LostAlien wrote:
mori_pastel wrote:
I've read several official books and sites that talk about temper problems and ASD individuals, especially concerning young children. My understanding is that this is fairly typical for ASD individuals even into adulthood.
My question is whether NOT having a temper can exclude a diagnosis of ASD. I'm much, much better at controlling my temper than my 15 year old ADD sister and my 13 year old ADHD brother, and I was never a confrontational problem child like the typical AS childhood stories you hear. I've always been mild-mannered and soft-spoken, so I wonder if this is an indication that I didn't have AS symptoms as a child and therefor am simply misdiagnosing myself as an adult.
While I have a bad temper, when I'm around reasonable and respecting individuals I don't appear to have any temper issues. My Mum knew that if I got into a fight at school, it was usually due to bullying from my peer group.
Were there mostly reasonable people around you growing up?
I would say yes. I mean, being a public school kid I was technically exposed to a variety of different kinds of people consistently, but I was raised by parents who have an absolute zero-tolerance of violence and my mom was always very concerned with politeness and kindness both in raising me and the people who I was allowed to have play-dates with. I was basically trained to be a polite, perfect babydoll, but at the same time I almost feel like if I had AS that wouldn't have mattered. I mean, my mom can try as hard as she can to make my sister pay attention and my brother calm down, but that still doesn't stop them from having ADD and ADHD respectively.
And all my mom's effort really hasn't changed some things about me. She hasn't made me any girlish for all the dresses she put me in and she hasn't made me more social for all the social pushing she's done. Despite the strong concern for appearances she tried to instill in me, I still don't wear makeup or fix my hair "properly." I'm trying not to be obsessive when it comes to exactly fitting the symptoms of AS, but I'm still a bit concerned that I'm seeing symptoms now that didn't exist in childhood because I didn't have a troubling childhood. I didn't have major issues at home or at school. So I'm concerned that my troubles are a relatively recent development as opposed to a life-long struggle, which would be more indicative of a personality disorder as opposed to a developmental one.