GodzillaWoman wrote:
andrethemoogle wrote:
Some people think we on the spectrum don't have emotions, whereas in my case that is extremely false. I am more emotional than logical.
I've been accused of both being too emotional and too cold, depending on the situation. And sometimes by the same person, at different times. My wife told me that when we first got together, she often couldn't tell what I was feeling. Now after years of therapy, prying open those locked up emotions, they spill out rather unexpectedly. Especially the tears.
...you just explained why you were questioned you about it. You are on the spectrum, you used to not cry until therapy, and now you cry.
Showing emotions versus feeling emotions are not the same thing. Understanding emotions and being able to communicate emotions is not the same thing as having them but being unable to express them in any meaningful way to someone else. Emotions are just like any other sense, they can be overwhelmed or buried, just like you can pay attention to all the sounds going on around you or you can block them out. Excess of blocking out stimuli IS an autism thing, and emotions are a stimulus. Just like now being devasted and over-analyzing when someone mentions that you can cry. From what you described here, to us, you are putting so much into the interviewer's mouth that it's kind of amazing. All that from 1 sentence they said??
Also SPD is a differential diagnosis for autism, which often present similarly, and one's ability to have emotions is a pretty big difference.
Also, if you feel like you were treated like a child, it is because sometimes autistics process things more like children do, on a different level of understanding and interpreting. If you felt it was beneath you, then it was, but that doesn't mean they don't care. It means that have tests that are generalized for ALL people with autism, and you know full-well that lots of people on the spectrum have it much worse than you do.
Lastly, why is it anyone else's job to help you cope with things? HOW can they help you cope with things is the more important thing??
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Not autistic, I think
Prone to depression
Have celiac disease
Poor motivation