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makuranososhi Purple Monkey Dishwasher


Joined: May 13, 2008 Posts: 4737 Location: Transitional
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Posted: Fri Oct 30, 2009 7:10 pm Post subject: |
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| Quote: | 1. It is not 50 years ago now.
2. The opinions on how SD hinders research is not really my own, but based on what I have read. I don't know what you mean about harming those who have seen a doctor.
I think (certain) doctors are better at deciding on a ASD Dx because they better informed. And I don't mean they have read more or have more documented information.
Psychs (especially those who specialise in ASDs) see people with ASDs more often than the general person SDing themselves over the internet. Their (doctors) diagnostic tools go well beyond reading the DSM or the most current research and making a comparison or checking off a list (though they have both these tools as well). They have the advantage of seeing and knowing people on the spectrum. They can see those subtle differences between the generalisations of the DSM and the specifics of AS, it is such a fine line alot of the time. They have experience in knowing people with AS, people who self diagnose only know themselves and compare themselves only to things they read and lists of symptoms (I'm not talking about parents of ASD kids who see traits in themselves after their kids dx)...things that alot of people, spectrum or not, could relate to. The reason you see a professional is to see whether you embody those subtle differences or not, you can not say yourself whether you do or not because there is nothing to read, or no list....it's all about the experience. This is what makes them professionals, not the years of school, the physical experiences they've had with people on the spectrum.
It's gunna sound odd, but it's like someone who lays concrete floor for a living. They look at a floor and they can see with their naked eye whether it is level or not, and exactly where it is not level. But if you or I were to look at the same floor, we would not see the inconsistencies and think it was just flat and level. This is because we have not spent days and hours training our brain to see them and looking for these inconsistencies that make a floor that seems level, a very wobly surface. Same with dxing AS. |
I'm still waiting to see some citation where there is both evidence of these masses of self-diagnosed individuals and of the negative impact they are reputed to have from your previous posts. I'll agree that 'certain' doctors would be a much better resource for getting a clinical diagnosis, but there are also massive numbers who are untrained or whose education has included extensive exposure to presumptions regarding ASDs that have been shown to be at best grossly inaccurate over the past 20-30 years.
Oddly, your last comparison makes no sense to me. After living with a brain whose 'floor wasn't level' for decades, I would consider myself intimately familiar with it. True - not being a mason, I might not know all the ways to address the issue, or always what is the root cause... but there is time spent with that 'room' that no other individual can match in familiarity. The doctor only sees it from the outside, whereas one affected has personal experience (with the possibility of objective observation depending on their ability to detach). The subject matters to me; it took months of spending time with my doctors, educating them on how the understanding of ASDs has changed and how the expressions may vary in adults affected (especially in the pre-diagnosis era, where it seems a goodish number of those here found a wide spectrum and strangely different methods of coping with their challenges), before even with their education they understood what was going on.
I have no quibble with those who take the time to research and come to the conclusion of self-diagnosis; I stood there for some time, and remain in a grey area with no 'official' diagnosis despite the concurrence of two doctors. I would stand with some reservation of those who read a single article and immediately self-identified with the condition, but there is no conclusive test or process that shows whether someone has an ASD... even professionals make mistakes. Therefore, a relative scale of acceptance works much better for me than this black and white assumption that seems to be your carried torch.
Lastly, understand that your personal environment and experience is not that shared by everyone; to put it simply, in some places it -is- still 50 years ago in terms of their understanding and ability to accurately assist and/or diagnosis. It seems that you have ample resources where you are now; where I just moved from, there was no one within over 100+ miles that had both experience with ASDs in adults (other than debilitating instances) and felt qualified to make a diagnostic evaluation.
M. _________________ He thrusts his fists against the posts and still insists he sees the ghosts.
From my heart and from my hand, why don't people understand my intentions...?
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hush6 Snowy Owl


