babybird wrote:
What's formal support...is it like a social worker
I can't guarantee I'm getting the nomenclature right...
The psychologist that diagnosed me did not specify that any supports were required.
When I was still working I did not have any official required support plan. I kept a few windup toys and fidget toys on my desk but there was no paperwork required for that, I was just a little odd. I asked not to be assigned one office-mate because of the sinus noises he often made and, as a kindness, they did not put me in with him but there was no paperwork that I know of that formally got me a different office-mate. When technology supported it I often had a CD-player and headphone to give me more pleasant noises to hear but that was well within company policy. Etc. That is, the adjustments for me were not formal or listed as being medical...it was just choices made within existing frameworks.
Of course, I was not diagnosed until eight years after I had retired. It's a darn convenient thing that my "preferences" could be accommodated informally within normal operation parameters! Otherwise things might've gotten ugly.
When I finally got the formal diagnosis the psychologist primarily recommended that my bride and I continue learning about Autism. And that I might benefit by accessing some communities of adult Autistics...with a mention of Wrong Planet. And that I might be able to use some of the tools at
https://autismandhealth.org/ to get my general medical care to accommodate my Autism...so far no luck on this, however.
_________________
When diagnosed I bought champagne!
I finally knew why people were strange.