bee33 wrote:
. . . Meds given by a psychiatrist I actually like and who was kind and thoughtful, after years of trial and error, is one of the few things I can think of. (Abilify and Lamictal) . . .
Straight up, I have not had good results with mental health professionals. They tend to be "be righters." Really. Once they make an initial judgement call, if you are perceived as questioning the diagnosis, they tend to get defensive or huffy. So from the perspective of this "professional" . . . . . their being "right" is more important than the quality of my life ? ? ? Wow. But that often seems to be the way it is.
What is lost is a framework of working together where experiments can be attempted and feedback honestly and openly looked at. And by this I mean, taking a medium step, seeing how it works, adjusting, taking another medium step. A person with Asperger's indeed can depression or anxiety issues. In fact, I'd say because of more frequent social isolation and difficulties connecting with others, depression and/or anxiety is somewhat more likely with us. And not every medicine works for every person. All the more reason to have real conversation and feedback (and probably not baby steps because then you often don't get enough feedback to really see what's going on, rather medium steps).
And so, if you feel that a professional is not putting forth the effort to listen and to understand, or is not treating you as a person of equal worth along with every other person, please trust that feeling and move laterally. Yeah, get another professional.