Joined: Oct 16, 2009 Posts: 140
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Posted: Fri Oct 30, 2009 8:12 pm Post subject: |
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| flamingshorts wrote: | | hush6 wrote: | Yeah you see, notice how after you found the lump and got suspicious you go and get a professional to do the biopsy? Then when it's malignant you seek a cancer specialist? You got your suspicions confirmed through a doctor. You didn't perform the biopsy yourself and decide "oh I have cancer", you got sought out a diagnosis that fit your symptoms. That is the critical step that is missing with people that SD AS, they stop before that extra step of getting the professional opinion and just diagnose their 'cancer' themselves.
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No, once again, you are wrong. In the parallel I am giving, I have to do the biopsy myself, cutting and everything to reach the diagnosis of cancer. I have to send the biopsy to the lab after doing a google for "unexplained lumps" and then seek out a diagnosis from a cancer specialist to confirm what I have figured out for myself. Thats the equivalent of whats happening for so many people who "seek diagnosis" after doing their own research.
I've spent 7 years of visits to a different psych where I would have talked about the same topic every session. Might be a clue? No, this guy just didn't consider Aspergers. How many other abysmal professionals out there are there? That's what the source of ridicule should be. Do you think the penny drops? No. Get it? Are you just stubborn and wrong at the same time. In fact you appear to be so stubborn and non-fact baesed you sound like an NT. |
Why would someone do their own biopsy?? That is just silly.
And as for sounding like an "NT", that always seems to be said around here when someone gets all defensive. It's funny. Is it supposed to be an insult? I sound like a normal person? Oh no!!!! Horrendous. I don't encompass the whimsical ways of the magical "Aspie" code of ethics, I dare to step outside the enchanted forest and walk with the beasts. OH NOS!!! (wtf?) But oh wait....it doesn't matter anyways because I'm firmly diagnosed by people I trust have good authority to do so....how you think I sound really means nothing. But hey, I'll be sure to point out at my next psych appointment that some random on the internet thought I seemed a bit too "normal" and see if she looks into it, I mean what better authority to go on than that of "flamingshorts", it really must be further investigated. |
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leejosepho Phoenix


Joined: Sep 15, 2009 Age: 59 Posts: 706 Location: 100 miles east of Chicago
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Posted: Fri Oct 30, 2009 8:19 pm Post subject: |
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| hush6 wrote: | | Why would someone do their own biopsy?? |
Because there is no one to do it for me. _________________ I began looking for someone like me when I was five ...
My search ended right here on WrongPlanet. |
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hush6 Snowy Owl


