Edit: can this be moved to the general private forum? See, I really am too tired to think 
This will be brief, I think. I still haven't recovered from my chronic exhaustion spell. Sometimes I feel like it's getting worse. I was sitting here today trying to do work and didn't even have energy to sit up. But anyway, I guess that's besides the point. (Or maybe it isn't.)
A few months ago, I asked my GP to refer me to someone who can diagnose AS. She did, and said that the guy is pretty knowledgable and I would like him. Finally my time came, and I showed up at his office this morning.
The meeting was only an hour long. I had read stuff from other people saying they were there for a whole day, they did all sorts of tests some of which didn't seem related at all. Not this guy though. He asked me why I thought I had AS, spent most of the time going over the rest of my health records, including depression and the fact that I was feeling really exhausted. Several of the questions he asked like "do you have any unusual movements", went over my head at the time, perhaps because I was exhausted (yes, it probably is because I was exhausted). Only long after I left did it occur to me that he probably meant stimming behaviour (which I don't personally see as "unusual").
Oh, but he also did call my special interests "unusual". That was the only part I really remember clearly, owing to the strange phenomenon whereby the only time I'm not exhausted is when my special interests are being discussed. Ha, I remember feeling a little embarrassed (I still do when I think about it
), like please don't think of my interest as a symptom, it's like a huge emotional attachment of mine 
His final conclusion was "I'm not sure if you have AS, you have some of the typical signs but not many of the others. But to give an answer to the question, I would say yes."
It was rather anti-climactic.
If I had read over the diagnostic criteria and prepared some answers beforehand (which I know some of you have done), rather than walk in half dazed and hoping to be surprised with new knowledge that only a professional would have (this did not happen), it would have gone much better, I think. I asked him what I can do to adapt to society better or something of that sort, he said go read some books written by other people with AS. Well, okay, that's nothing new. I also asked him about my flat affect issues and he said it was more likely a depression thing than an AS thing, which just made me more confused, but then I was too tired to elaborate on the confusion so I went on my way.
I expected something else, or more, I suppose. Was it useful? I'm not sure. I'll go over his report with my GP when it arrives, but I don't expect to learn anything interesting from it, just an embarrassing account of how tired I was that day.
This will be brief, I think. I still haven't recovered from my chronic exhaustion spell. Sometimes I feel like it's getting worse. I was sitting here today trying to do work and didn't even have energy to sit up. But anyway, I guess that's besides the point. (Or maybe it isn't.)
A few months ago, I asked my GP to refer me to someone who can diagnose AS. She did, and said that the guy is pretty knowledgable and I would like him. Finally my time came, and I showed up at his office this morning.
The meeting was only an hour long. I had read stuff from other people saying they were there for a whole day, they did all sorts of tests some of which didn't seem related at all. Not this guy though. He asked me why I thought I had AS, spent most of the time going over the rest of my health records, including depression and the fact that I was feeling really exhausted. Several of the questions he asked like "do you have any unusual movements", went over my head at the time, perhaps because I was exhausted (yes, it probably is because I was exhausted). Only long after I left did it occur to me that he probably meant stimming behaviour (which I don't personally see as "unusual").
Oh, but he also did call my special interests "unusual". That was the only part I really remember clearly, owing to the strange phenomenon whereby the only time I'm not exhausted is when my special interests are being discussed. Ha, I remember feeling a little embarrassed (I still do when I think about it
His final conclusion was "I'm not sure if you have AS, you have some of the typical signs but not many of the others. But to give an answer to the question, I would say yes."
It was rather anti-climactic.
If I had read over the diagnostic criteria and prepared some answers beforehand (which I know some of you have done), rather than walk in half dazed and hoping to be surprised with new knowledge that only a professional would have (this did not happen), it would have gone much better, I think. I asked him what I can do to adapt to society better or something of that sort, he said go read some books written by other people with AS. Well, okay, that's nothing new. I also asked him about my flat affect issues and he said it was more likely a depression thing than an AS thing, which just made me more confused, but then I was too tired to elaborate on the confusion so I went on my way.
I expected something else, or more, I suppose. Was it useful? I'm not sure. I'll go over his report with my GP when it arrives, but I don't expect to learn anything interesting from it, just an embarrassing account of how tired I was that day.
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