Cuterebra wrote:
So I need to figure out what I'm going to say and how I'm going to say it. Has anybody read Coming Out Asperger: Diagnosis, Disclosure And Self-confidence by Dinah Murray? Any other books/resources people can suggest? Any general advice would also be welcome.
Yes, I have read the book. Another book to check out would be "Ask and Tell: Self-Advocacy and Disclosure for People on the Autism Spectrum", which is basically a compliation of different stories, just like the other book. The book you've mentioned was actually edited by Dinah Murray, not authored - just a side note. I haven't read the latter book so I can't offer my opinion, but I've gathered some bits and pieces from the one you've mentioned.
When it comes to self-disclosing, the best advice I would have is to NOT mention the word Asperger's or even autism. If you are having a specific problem, then say that you have this problem and what is causing it. From my own experiences, people would be willing to help you once you've clearly stated your issue. If someone asks you whether you have the condition, then you could say yes, you have it. But the important thing here is that the label's name would have to be said by the other person first, since that would show that they are aware of its implications. If you say the name first, then you risk having other people judge you by their own, highly stereotypical standards of autism.
EDIT: I previously mentioned self-diagnosis because I remember that you were self-diagnosed before, a mistake on my part.
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Leading a double life and loving it (but exhausted).
Likely ADHD instead of what I've been diagnosed with before.