Joined: Oct 16, 2009 Posts: 140
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Posted: Fri Oct 30, 2009 8:44 pm Post subject: |
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[quote="makuranososhi"] | Quote: |
I'm still waiting to see some citation where there is both evidence of these masses of self-diagnosed individuals and of the negative impact they are reputed to have from your previous posts. I'll agree that 'certain' doctors would be a much better resource for getting a clinical diagnosis, but there are also massive numbers who are untrained or whose education has included extensive exposure to presumptions regarding ASDs that have been shown to be at best grossly inaccurate over the past 20-30 years.
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Wait all you want for citations, I'm not going to provide you with any. It's such a lame thing here, people say this and that and this and that, no proof, no back up, no citation, no questions. But as soon as someone disagrees with the mass opinion all this proof is needed. Nobody has shown me any proof that self-diagnosis is reliable most of the time, or any statistics on how many SD people have been then accurately dx'd. But oh that's cool cause you don't have to back yourself up when you're with the majority (now THAT'S "NT"), just say whatever you want.
I have never claimed that ever doctor is an ASD specialist, you are changing what I have said for your own convenience. I know this because I know what I meant when I wrote it.
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Oddly, your last comparison makes no sense to me. After living with a brain whose 'floor wasn't level' for decades, I would consider myself intimately familiar with it. True - not being a mason, I might not know all the ways to address the issue, or always what is the root cause... but there is time spent with that 'room' that no other individual can match in familiarity. The doctor only sees it from the outside, whereas one affected has personal experience (with the possibility of objective observation depending on their ability to detach). The subject matters to me; it took months of spending time with my doctors, educating them on how the understanding of ASDs has changed and how the expressions may vary in adults affected (especially in the pre-diagnosis era, where it seems a goodish number of those here found a wide spectrum and strangely different methods of coping with their challenges), before even with their education they understood what was going on.
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Yeah, you didn't get it. My point was kinda that it doesn't matter how long someone has spent with their own brain, they have spent time with a only one brain that may or may not be 'defective'. The person with the brain has not seen a wide range of brains, just their own. Not only is there a lack of comparison but there's also the hinderence of personal thoughts/ideas/desires hindering an objective conclusion. But I don't think you will understand what I'm saying, you are determined to defend your ways, perhaps to protect yourself, I don't know.
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I have no quibble with those who take the time to research and come to the conclusion of self-diagnosis; I stood there for some time, and remain in a grey area with no 'official' diagnosis despite the concurrence of two doctors. I would stand with some reservation of those who read a single article and immediately self-identified with the condition, but there is no conclusive test or process that shows whether someone has an ASD... even professionals make mistakes. Therefore, a relative scale of acceptance works much better for me than this black and white assumption that seems to be your carried torch.
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There are conclusive tests and processes. I have been through them myself. Let me guess, you want proof? Citations? Well google it! It's just these tests and processes aren't convenient for SD people because they can't be administered at home by themselves.
You seem to be holding on to this idea that I think every doctor = awesome. Not the case, so stop acting like that's how I think.
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Lastly, understand that your personal environment and experience is not that shared by everyone; to put it simply, in some places it -is- still 50 years ago in terms of their understanding and ability to accurately assist and/or diagnosis. It seems that you have ample resources where you are now; where I just moved from, there was no one within over 100+ miles that had both experience with ASDs in adults (other than debilitating instances) and felt qualified to make a diagnostic evaluation.
M.
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Don't be offended by this, but am I supposed to care about peoples circumstances? Like am I supposed to say "oh well, there was no reliable within 100 miles for this person, I guess it's ok that they diagnose themselves then, that changes everything!" ??
I don't understand how a lack of available help suddenly qualifies someone to make a diagnosis. I know I am lucky to have had the resources that I've had and still have, it is the reason I am not a "bitter aspie". Hell, that is one of the reasons I'm so into people seeking professional help, I know how beneficial it is, not just for me personally, but for many of my friends (on the spectrum).
But, yeah, sorry, I just can't do that whole "change my opinion cause I feel sorry for someone" thing. My opinion is cement even though I feel for peoples circumstances.
And also, maybe it's not clear. I'm not against people researching their symptoms, recognizing them, associating those symptoms with a certain disorder and trying to find strategies and help to cope. I'm actually all for that, go for it! I just think it's wrong when people take that extra step and flat out decide they have the condition. I don't think they should label themselves, I don't think they should say "I have blah blah..." I think SD people should stand for 'seeking diagnosis' or it should be changed to HSA (highly suspect AS). |
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hush6 Snowy Owl


Joined: Oct 16, 2009 Posts: 140
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Posted: Fri Oct 30, 2009 8:50 pm Post subject: |
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| leejosepho wrote: | | hush6 wrote: | | Why would someone do their own biopsy?? |
Because there is no one to do it for me. |
Oh seriously, ew and ouch. I'd hate to have to do that.
But anyway, no matter how much of the process you could do yourself, biopsy, whatever, you still, in the end, have to send it off to a professional for the actuall diagnosis of cancer. Otherwise you will never know, because the tools and knowledge to make that dx aren't availble at home, or you don't know them and can't learn them simply by reading...(though maybe with pictures?? But AS doesn't have visual aspects so I don't think pics would help there). |
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leejosepho Phoenix


Joined: Sep 15, 2009 Age: 59 Posts: 706 Location: 100 miles east of Chicago
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Posted: Fri Oct 30, 2009 9:18 pm Post subject: |
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| hush6 wrote: | | ... no matter how much of the process you could do yourself, biopsy, whatever, you still, in the end, have to send it off to a professional for the actuall diagnosis of cancer. |
I have no place to send it. _________________ I began looking for someone like me when I was five ...
My search ended right here on WrongPlanet. |
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hush6 Snowy Owl


Joined: Oct 16, 2009 Posts: 140
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Posted: Fri Oct 30, 2009 9:20 pm Post subject: |
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| leejosepho wrote: | | hush6 wrote: | | ... no matter how much of the process you could do yourself, biopsy, whatever, you still, in the end, have to send it off to a professional for the actuall diagnosis of cancer. |
I have no place to send it. |
Then you will never know, so just do your best to alleviate your symptoms. |
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makuranososhi Purple Monkey Dishwasher


