Quote:
"Autistics view other people as inanimate objects and understand only that they have feelings themselves. Not that other people do.
I take it you are more than nine years old, yes? Because that's the age at which the average person with classic autism can demonstrate that they have a concrete, language-based theory of mind. His making this assumption would only make sense if you were about five years old, which is how old NT kids tend to be when they first reliably get their ToM. Since you're an adult who can use language, the presence of theory of mind doesn't say much about whether you're autistic.... autistic adults with language ability (which is most of them) are usually capable of at least first order theory of mind.
Quote:
You interact with people, you converse, and you have a sense of humor. You couldn't possibly be autistic.
If you were good at interacting, good at conversation, and good at using humor, yeah, he'd be right to doubt autism. However, just being able to talk, answer questions, and use some kind of humor is not enough to rule out autism. Many autistic people can do this. Those with mild autism can even look normal for short periods of time.
Quote:
He also told me that another sign was that when he gave me some plastic blocks with different colors on them it took me a minute or two to make them match a pattern on a printed sheet he gave me. He claimed an autistic person would have had the blocks arranged in seconds, so I can't possibly be autistic.
This is not true either. Yes, many autistic people have visual-spatial strengths or even splinter/savant skills, and those people would indeed have the blocks arranged in seconds. However, many others, including the people with the Asperger's/NVLD pattern (Verbal > Performance IQ subscore gap) would actually be much below average in arranging those blocks, and more importantly below their own personal average, showing the scattered skill profile that is common on the spectrum (and also among those with learning disabilities and other types of non-typical wiring). Your lack of skill at arranging colored blocks is not a sign that you cannot be autistic.
From what you say, this person doesn't seem to know enough about autism to tell you whether you are autistic. I can't even say, "You're probably autistic and he's wrong", because with the information he seems to have, he couldn't identify a non-autistic person, nor an autistic one, with any sort of accuracy. Unfortunately, you're back to square one: You still have no clue whether you're actually autistic, and his evaluation has told you exactly nothing. This guy needs more training, and he shouldn't be doing evaluations for disorders he isn't trained in identifying.