NiceCupOfTea wrote:
How does social anxiety disorder get you extra support at uni?
My diagnosis is generalized anxiety disorder, so can't really help you with your query. I'd be surprised if your uni cared about such a technical distinction, though, particularly as there's no real way of finding out whether your social anxiety is down to the Asperger's or would be a separate condition in its own right: it could be a mixture of both.
Well, there's not that much support you can get for social anxiety but I get help when it comes to oral presentations. Standing in front of people and speaking about things makes me extremely anxious. I need to take several beta blockers and still I pretty much panic before I need to speak. So what they've said is OK is for me to "start out small" and only present in front of one or two teachers and then work my way up to bigger things (a few more people, smaller groups, and then eventually the whole class).
Anyway, you're probably right. They probably don't care. It's more that I don't want to feel like I'm being dishonest or something (which I don't feel like I am but I'm still wondering about it).
Kiriae wrote:
Are you afraid in social situations?
Are you afraid what others think of you? Do you constantly think of it?
Are you afraid of making a social mistake? Do you prefer to do nothing than risk making a unintended mistake?
Does it prevent you from interacting?
Do you avoid social interaction? Why? Is it because you are afraid of the people or simply your sensory issues make it unpleasant? (For me it is because in groups people speak too loud and too fast so I get confused - I am not afraid, I just easily get overloaded)
I'm not sure if you actually want me to answer those questions but the answer to most of them is yes-ish.
Am I afraid of what others think of me? Yes. Do I think about it constantly? Not
constantly, but often. Am I afraid of making social mistakes? Sometimes. Do I prefer to do nothing than risk making a mistake? Yes. Does it prevent me from interacting? I'm not sure. Do I avoid social interaction? Yes, but mostly it's not because I'm afraid of people (though I am sometimes). I'm mostly
afraid of the situation because I just don't really know what to say around groups of people for example. It makes me exhausted because I have to think of my facial expressions, smiling, eye-contact etc., and I often get headaches because of sounds and exhaustion.
olympiadis wrote:
It just comes in different combos.
I think of ASD as a main course, and the other diagnosis as the sides.
I think most of them are interrelated.
That's probably a good way of looking at it.