Autistic Hedgehog

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Posts tagged with "asks"

Mar 3

I have a question for you! Do most/a lot of autistics obsess over certain things for a while, and then move on to something else? I do this all the time, and I've heard just a couple other people say they do this. I'm just curious.

Anonymous

We vary in this a lot, I think. Some do exactly that. Some are more narrow and focused in their interests. Some, like me, are all over the place.

I tend to have longer term interests, and what I call “fixations.” Fixations are pretty much what they sound like: Things I get fixated on. Unlike with special interests, I don’t necessarily try to learn a lot about my current fixation (especially since it can be almost anything, including a color). I just get stuck on it for a while. Which is how I’ve acquired things like a panda plushie and an owl pendant. 

Other people will obsess over something else until they learn everything there is to know about it, and then move on. There’s no one true autistic way with this kind of thing. 

Mar 3

Is there anyone out there who was diagnosed as a elementary-aged kid in the early to mid 2000s? What was the testing like? I'm feeling really paranoid that I may have been officially diagnosed as a kid, but my mother never told me. Does anyone know how I could find out without having to ask her?

Anonymous

Unfortunately, I was diagnosed in the mid-90s, and it sounds like things have changed a lot since then, so I personally can’t really help.

Any other Hedgies have some information on this?

Mar 3

Um hi. I was wondering if you could tell me what going nonverbal's like? I have times when I just can't get words together, and others when I can't regulate my volume. I'm working towards a diagnosis, but my psychiatrist tells me that it's not really worth pursuing because I don't have too much trouble (I'm diagnosed with OCD and agoraphobia, but it seems to match autism more). Thanks.

Anonymous

I’m not sure it’s precisely the same from person to person, but I do think it may be somewhat similar, at least. 

For me (since I can only speak for myself; if other Hedgies want to talk about their own experiences with it, please do) I know what I want to say. The words are in my head just fine, but they will not come out of my mouth. They just won’t. At my last blood test, I managed to croak out the word “crochet” (they were considering if they could take the blood from my fingers instead, so I pointed to my left hand, and eventually got that one word out, which my husband at least understood) and I’m almost never able to do that. Of course, what was actually going through my head was “Please use my left hand, since I need my right hand more for practicing my crochet” but that just would not come out.

It might not express itself in quite that way for you, though.

What I do find interesting is that you mention trouble regulating volume, which is a common issue for autistics. I actually have pretty good control with that sort of thing and yet there are still times when it happens.

If this diagnosis is important to you, don’t let your psychiatrist dismiss it. They are not you. It’s easy for them to say, from the outside, that you don’t have too much trouble, but that’s for you to say, not them. After all, they only see you once in a while. You live in your head all the time. 

Mar 3

Is it possible that instead of having certain motions for different moods or situations like flapping when happy, or rocking when nervous, they vary with intensity of mood instead, like rocking when less extreme and flapping with more urgency?

Anonymous

I don’t see why not. Stimming seems to vary greatly from autistic to autistic. Most autistics I know talk about happy flapping, for example, but I almost never flap when happy. Usually it comes with nerves (though I’ve recently discovered that abject horror will make me flap too. I never knew that until I watched Once Upon a Time).

That your stims are related to the intensity of your mood rather than which mood is just your variation of something we all experience. 

Mar 3

I recently found your blog and I find that I can relate to almost all of the submissions. I looked it up and I have a lot of the common signs of being autistic. I'm 16 and haven't been diagnosed with it, but I'm starting to wonder... Then again, it could just be my mild hypochondria kicking in... I still would like to bring it up with my parents/psych. Any tips?

If you really relate to a lot of things here, and you’re really wondering, there’s nothing wrong with that. It is a good thing to research as much as you can, especially if you want to bring it up with your parents and/or psychiatrist.

If you do have some hypochondria, then it’s good if you have a firm grasp on why you feel this way before you bring it up. Don’t be afraid to write down the things you relate to before you talk to anyone about it, so you don’t forget what you want to say if you get flustered. I imagine with hypochondria, you could easily face people being dismissive of you about this, so organization is important. Do your best to make sure they understand you did a lot more than just glance at a list of symptoms.

Unfortunately, no matter who you are, an autism diagnosis is a subject that it can be very hard to get into with a lot of parents and psychiatrists. There’s a lot of ignorance about what autism even is. If they point out that you’re already sixteen, let them know that a lot of people are still diagnosed quite late in life. If they think autistic people aren’t capable of speaking, point out that autism is a spectrum with many different symptoms, and mutism is only one of them that not all of us have. Your best shot is to know as much as you can.

Even if they won’t listen, if you feel strongly about this, that’s okay. We will listen. There’s always support to be found here and AH and in the community in general. 

Dec 9

Can you list some traits of people with Autism in their teen/adult years? All symptom lists seem to be directed at ages 1-4. Or point me to one? Thanks, lovely.

Anonymous

Here is a list of criteria put together by someone who is actually autistic, rather than some unfortunate “expert” with a lot of misconceptions. Just a few things I’d like to point out for you to keep in mind while reading:

1. Teenagers or adults with undiagnosed autism are the proverbial babies that are taught to swim by just pitching them into the water. Many develop a number of coping mechanisms to deal with their autism symptoms and even overcome a few altogether. That an individual may have done so does not disqualify them from being autistic.

