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Vterry
Butterfly
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Joined: 13 Jan 2013
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30 Nov 2013, 10:41 am

I did the online test it and shows that I am might be an aspie, but I haven't been formally diagnosed yet.

One of the reasons I started questioning my mental health (can I call it like this? English is not my first language) is that when I think about my past I somehow feel I was smarter,
and hence I am getting dumber.

When I go online and read some of online posts which I did many years ago - I almost always have a thought "well written, was it really me". I am 37 now and I am talking about my online conversations and emails from 5-10 years ago. It seem that my loss can be seen as 1) decreased ability to present information in a structured way 2) decreased ability to maintain a discussion 3) reduced richness of a language. It also happens with me in a real life - I either have to think before I say almost anything or I end up saying something that might be misunderstood (or am I just becoming cynical).

When I talk to people from a close family or to my friends - whey say something like that I am either "a not very normal" or the way I do things "are not very normal".

Does any of these symptoms sounds familiar to you?



sepia
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Location: N.London

08 Dec 2013, 3:46 pm

hello,
i think i can relate to your situation.
are you under a lot of (or increased) stress at the moment?
i am high functioning autistic but also been suffering chronic fatigue and feel my working memory and mental capacity has decreased significantly. under investigation i have found this to do with having Ehlers-Danlos Syndrome ( specialist diagnosed less me than a month ago!) which effects the connective tissues around the body... more pertinently, soft tissues in the airways and blood vessels cause me to have sleep apnea and dis-automnia. long term lack of sleep may be the cause of your symptoms.
to cut a long story short... that is my situation but there are other things that may be causing/exagerating your difficulties.
and you might benefit by doing a little online research and/or asking for a neurologist appointment.



Sarah81
Deinonychus
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08 Dec 2013, 4:16 pm

There are many diseases of reducing brain function (neurodegenerative) which would cause problems in language as you have described, so you have a right to be a little worried.

However, there are many more likely explanations especially for someone of your young age. Stress, like the other poster said, is highly likely. In my case with my bipolar emerging it certainly felt like I was getting slower in the brain. Any psychiatric disorder can cause your brain not to function fully.

I just want to say that your post was perfectly coherent and structured.



Raziel
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Joined: 25 Oct 2011
Age: 40
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09 Dec 2013, 4:20 am

maybe two years ago I was in a situation where I kept forgetting things. I couldn't remember anymore what i did yesterday or the last months or even in the morning. I was like in a timeless bubble. I also couldn't remember what I heard or read just a view moments before. I was totally worried and thought I would lose all my knoledge and stuff. One psychiatrist even thought I might have schizophrenia, in the end it came out that I was suffering from severe depression at that time.
Stress (depression goes along with stress) can cause a lot of symptoms. The problem is that many different disorders are related to sever stress symptoms, like trauma, depression, paranoia and so on.


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"I'm astounded by people who want to 'know' the universe when it's hard enough to find your way around Chinatown." - Woody Allen


cavernio
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10 Dec 2013, 5:05 pm

Pretty much any vitamin or nutrient deficiency will cause mental problems. My mental health deteriorated when I was ~17 years old. I got depressed for no known situational cause, I couldn't concentrate at all like I used to, I was tired all the time. Eventually I started to get bloated, and my hands and my feet and my lips and face around them started to tingle, I would feel like I had a mild flu most of the time, hot and cold spells like I was menopausal or something, my mood swings became unreal, and the tiredness....oh the tiredness.
Doctor's never found a thing wrong with me. I had to look up my symptoms for myself, looked like I had vitamin deficiencies even though my bloodwork (except low ferritin ONCE) was fine. I found celiac disease, decided that I should be asked to be tested for it among a couple other things. No one in my family is diagnosed with it, I hardly knew what it was. Fortunately and actually surprisingly, I had it.
It's been almost 2 years, but I'm not the same person I was when I was 17, and I might never be anymore. My concentration isn't where it once was, and neither is my motivation. (If anything, my motivation is worse...) In any case, if doctors can't find something wrong, (and I strongly suggest you see a physician just in case it's something malignant!), I'd look into auto-immune diseases.
Also, vitamins vitamins vitamins.


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Not autistic, I think
Prone to depression
Have celiac disease
Poor motivation