Quantum wrote:
It's not that I am against it. It makes me insecure about my identity, do I have it or not? Many assumes I have it (for some reason not my previous teachers).
Have I somehow developed into being identical, even though I might not be one? I'm not viewing it as a disease.
I can't get a second opinion because my mother would not bear with it.
Not sure what to do
You may be at the borderline in the symptoms for being an Aspie. If you are, the diagnosis could go either way each time you get tested depending upon how the results are interpreted by the professional in charge. Remember, it is a set of characteristics that determine this, not just one thing. Friends may see one or two of these characteristics in you and then automatically say "He is an Aspie!", yet they could easily be wrong. Everyone is different in some way, even if they "seem" to be perfect, they are not. Skurvey is right. Having a label put upon you by others should not change who you are, you are the only one who can do that.