Joined: May 13, 2008 Posts: 4737 Location: Transitional
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Posted: Fri Oct 30, 2009 10:00 pm Post subject: |
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*shakes head* I've not made any assertions of fact, only questioned your own. The ability to Google is there - many have learned about the condition itself by that very method - but I was more curious as to your response. By choosing not to answer and provide any basis for your argument, it leaves me with the decided impression that you are arguing your beliefs instead of making one on substantiated evidence. I've acknowledged that there are those whose self-assessment may be in error; you insist on being right instead of examining your own arguments... as you said yourself, your opinions are concrete and set in stone.
"I know what I meant when I wrote it." That's splendid - but the purpose in language and communication to express meaning to another person. Otherwise, it seems to be more a matter of semantic onanism to me. If you want to know how many people here were self-diagnosed and were later validated or proven wrong, all you need to do is create a poll to that effect. I'd be interested in the results myself.
I never claimed you said every doctor was a specialist; you're being presumptive. I merely pointed out that many doctors have outdated or insufficient information to be able to assist those on the spectrum - even in terms of pointing them in the right direction.
*shrug* I didn't get your intended meaning; it seems that my own was lost as well. You also presume that the 'affected' mind cannot see the minds of others; while it may be impacted, it is not blind.
What are these conclusive tests and processes? I've spent a considerable amount of time researching the matter, both regarding myself and my son - nothing in that research has produced a single test or exam that gives a definitive answer. Even the tests and surveys available rely on interpretation instead of quantifiable data.
Are you supposed to care? No, not really. Should you recognize that circumstances differ between yourself and others? Absolutely. Self-diagnosis is not the same as a professional diagnosis - I don't think anyone here has made that claim. But that doesn't make it invalid or inaccurate, either. If the lens of perception granted by understanding a fundamental difference in how one perceives the world gives them benefit, what does it matter whether that insight was given by a doctor or through the journey of research and self-discovery?
Finally, some of your last words again baffle me... I've never encountered someone in person who falsely claimed to be on the spectrum. Anyone who has told me of their condition exhibited core characteristics of being on the spectrum. Online, there are those whose behavior does not seem to match all the characteristics, yet their experiences match much of the criteria. Perhaps they are compounded by another condition; perhaps they are not on the spectrum but have one that closely resembles it at some level; perhaps they have adapted differently because there wasn't an explanation or acceptable for their oddity for much of their lives. Of them all, I know none well enough to evaluate them. At best, all one can do is see strong similarities or glaring divergences from the diagnostic criteria and related literature. Yet you seem to imply that people take the 'final step' and say they have a condition when they have not gotten a professional diagnosis. Where do you encounter such incidents? Are you evaluating the conditions of others on an anonymous online basis? And what is it that you are against - self-identifying with the condition? It is acceptable to research and use what can be gleaned but it isn't permissible to seek answers from others and discuss their questions and perceptions with the conviction of their own experience? From what I can tell, you seek yet another label to divide people into niches... which I have found to be an unsuccessful strategy, at least for me in my own experience - everyone is intrinsically different, even if those differences are not obvious to me, or even observable.
M. _________________ He thrusts his fists against the posts and still insists he sees the ghosts.
From my heart and from my hand, why don't people understand my intentions...?
Wrong Planet Moderator |
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leejosepho Phoenix


Joined: Sep 15, 2009 Age: 59 Posts: 706 Location: 100 miles east of Chicago
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Posted: Fri Oct 30, 2009 10:13 pm Post subject: |
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| hush6 wrote: | | ... just do your best to alleviate your symptoms. |
Symptoms of what? _________________ I began looking for someone like me when I was five ...
My search ended right here on WrongPlanet. |
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hush6 Snowy Owl


Joined: Oct 16, 2009 Posts: 140
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Posted: Fri Oct 30, 2009 10:16 pm Post subject: |
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| leejosepho wrote: | | hush6 wrote: | | ... just do your best to alleviate your symptoms. |
Symptoms of what? |
Your undiagnosed condition which is causing you to feel unwell and giving you reason to research that something might be wrong with you. |
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RainSong Seatbelts Totally Cause Autism


