebody would willingly choose to have that label applied to them when I've tried so hard to get away from it. Well that, and the fact that most of them don't even know what the hell they are doing.
I seem to have problems with my dopamine levels. I've been on drugs to control issues related to problems with serotonin; unlike with most people with AS, they've done nothing for me. I've been on Risperdal since 2002 though and it has basically been the only medication that has worked for me. I exhibit symptoms that are suggestive of moderate OCD and mild/borderline Tourette's, although I have an offical diagnosis of neither. I feel that the label that would be closest to accuracy for me would be PDD-NOS, since I do exhibit mild similarities with autistics and AS folk but not enough, and I have a whole lot of other things going on that are uncharacteristic of both. The only reason why I even consider myself "on the spectrum" to even a mild degree is because when I was one year old I developed fairly moderate autism with speech and motor delays, and although I was somewhat socially related to others around me I did have significant delays in that field as well. I don't really have any of these problems anymore; I can make friends, I can have normal conversations, I have normal emotionality, I usually speak pretty well (although not always). Usually when I act weird it's because I'm tired.
I've met several people with autism and AS both online and off; with the exception of three people (all girls; I always found that sort of odd...) I have connected with/related to none. Most of those who I met IRL were nice enough people, so it wasn't due to any disliking or self-loathing; I just couldn't find myself in them. All of the three that I have been able to connect with have all been online, and I'm currently friends with one. We talk online somewhat regularly and I really like her a lot.
So, that's the Number_11 story, more or less, although there may be a lot more that I'm missing. Glad to be here.
_________________
End of line.