Noca wrote:
I was in a peer support group today and could just tell this guy sitting beside me was autistic. This guy came in with like 10 pages of typed notes for an informal group. He stimmed with his hands the whole time and he talked about that his parents thought he was deaf(probably central auditory processing disorder though he never mentioned that specifically). The way he spoke with such interest in a specific niche topic gave it away.
After the meeting he mentioned that his parents thought he was autistic and sent him to Toronto as a kid to be diagnosed, and the thought of being autistic was so bad that he fell into a deep depression. I didn't tell him I thought he was autistic but it was really obvious though I think I was the only one in the room to notice. I told him I had autism which kinda shocked him, and then he left. It's kinda sad that the thought of being autistic is so bad that one would become seriously depressed for years.
But yeah I have an ASD radar. My mind is hard wired to see patterns.
AAUGH.......patterns...... seemingly for me , patterns are overtly obvious aswell
but serioudly seems to cause confusions, in Many NTs when , identification of the obvious is presented . It some how seems to be discounted , if they did not come up with it themselves . And have been almost shunned by people in authority . It would seem to me. Oddly enough am wondering if my research methods are poor .. Eliminate all possibilities till one only has replicatable consistant results . .WHEN all negatives are eliminated ..looking for more ways to prove concept wrong . Then look for more.. till you run out of wrong answers. And only obvious things remain .But that is just me , occassionally but rarely abbreviate this procedure .
This can even include anything that appears as coincidence .
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Diagnosed hfa
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Quote:
where ever you go ,there you are