Joined: May 02, 2006 Posts: 4451 Location: Georgia
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Posted: Fri Oct 30, 2009 10:47 pm Post subject: |
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Sorry, I just cut out what wasn't relevant to what I'm going to say.
| makuranososhi wrote: | | I've never encountered someone in person who falsely claimed to be on the spectrum. [cut] Yet you seem to imply that people take the 'final step' and say they have a condition when they have not gotten a professional diagnosis. |
I cannot say whether it was "false" or not (because even without a diagnosis, someone can still be on the spectrum), but I've known people to claim a diagnosis where there has been none and/or to insist on an ASD despite not really fitting the criteria. This is both online and off, on this site (there have been a few people on this site who openly note that they are self diagnosed but changed it to just diagnosed because they decided it was accurate) and others. I wouldn't say it's many, but there are some. Specific example: I talked to one woman at length on another site; her father is self diagnosed with AS and goes on radio shows to talk about living with AS. He has never been officially diagnosed - actually, his wife is a special ed teacher who works predominately with kids on the spectrum and has for over twenty years, and she thinks he doesn't have it (she thinks there's definitely something off, but it's not an ASD) - but he tells people he has been.
In the end, do those people accurately reflect on everyone who's self diagnosed? No. But they do reflect in general, and someone who's listening to that radio talkshow up there could get wrong information because one man was claiming a professional diagnosis when he had refused to pursue one.
I am not against self diagnosis in general, so long as one accurately represents that (ie, not claiming a professional diagnosis where there is none) and is willing to consider other possibilities if they go to a specialist and are referred to another disorder. I think (and I apologize if I'm wrong) that that's essentially what hush6 is saying as well, at least in his last paragraph from the 8:44 post. _________________ "Nothing worth having is easy."
Empathy is when you feel the emotions of someone else despite never having been through the same or similar situation. Sympathy is when you feel the emotions and have been through the same or similar situation. |
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hush6 Snowy Owl


