I used to take things very literally when I was younger. Started to learn how to identify sarcasm when I was in college, but sometimes I still have trouble with it. I have to process for a minute or two when I hear something I think might be sarcasm. People look at me like I am a doorknob and say, "It was a joke!"
Thanks for the Rudy Simone page link! I am going to order her book this week, but the site is very helpful too. I found a psychologist here in town that says she has experience diagnosing asperger's in adults (don't know if she has experience with females), so I am planning to print off some of the graphs and bring them in. My husband has read a lot of the articles I have printed off, and he said he would make a list of things he has noticed so we can bring that with us when we go to meet her. I'm glad he is going with me as it will help with my stress and anxiety level.
My parents don't live nearby, and neither of us thinks they would be cooperative with the therapy and diagnostic process. My entire life, they have repeatedly told me I was a hypochondriac, making a big deal out of nothing for attention (ironic since I usually just wanted to be left alone), and was being too dramatic. When I was 13, I was injured in gym class. I kept complaining that my shoulder hurt, and they kept telling me to stop being a baby about it and stop complaining. Five months later, it was discovered that I had whiplash in my neck and a dislocated collarbone. But, you know, I just wanted attention. I've tried to talk to my mother at other points in my life about some of the therapy I have been through and the diagnoses I had been given, and she just dismissed it.
That is one of the biggest reasons I am seeking a professional diagnosis. I would like it for my own peace of mind, as well, because I continually second guess myself and think I am making too big of a deal out of things (wonder where that came from, right?) I also want a professional diagnosis so I can receive appropriate therapy.
_________________
?To be yourself in a world that is
constantly trying to make you
something else is the greatest
accomplishment.?
-- Ralph Waldo Emerson