StarCity wrote:
Personally I fail to understand how people pretending to be on the spectrum can do so as in my opinion, and from my own experience I can tell if someone is on the autistic spectrum within 2 seconds of looking at them if it is in real-life (such as them walking past me and me looking at them, or me seeing them stood in a supermarket cue), regardless of where they are on the scale. It is SO EASY to see.
Why can't doctors see it?
But is it really that easy to see? I've met several people who were diagnosed with Asperger's but I couldn't see it in them at all. They had certain relatively small ASD-like characteristics that would only be visible if you looked hard enough, and that are also present in a portion of the non-ASD population.
It seems to me that there's no one definitive thing that would signal someone as "one of us". The tricky thing with autism is that its traits fade into normality and there is no definitive cutoff. For me, with some people, I definitely get that mutual feeling, but with many who appear as/claim to be "mild" or "borderline" cases, I don't always get that.
I think perhaps there are some who make it up, but it's not as gainful to make up ASD as it would be, say, with ADHD. Maybe some people want to get on disability or something. There's really no way to tell whether they are making it up or whether they are just delusional, though.
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Leading a double life and loving it (but exhausted).
Likely ADHD instead of what I've been diagnosed with before.