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I am meeting with the Occupational Health Dept Doctor again today. I will have my Professional Body Rep and my wife with me. I am making a list of things I want to say and things I want us to agree on today. Will post here later with the result if that's OK?
Good luck, hope it goes well
Thanks. Unfortunately it went worse than could ever be expected. The Doctor accepted that I have got Asperger's then screamed at me and stormed out of the room. My wife and Professional Body Rep, who were also in the room were equally stunned. The worst thing you could ever do to an Aspie, who you have just said has General Anxiety Disorder too.
We are complaining about his behaviour to his employer and possibly to the General Medical Council.
Add to this that my bosses had written to the Dr beforehand and not provided me with a copy of what they had wrote beforehand as the law requires. In it they suggested that I had lied to the Consultant Psychiatrist to falsely obtain the Asperger's diagnosis just so I didn't have to work in the noisy office that they want me to (I am requesting my own, quiet office). Their answer to my sensory overload? To put me back in the noisy office where I had my meltdown and make me wear headphones!
My professional body is starting legal proceedings on my behalf for discrimination.
I have this issue no matter where I seem to work, I always at least get this one that would think of me as either really stupid or talk to me in a way that they would do to a young child and I still seemed puzzled why that would be the case? Maybe they notice it because where I'm working at, I'm honestly not sure how aware they are about this? I haven't mentioned anything of it but I'm not sure if it would even be worth mentioning?
I know what you mean when referring to the "talking to me like a young child" thing. A lot of people do that to me after hearing of my diagnosis, even if they'd known me for years and treated by like a normal person beforehand. It's really frustrating and somewhat insulting, isn't it? I feel for you if you have to deal with that on a day-to-day basis. We're aspies, not mentally disabled chimpanzees.
My employment problems are still ongoing. Just had yet another stressful meeting where they tried to get me to go back to work in the shared office that I found so stressful due to constant sensory overload. They thought that because I am undertaking CBT that this would cure my Asperger's!!!!
So, being more precise, have I been the subject of unfair and/or stupid discrimination? Sure, but then I am human, and this is occasionally going to happen. If it wasn't ASD, then it would be something else like the colour of my skin, my gender, my religion, or my national origin (people love to hate Americans these days). If the unfair/stupid discrimination is so extreme as to have a lasting impact on my life, then I might have to do something about it. However, I should say that if you fight it every time, then that is all you end up having time to do. Life's too short.
My employment problems are still ongoing. Just had yet another stressful meeting where they tried to get me to go back to work in the shared office that I found so stressful due to constant sensory overload. They thought that because I am undertaking CBT that this would cure my Asperger's!!!!
ASD is a disability in a world built for neurotypicals. We're talking about more disheartening differential behaviour like being infantilised or condescended to, not be taken seriously, have people use the condition against you, being told when you're having sensory overload to "pull yourself together" or that you're "too sensitive". (Yeah, I'm too sensitive, that's why I get sensory overload. Duh.)
Were you diplomatic and told them "then you are sadly misinformed" instead of the more sarcastic "don't you think an actual cure for Asperger's would be all over the news?" that I probably would have said?