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Hiya

Ames

Active Member
Hello, everyone! Not really sure how this works, whether I belong here, or where to begin.

I am 41 and have never been diagnosed with Asperger's/ASD. I have had "something wrong with me" for as long as I can remember, but Asperger's/ASD was never mentioned by any of the scores of doctors, psychologists, and counselors I have seen over the years. I have run into some articles about ASD when trying to figure out the nature of my disorder, but any traits I have that are common in ASD were quickly dismissed, as other traits I have are considered exclusionary for an ASD diagnosis. [E.g., I make eye contact, I don't appear to struggle socially, I am very empathetic, I tend to "go along" with whomever I am around, I am not smart enough to "read" as being a stereotypical (male) person with Asperger's (I have a terrible memory, bad at math), and I sometimes struggle with depression, so docs/counselors assume anything "wrong" just means I am depressed.]

A week or two ago, I came across a "checklist for females with Asperger's" of some sort. I had almost every symptom. At first I laughed out loud, because obviously the list's author had been misdiagnosed; she doesn't have Asperger's -- she has whatever I have! Hahaha... Then came the tears, as I slowly realized maybe *I* have been misdiagnosed for my entire life.

Is that even possible? I have had enough neuro-psych testing that ASD would have shown up, right? I'm 41...I would have known, wouldn't I?

I feel lost. I don't know what to do or where to begin. I just moved to a new state. I am trying to find a counselor to help me navigate this, but there appear to be zero resources for adults with ASD, and no counselors who are familiar with Asperger's, let alone in females. (Even if my symptoms were subclinical, I feel having someone familiar with how ASD manifests in adult women would better be able to help me.)

Any (kind) advice would be welcome. Thanks in advance.
 
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Hi, @Ames! Welcome. Hopefully, you'll come to realize that there's nothing wrong with you. What's wrong is the way people have treated you your entire life for being wired differently. This is a great place to begin that learning and healing process.

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Welcome to Aspies Central @Ames

Adult females have long been misdiagnosed. We can't be Aspies, because only the male 'brain' with autism has been studied. She says with a tinge of sarcasm.
We learn early to socialize because it's what's expected of females. And some mimic social behaviour quite well and learn eye contact.
I experienced the same thing, when I first came here, to find out about my Aspie spouse. "It can't be" I thought at the time. But it was, and here I am, two years later.

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There are other disorders that are like autism but are not I think they are now probably included as autism it is very common for females who are high functioning on the autism spectrum to be diagnosed with borderline personality disorder, as there are many therapists who have very little knowledge of how women or girls present with autism ,a common diagnosis used to be schizophrenia,so you do probably have something related to autism
Women and girls also learn to mimic neuro typical people so that is how you maybe do interact re eye contact
Hope this helps
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Hello, everyone! Not really sure how this works, whether I belong here, or where to begin.

I am 41 and have never been diagnosed with Asperger's/ASD. I have had "something wrong with me" for as long as I can remember, but Asperger's/ASD was never mentioned by any of the scores of doctors, psychologists, and counselors I have seen over the years. I have run into some articles about ASD when trying to figure out the nature of my disorder, but any traits I have that are common in ASD were quickly dismissed, as other traits I have are considered exclusionary for an ASD diagnosis. [E.g., I make eye contact, I don't appear to struggle socially, I am very empathetic, I tend to "go along" with whomever I am around, I am not smart enough to "read" as being a stereotypical (male) person with Asperger's (I have a terrible memory, bad at math), and I sometimes struggle with depression, so docs/counselors assume anything "wrong" just means I am depressed.]

A week or two ago, I came across a "checklist for females with Asperger's" of some sort. I had almost every symptom. At first I laughed out loud, because obviously the list's author had been misdiagnosed; she doesn't have Asperger's -- she has whatever I have! Hahaha... Then came the tears, as I slowly realized maybe *I* have been misdiagnosed for my entire life.

Is that even possible? I have had enough neuro-psych testing that ASD would have shown up, right? I'm 41...I would have known, wouldn't I?

I feel lost. I don't know what to do or where to begin. I just moved to a new state. I am trying to find a counselor to help me navigate this, but there appear to be zero resources for adults with ASD, and no counselors who are familiar with Asperger's, let alone in females. (Even if my symptoms were subclinical, I feel having someone familiar with how ASD manifests in adult women would better be able to help me.)

Any (kind) advice would be welcome. Thanks in advance.
 
Hi & Welcome,
I think a surprising ammount of doctors/mental health professionals are still clueless about High Functioning autism. Its like you have to slowly spell out a mountain of evidence to them and then maybe they might say 'oh yeah, I think you are right'. They still seem to think its something you can obviously see in a person's appearence.
 
Hi @Ames, me and you are the same age, possibly give or take a few months.

I was diagnosed Aspie in October 1999 at the age of 23, in some ways the day I was diagnosed was one of the best days of my life, because it finally answered a lot of questions about why I'm like I am.

If you want to chat more, feel free to message me on Facebook (link in my sig) or post on my Blog (Link in my sig as well).
 

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