What is it like to be a girl with autism?

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ASPartOfMe
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13 Jul 2015, 10:26 pm

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/women/womens-health/11735971/What-is-it-like-to-be-a-girl-with-autism.html

Quote:
Beth Worboys was desperate to read a novel aimed at girls like her. “All the books about autism were for boys,” says the 17-year-old. “I wanted to read a book aimed at anxious, isolated girls like me”.

Thanks in large part to Beth, that novel now exists. At a 2014 autism event, the teenager, then a pupil at Limpsfield Grange, a Surrey-based school for girls with autism and communication difficulties – and the subject of an ITV documentary tomorrow – cornered Robert Pritchett, a leading figure at the National Autistic Society. She persuaded him to fund her book. The resulting novel, M is For Autism, was published last week. Co-written by the entire cohort of the school, it allows the reader to view the world through the eyes of a girl with autism. And with experts now recognising that female autism often goes undiagnosed, it’s a novel that could change lives.


Quote:
There is no research on the number of women on the autistic spectrum, but clinicians are now saying anecdotally there are probably a significant number of undiagnosed cases accessing adult mental health services for depression, OCD, eating disorders and self-harming. Staff at eating disorder clinics in Birmingham recently discovered that, of women in their twenties attending the clinics, between 60 per cent and 70 per cent were undiagnosed autistic women


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BuyerBeware
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14 Jul 2015, 6:46 am

What's it like to be a girl with autism??

HELL. Silent, smiling, gut-busting, wearing-out-your-knees-kissing-ass, terrified HELL.

It's high time someone told the story.

The only thing that scares me is that more awareness of what The Beast looks like in girls and women means I will have to work even harder to hide it when I go out on the street.

In three more years, my youngest kid will be in kindergarten. Then I will be able to only go out when I can go out alone. That should lower the stakes somewhat.


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Violetvee
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15 Jul 2015, 11:18 am

Every single part of that article that describes how autism generally shows in girls is definitely describes me, especially when I was in high school. It was hard for me to make and keep friends, and some of the people I was friends with were not always the nicest of people. Not to mention that a lot of times after having a really really rough day at school I would go and hide in my room and either start screaming and throwing pillows and stuffed animals, or I would be bawling into my pillow.

I went un-diagnosed for years, and right now I still don't actually have an official diagnosis. Sure, I got diagnosed with ADHD in kindergarten because I didn't always want to do what the rest of the class was doing and I had a hard time focusing on my work, but the autism was completely overlooked until I was in high school.


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MindBlind
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15 Jul 2015, 6:37 pm

I was on the National Autistic Society's website and read the article regarding how autism presents in girls and women. Honestly, I don't relate to most of it (with the exception of the sections regarding imaginative play and possibly socialising to an extent). Otherwise, I was very typical of boys on the spectrum growing up.



xxZeromancerlovexx
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16 Jul 2015, 11:38 am

I don't remember much about what it was like growing up, but now I don't feel like I'm different. That article talking about how girls with Aspergers have similar interest as other girls applies defiantly applies to me, but I don't have such an intense interest to the point where that's all I talk about or all I think about.

So in other words, I consider myself average. I've worked hard to get there. Trust me, my teenage years were terrible. I had a lot of social and emotional delays, like I was a five year old in a teenager's body, but now I've caught up and I'm not like that anymore. Now, I did used to have intense interest in things, but talking and thinking about one thing and one thing only got really boring.

The other day I got told that I used to hate dresses growing up, but these days if I went places where I could wear them I would probably wear a dress every single day.

I guess it all depends on the girl or woman.


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goofygoobers
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23 Jul 2015, 12:29 pm

I really hope there's even more awareness of females on the Autism spectrum so they can get the help they need faster.

I was diagnosed young, but I still face struggles with socializing and understanding people.

Is the book out yet?



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23 Jul 2015, 6:52 pm

BuyerBeware wrote:
HELL. Silent, smiling, gut-busting, wearing-out-your-knees-kissing-ass, terrified HELL.


THIS



TheAP
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23 Jul 2015, 7:06 pm

That sounds like a cool school and a good book.