carbonmonoxide wrote:
I started this job a couple of months ago and disclosed my Asperger, suspected at the time, after a couple of weeks. There was a lot of things getting on my autistic nerves and the fact is, that even though I didn't know I may have Asperger at the time of the interview, I told them that I am very practical/logical/solution focused person. When I started they didn't want any of that, they wanted me to be sympathetic and people focused.
I very often had two people talking to me at the same time trying to explain me something. There was loads of indirect communication and doing things 'together' which I never know what that meant. Never been in a place like that and, thank god I realized I may be on the spectrum as otherwise I would have had major breakdown.
My company supports disadvantages people so they should be understanding... at least you'd think so. No, they weren't. I was refused written handover even though we need it anyway, whether I have Asperger or not as the passing in information is really bad here, I still often have two people talking to me at once, we still do things 'together', I was told I don't have any Asperger as 'you understand most of jokes' as my colleague said and 'I was a support worker for a man with Asperger once and you are completely different than him'.
I was diagnosed last week. The moment I will receive my diagnosis in writing I will get in touch with disability employment advisor and start looking for a different job.
Wise of you to wait until you've found a new one, before ditching the old. You might also seek some advice on how and to whom to disclose. It seems as if the whole office knows this in your current job. "You get my jokes" and "you're different than him" are remarks you should never have to hear. Keep it to supervisors or possibly not even them, just the HR department.
And good luck!
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A finger in every pie.