madbutnotmad wrote:
Anyone else have any similar experiences.... "if you do... put your hands up children"... (sarcastically put)
One hand up here.
Disclaimer: I was diagnosed ASD-1 recently enough that most of the time since the diagnosis has been spent staying home waiting for the pandemic to go away. So I have had little opportunity for such experiences. But, nonetheless, I managed one.
In February I had surgery (well, technically, two surgeries). I noted to them that I was ASD-1 because I believed it to be something they should know (see:
"Caring for Patients on the Autism Spectrum: How Autism CanAffect Healthcare"). After I was moved from ICU to a normal-care hospital room I was visited by, among others, a physical/occupational therapist. Sigh...he was the only one there who tried to adjust his communication for me...he spoke very slowly while clearly asking things indicating he was expecting me to be seriously intellectually impaired. It took me about three sentences to describe my credentials, embarrass him, and amuse his co-workers. I am still mulling over how to give a more useful response the next time something like that happens; I think there are things they can do that would be helpful, but treating me as an intellectually-impaired young child is not one of them.
P.S. I am securely, happily retired and I look very good on paper. That is, I can tell a stranger a few things about myself that I suspect would be counter to their expectations regarding someone on the
spectrum. Would I be doing a public service by attempting to dispel some of the stereotypes that that therapist had? (And I will concede that sometimes an individual might match those stereotypes, but I think individuals on the
spectrum should be assessed individually, not by those stereotypes.)
_________________
When diagnosed I bought champagne!
I finally knew why people were strange.