Joined: Oct 16, 2009 Posts: 140
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Posted: Fri Oct 30, 2009 10:53 pm Post subject: |
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| makuranososhi wrote: | | *shakes head* I've not made any assertions of fact, only questioned your own. The ability to Google is there - many have learned about the condition itself by that very method - but I was more curious as to your response. By choosing not to answer and provide any basis for your argument, it leaves me with the decided impression that you are arguing your beliefs instead of making one on substantiated evidence. I've acknowledged that there are those whose self-assessment may be in error; you insist on being right instead of examining your own arguments... as you said yourself, your opinions are concrete and set in stone. |
I never claimed that anything I said has been based on facts. I actually think I made it VERY clear (either in this thread or another similar one) that everything I've been saying is based soley on what I feel and experiences I have had. I said it straight out "I'm not working on facts, this is about how I feel." It is based on things I have learned and seen and heard for myself which has caused me to form certain opinions and emotions, I haven't read something somewhere which has given me this opinion. It's the same as most things learned in life, like bad smells, you don't read and research that certain things smell bad and then say to yourself "ok this smells bad so when I smell this I shall hold my nose and make an unpleasant face", you simply experience bad smells and you learn to dislike and avoid them....should people be required to give citations and facts on why something smells bad, or why they don't like bad smells? I don't think so. My experiences have brought me to this opinion.
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"I know what I meant when I wrote it." That's splendid - but the purpose in language and communication to express meaning to another person. Otherwise, it seems to be more a matter of semantic onanism to me. If you want to know how many people here were self-diagnosed and were later validated or proven wrong, all you need to do is create a poll to that effect. I'd be interested in the results myself. |
I did not mean on this forum, I meant globally. I would not trust people on here to be honest anyway, I've read the IQ thread.
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I never claimed you said every doctor was a specialist; you're being presumptive. I merely pointed out that many doctors have outdated or insufficient information to be able to assist those on the spectrum - even in terms of pointing them in the right direction.
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When you said this in another of your posts: "I'll agree that 'certain' doctors would be a much better resource for getting a clinical diagnosis, but there are also massive numbers who are untrained or whose education has included extensive exposure to presumptions regarding ASDs that have been shown to be at best grossly inaccurate over the past 20-30 years."
I could only assume you were telling me this because you were under the impression that I had a differing view on the subject. If this was not the reason then why did you mention it?
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*shrug* I didn't get your intended meaning; it seems that my own was lost as well. You also presume that the 'affected' mind cannot see the minds of others; while it may be impacted, it is not blind.
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Um I didn't mean anything to do with mind-blindness or anything like that. I meant literal, physical, exposure to many individuals on the spectrum. Getting to know them and becoming attuned to their similarities, common traits and differences. Has nothing to do with what the 'affected' mind can and can't see. It is about professionals literally being exposed to many Autistic individuals with the actual intention of learning about them and how to more effectively diagnose ASDs. You can't tell me people who SD actually have this same advantage.
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What are these conclusive tests and processes? I've spent a considerable amount of time researching the matter, both regarding myself and my son - nothing in that research has produced a single test or exam that gives a definitive answer. Even the tests and surveys available rely on interpretation instead of quantifiable data.
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There is a description of the diagnostic process I went through in a thread around here. So you can read about it there, all the methods I mentioned provide indicators that either confirm or deny the existence of AS. This process is for adults with AS though, so it may not be useful for your son, though I think there are many tests for children also. If you don't want to find the post, let me know and I'll find it. If you'd like to know more about my diagnostic process then is in that post, let me know.
Oh but you were sort of right, it was not a single test or exam, it was a series.
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Are you supposed to care? No, not really. Should you recognize that circumstances differ between yourself and others? Absolutely. Self-diagnosis is not the same as a professional diagnosis - I don't think anyone here has made that claim. But that doesn't make it invalid or inaccurate, either. If the lens of perception granted by understanding a fundamental difference in how one perceives the world gives them benefit, what does it matter whether that insight was given by a doctor or through the journey of research and self-discovery?
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I do recognize the differences between myself and others, I thought I made that clear. What I want to know is, does recognizing those differences mean I should change my opinion? Just because I can see they're in a tough spot?
And like I said over and over, I'm all for self-discovery, I just think people should get professional confirmation before they run around saying they have this or that.
| Quote: |
Finally, some of your last words again baffle me... I've never encountered someone in person who falsely claimed to be on the spectrum. Anyone who has told me of their condition exhibited core characteristics of being on the spectrum. Online, there are those whose behavior does not seem to match all the characteristics, yet their experiences match much of the criteria. Perhaps they are compounded by another condition; perhaps they are not on the spectrum but have one that closely resembles it at some level; perhaps they have adapted differently because there wasn't an explanation or acceptable for their oddity for much of their lives. Of them all, I know none well enough to evaluate them. At best, all one can do is see strong similarities or glaring divergences from the diagnostic criteria and related literature. Yet you seem to imply that people take the 'final step' and say they have a condition when they have not gotten a professional diagnosis. Where do you encounter such incidents? Are you evaluating the conditions of others on an anonymous online basis? And what is it that you are against - self-identifying with the condition? It is acceptable to research and use what can be gleaned but it isn't permissible to seek answers from others and discuss their questions and perceptions with the conviction of their own experience? From what I can tell, you seek yet another label to divide people into niches... which I have found to be an unsuccessful strategy, at least for me in my own experience - everyone is intrinsically different, even if those differences are not obvious to me, or even observable.
M. |
I feel like I have already answered all the questions you've asked me here.
But once again, no I have no problem with people identifying with the condition and seeking help for whatever symptoms give them trouble.
This thread is about self-DIAGNOSIS, not self-suspicion. Self-diagnosis implies, someone feels a certain way, experiences certain things, reads the DSM for AS, does a whole heap of research and reading on the subject, maybe asks some questions online then says "I have Aspergers Sydrome".
Also, I'm not sure if you are aware, but there are a couple of other mental health conditions that 'look' almost exactly like AS? Do a google search on Asperger's and RAD. They are almost identical. The difference in the two conditions is only the cause. Asperger's is a biological brain dysfunction. RAD is caused by early childhood abuse, or neglect which has goes untreated. But people with AS and people RAD are very very similar. Many people who think they have AS who have been abused and neglected in childhood very likely have RAD. And if anyone who has SD AS who has been abused or neglected should seriously consider a professional DX as the treatments are very different.
(side note: What makes this even HARDER is that alot of kids with AS that goes undiagnosed during early childhood sometimes develop RAD as a co-morbid condition because of the trauma involved with trying to cope with, well you know, everything! Apparently it isn't all that common, but it is of my opinion that with what alot of AS people go through and our ability to handle it and process it, alot of us have RAD/PTSD co morbidities.
edit: Also, people with RAD are somewhat likely to be attracted to the AS label as they often have a 'lack of self-identity' and feeling of being lost and out of place, the AS label is almost like a fastrack to "who they really are" for alot of people. Instant identity if you will, it fills a whole inside of them for them.)
And yes I suppose I am after another label, but only because they insist on having a label at all. If they must be called something, I don't think it should be SD (the term just seems paradoxical to me). So I guess I'm not wanting a new label, just an adjustment of an already existing label.
You said "at least for me in my own experience - everyone is intrinsically different, even if those differences are not obvious to me, or even observable."
Exactly, and with people who may or may not have AS, it is specially educated professionals who can see these non-obvious differences, these subtleties that confirm or deny a dx of AS. But because all you have to go off is your "own experience" you are not attuned to these non-obvious differences, certain educated professionals are, so they can give whatever label is appropriate.
Last edited by hush6 on Fri Oct 30, 2009 11:58 pm; edited 2 times in total |
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pensieve Autist and Artist


