wrongcitizen wrote:
I'd prefer you to stay. Diagnosis does nothing except tell us we have issues and fits all of those issues into one label. Even without a diagnosis we have a lot more in common than we do with the wider world and this forum is invaluable.
At the end of my doing the ADOS yesterday the assessor admitted ,without prompting, that it was quite subjective ie down to her interpretation of things.
I'm also certain (99%+) I'm not neurotypical even if ASD is seen to not be a good fit. Ideally I'd have liked to be assessed for NVLD as well,as I think that is a better fit. However in the UK it's scarcely recognised. I have heard that symptoms that would be indicative of NVLD in the States are often labelled as dyspraxia in the UK.
Doing a google search I found
http://simonbaruchcurriculum.pbworks.co ... lities.pdfAs a child I would have fitted elements of types b and c best . According to my sister in her letter for my assessment-
Quote:
As Tim grew to his teenage years he became more socially awkward and reclusive. It was around this time that he was badly bullied at boarding school due to not being a ‘normal’ kind of teenage lad.