Kinnery wrote:
I must admit, every kid and his uncle (is that how that saying goes?) can read the symptoms of something and assume they have it.
Hence hypochondria, which is perpetuated greatly by the easy availability of medical information on the internet. Someone can see bloody noses as a sign of endometriosis and start telling everyone they have it. Likewise, every socially awkward teenager who stumbles into information about AS can easily start thinking that they have it because of a set of diagnostic tools, without seeking professional opinions. It is very easy to be wrong about this sort of thing, and confuse it with avoidance or anxiety. Then, when they start using it as an excuse, it sticks into their mind and they act more and more as though they have AS, and then it becomes extremely difficult to tell whether they actually have AS, or whether they just developed AS-like traits. At that point, most professionals will say that there is no diagnosis of AS, and whether or not the person had it becomes irrelevant.
I don't know, it just seems to me like self-diagnosing is too easy...
A person is with him or herself 24/7. There is no escaping the inner workings of the mind. That being said, an objective, rational, individual that is in touch with him or herself can make a proper diagnosis.