Joined: Nov 19, 2008 Age: 23 Posts: 2285 Location: NSW, Australia
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Posted: Fri Oct 30, 2009 10:57 pm Post subject: |
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I'll just reply to the OP as best I can.
Just ignore people. I have been told that AS is a buzz diagnosis like ADD just because a lot of people get diagnosed with it. It does not mean it's not real.
Many people did not take me seriously when I was self diagnosed. I suppose it isn't real until you have a professional to back you up. Never mind that sometimes they misdiagnose. _________________ Don't count your problems, count your blessings
http://latedx.wordpress.com/
Latest post: A Few Interesting Days |
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Electric_Kite Phoenix


Joined: Aug 21, 2008 Age: 34 Posts: 524 Location: crashing to the ground
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Posted: Sat Oct 31, 2009 2:14 am Post subject: |
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| hush6 wrote: |
I never claimed that anything I said has been based on facts. |
That being the case, will you please do things properly and stop making claims?
By the way, even Google will not help you prove things that are not based on facts. And it is perfectly normal for people to ask for you to give a citation when they want evidence, and not bother when they happen to believe you. Anyway, as I have said before, I did Google it, and then I ran it through pubMed and psychInfo and several other massive databases of medical findings, and what you say is, guess what, not there.
But look, here's Simon Baron-Cohen again, saying how the self-diagnosed are often right. Without any actual numbers, the bastard. http://www.iancommunity.org/cs/articles/very_late_diagnosis_of_asperger_syndrome
He's said it before in transcripts of lectures of his that I've read. Attwood has too. So has that ridicuous disgusting bint Maxine Aston, come to think of it.
Point of fact, cancer cells are really easy to recognise under a microscope. You don't really even need a picture, just a vague description and a certain amount of experience looking at normal cells. |
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sinsboldly Free Range Aspie


Joined: Nov 22, 2006 Age: 59 Posts: 13250 Location: Oregon, USA
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Posted: Sat Oct 31, 2009 3:32 am Post subject: |
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| flamingshorts wrote: | | hush6 wrote: | Yeah you see, notice how after you found the lump and got suspicious you go and get a professional to do the biopsy? Then when it's malignant you seek a cancer specialist? You got your suspicions confirmed through a doctor. You didn't perform the biopsy yourself and decide "oh I have cancer", you got sought out a diagnosis that fit your symptoms. That is the critical step that is missing with people that SD AS, they stop before that extra step of getting the professional opinion and just diagnose their 'cancer' themselves.
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No, once again, you are wrong. In the parallel I am giving, I have to do the biopsy myself, cutting and everything to reach the diagnosis of cancer. I have to send the biopsy to the lab after doing a google for "unexplained lumps" and then seek out a diagnosis from a cancer specialist to confirm what I have figured out for myself. Thats the equivalent of whats happening for so many people who "seek diagnosis" after doing their own research.
I've spent 7 years of visits to a different psych where I would have talked about the same topic every session. Might be a clue? No, this guy just didn't consider Aspergers. How many other abysmal professionals out there are there? That's what the source of ridicule should be. Do you think the penny drops? No. Get it? Are you just stubborn and wrong at the same time. In fact you appear to be so stubborn and non-fact baesed you sound like an NT. |
I have often thought that had I a broken leg and went to the doctor and they said 'wow, that looks like it hurts. Tell me how to set the bone and put a cast on it and I will see what I can do." It is like going from councilor to psychiatrist to psychologist with my little neurological issues only to be assured I 'wasn't crazy!' and 'you function well enough! and "why don't you find a nice steady guy and settle down, have a couple of kids and 'get out of yourself'?
Oh, OK  _________________ where sin abounds, grace abounds the more;
Non omnis moriar |
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