Hi
I'm Angela, I'm 45 and discovered about a month ago that all my hang ups and quirks that I've dealt with all my life all turned out to be asperger traits.
It was a bit of a surprise. I thought I was just a bit different (almost from another time or planet) It never occurred to me that I could be on the autistic spectrum.
Strangest of all is that I feel such a relief. I don't feel bad about it at all. I'm ecstatically glad that I'm not crazy. I'm simply an aspie and my whole life has suddenly made sense. If anything, my worry is that I've accepted this self-diagnosis to quickly and easily (despite reading the whole internet about it).
I'm pretty sure that the few people I've told - colleagues - I don't have any friends about my self-diagnosis don't believe that I have aspergers. This is because they don't know what it really is or how it presents in women. I'm feeling the need to educate them. We work in elderly rehab in the NHS and I'm sure an elderly patient with ASD will come along to us one of these days and we really should be able to identify them quickly and help anyway we can.
I went to my GP who said although I have all the traits, she does not think I have aspergers as I have too much empathy (!) she also had never heard of alexithymia.
Worrying. All the information on Aspergers in out there. It should be filtering down to all community health professionals.
I'm Angela, I'm 45 and discovered about a month ago that all my hang ups and quirks that I've dealt with all my life all turned out to be asperger traits.
It was a bit of a surprise. I thought I was just a bit different (almost from another time or planet) It never occurred to me that I could be on the autistic spectrum.
Strangest of all is that I feel such a relief. I don't feel bad about it at all. I'm ecstatically glad that I'm not crazy. I'm simply an aspie and my whole life has suddenly made sense. If anything, my worry is that I've accepted this self-diagnosis to quickly and easily (despite reading the whole internet about it).
I'm pretty sure that the few people I've told - colleagues - I don't have any friends about my self-diagnosis don't believe that I have aspergers. This is because they don't know what it really is or how it presents in women. I'm feeling the need to educate them. We work in elderly rehab in the NHS and I'm sure an elderly patient with ASD will come along to us one of these days and we really should be able to identify them quickly and help anyway we can.
I went to my GP who said although I have all the traits, she does not think I have aspergers as I have too much empathy (!) she also had never heard of alexithymia.
Worrying. All the information on Aspergers in out there. It should be filtering down to all community health professionals.