Velorum wrote:
As part of a training event that I attended at the NAS recently there was an interesting discussion on the 'severity' of ASD
The consensus was that there may be ASD that affects others mildly or severely but there was not really any such thing as ASD that affects the individual 'mildly'
I agree with this
I am trying to understand this. The statement. I think the reason why I find I am puzzled is that I don't know if I am on the spectrum or where I fit, and as I have always been me and have not ever been anyone else, then unless I can compare by being someone else, how do I know if I am mild or severe etc?
Ok, I realize that if I had extra conditions which people with autism have then it would be different.
Yes, I can point a few traits and actually was rather shocked when a certain lady I know started to list them when I asked her to (I thought I just had one or two but she listed 30 traits and only two she listed that I can question).
The thing is that how do we know if we are struggling as we have naturally learned how to adapt to find ways to cope with the things we have not been able to do. A classic example is when I hit mindblank if I try to speak something out in a direct way when I am nurvous. If I do not speak directly and speak on various indirect tangents I can then steer the conversation round so I will come at the answer from a different angle and avoid the mindblank from occuring. To the other person it may sound like I just like talking and they never realize why I do it... And even I am so used to doing it, that it is only fairly recently that I realized that I am doing it. I wonder how many other people do this and have not yet realized that they are doing it?
Well, I guess thats the challenge of trying to view things form another perspective or insight. We view ourselves through the prism of our own mental processes, emotions and experiences. That's why someone else making an arbitrary judgement on how sever something is for you is pretty meaningless to anyone other than them. Only you can decide how much a particular aspect of yourself affects you.