zer0netgain wrote:
If this is in the wrong forum, kindly move it if needed.
After 40 years of struggling to get by in life, I learned of AS and was shocked at how perfectly the symptoms match what I've struggled with for as long as I can remember.
Still, in spite of the struggle, I managed to teach myself to "fit in" fairly well, but my symptoms still pose a challenge to issues like relationships and employment because "faking it" only goes so far.
However, from what I can find, there are few people in the psychiatric profession who understand AS, and it's well-known that diagnosis in adults is harder because most adults with AS have learned to adapt and conceal their condition where it's easier to spot the symptoms in children.
So, if I want to have a diagnosis of my condition, how do I locate someone experienced with AS in adults who will not try to avoid making the diagnosis if indeed it is present? I hardly know where to start, but I figure other AS adults who have gotten diagnosed may have some helpful tips.
For what it's worth, I live in the Southwest Virginia/Northeast Tennessee region of the USA.
Oddly enough, many adult diagnoses of AS occur when the adult's child is diagnosed! That's how my condition was discovered...As the psychiatrist went over symptoms, my son would look at me and say, "Mom! That's you, too!" Errr...Thanks, kid.
When I was searching for a psychiatrist to work with my son's ADD (the original reason), I called a place that makes it its business to know the mental health profession...The mental health division of our state's medicaid program. I spoke with the state director over MH, and she was kind enough to direct me to a well-respected, competent psychiatrist whose specialization in ADD/ADHD, AS and other conditions in pediatrics/adolescents was a perfect fit for a variety of reasons.