...Because you make eye contact. "You're female, you're too normal looking & acting..." And the list goes on.
Unfortunately, those so-called health professionals have never seen me in anything other than in a room where it's quiet. There's few distractions, loud noises, phones ringing loudly, people speaking loudly, lots of activities going on, etc. They also tend to talk about about their qualifications, & drone on & on about what they know, vs hearing what I have to say.
If they would listen they'd find out that I have severe sensory issues with noise, certain types of clothing/tags, light, smells, textures, etc. Sometimes it's bad enough that it's all I can do to keep from running out of the area that's causing me problems. I have learned to avoid some places that I have trouble tolerating: malls, casinos, any place with big crowds, etc. Unfortunately, my job often puts me in the middle of situations that are difficult to tolerate. But because I have to earn a living, I am required to put up with stuff that I find to be physically painful. I have found that wearing certain clothes can help...things that don't irritate my skin, turning socks inside out so the seams don't cause friction on my feet, going into parts of the building where there are no phones/away from voices & activities, all help me to cope.
I think autism & aspergers have so many traits. But unfortunately, it seems as though there are just a few that are recognizable to people who deal with mental health...they pick & choose what they think are blanket symptoms that apply to all. If you don't do those known things, you have another disorder, if you have any disorder at all.
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If I do something right, no one remembers. If I do something
wrong, no one forgets.
Aspie Score: 173/200, NT score 31/200: very likely an Aspie
5/18/11: New Aspie test: 72/72
DX: Anxiety plus ADHD/Aspergers: inconclusive