2. Some of these things can be very hard to identify from within. It may take a lot of time and thought to see if this criteria applies to you, because it can be so difficult to notice things you yourself do. As well, some of these are things (like differences in sensory perception) that one may not have had much reason to realize is different in themselves from what it is in others. I never knew I was synesthetic until a few years ago, because I always assumed everyone else processed the world synesthetically too.

3. It’s my firm belief that the underdiagnosis of DFAB girls is due in part to socialization. Two (erroneously) common “traits” of autism are a lack of empathy/emotion and less desire to socialize. However, any child identified by others as a girl will be encouraged, from a very young age, towards pursuits and hobbies that surround empathy and socialization (where as a child identified as a boy will not be, or will be encouraged towards these things to a much lesser degree). They will be expected to be more emotional and social, as well as to be less energetic and rowdy than, DMAB boys, thanks to sexism and cissexism. So when dealing with someone who either identifies as female or especially who was identified as female from birth, keep in mind that some of these traits may have been greatly lessened or forced out by how the person in question was raised. That doesn’t mean that the individual doesn’t necessarily have them, but may have been forced to have them “under control” so they don’t show nearly as strongly as they otherwise might. 

Dec 9

My mother commented that while I'm introverted, I'm not anti-social, and I'm certainly not autistic. We'd been wondering after a diagnosis for some time, but my mother has now decided that because I've assimilated to my environment it's okay. I can't keep eye contact, I have a melt down if my talking goes off track, and I do avoid people. She just... she makes me sad and mad. How do I go about a diagnosis without her? Do you think it's worth pursuing?

Anonymous

Oy vey.

Many autistic people aren’t in the least bit antisocial. A lot of us aren’t even all that introverted, but can be driven to both introvertedness and antisocialness by the way society treats us. Being social doesn’t even begin to disqualify you from being autistic, and I’m sure I can find other autistic people right here on tumblr who’ll agree with that, if you think a wake up call might work on your mother.

Otherwise, often the best way to look into diagnosis is to get a referral from your GP or bring it up with your psychiatrist if you already have one. It can be difficult, because there are a lot of misguided notions out there like the ones your mother expressed. In the end, it’s about whether it’s worth it to you. If you feel it would make a difference for you, you should pursue it regardless of what your mother thinks. She’s not the one who struggles with eye contact or has meltdowns, after all. 

Dec 2

My dad has given me several articles on Autism, and I'm beginning to think he thinks I'm on the spectrum. I've long suspected thus. My mother, on the other hand, is pro-autism speaks/finding a cure because her friend's son has asperger's, she thinks knows exactly what it looks like. She's resistant to me seeking a diagnosis on this. How do I go about it without making her mad?

Anonymous

Honestly? This is about you, not her. Unless her anger is very uncomfortable or dangerous to you, worry more about your feelings, rather than hers. If you have to, ask for your dad’s help, since it sounds like he might understand. Your mother may not even need to know about it.

If it is important that you talk to her about it, then there’s something to keep in mind: Modern rhetoric is on autism is still very parent-blaming. The days of the “refrigerator mother” might be largely over, but all these things science keeps thinking might be “causing” autism feels like blaming, too. Too old, too young, where you live, what you eat, how much money you have…these are all correlations, but they’re often put out there by journalists as causations, and that’s wrong.

Unfortunately, it also gives the impression that in some way, if a parent had just done something differently, their kid wouldn’t have autism. In truth, these things are likely just coincidences, but no one tells parents that. So many parents, consciously or subconsciously, end up with the feeling that if their child is autistic, it would be their own fault. Organizations like Autism Speaks don’t help them get through that feeling. 

That is most likely what you’re up against, or at least part of it. It’s terribly unfortunate, and terribly common, for resistance to diagnoses of neurodivergence to come from this feeling, for parents. And your mother needs to understand that this is in no way about her. It’s about you. It’s about how you feel and what’s right for you. Do you feel like there’s something “wrong” with you, or do you simply see that you have differences, and want a name for that?

Think about what you want to say and how you want to say it. What this means to you. As I’ve advised before, write it down if you need to. If that doesn’t work, you may have to be more underhanded about it, but again, ultimately, this is about you, not her. 

Dec 2

Have you ever read The Complete Guide to Asperger's Syndrome by Tony Attwood? If so, what did you think of it?

No, I haven’t. I don’t tend to read a lot of non-fiction about autism. I got a fair bit thrown at me when I was younger, and I’ve been diagnosed since I was 9 so like…sometimes I feel like a walking Complete Guide to Asperger’s Syndrome, if that makes sense.

I do think I’ve seen some complaints about Attwood in the autism community here. Or maybe I’m thinking of someone else. Hedgies?

Is it possible to get less autistic over time? I used to have meltdowns (or shutdowns more frequently), but I've noticed in the past year or so sensory input is bothering me a lot less and I've gotten much better at social stuff. And on the one hand it's great, but I'm also panicking a little that I can't call myself autistic anymore.

Anonymous

Autism fluctuates, I’ve noticed. Some things get better, some get worse; none of them necessarily stay that way. 

I’ve gotten much, much more twitchy and upset in crowds over the years. On the other hand, you know that thing where a change in our routine—even a small one—can completely ruin our day? Happens to me almost never anymore. Used to be if my breakfast went wrong, I couldn’t go to school that day. Now when something changes, I can almost always handle it.

So don’t worry about being “less” autistic, because autism simply doesn’t work that way. All that’s happened is you’ve gained more spoons to cope with those things, and that’s good.