TJustice
New Member
I have long known that I was at the very least ADD, but in researching issues for my son, am beginning to question if I might actually have Asperger's. As I dread the flood of self diagnoses on the Internet, I am hesitant to do so myself, but in reading up on this, am having some serious questions.
I am 45 years old, and usually get along fairly well. But I always find myself limited career wise because I am unable to handle schedules that require frequent contacts, deadlines, and interactions with people. I've been unable to explain this, as it doesn't make sense, and I haven't heard anyone else talk about it.
Until now. Our 8 year old son had extreme difficulty in the public school system, and we attributed his social problems to bullying, but it was more than that. To the point where he was terrified when one of the classmates that harassed him was on a bounce house, and he was in tears because he wanted to be on the bounce house, but not around this individual.
It was more than just typical childhood fear. To me it looked a lot like defense mode. And it explains why, in two years in the public school system, he was unable to learn to read/write; because he was in defense mode. In the year and a half since he has been out, his reading and math skills have come up to his age appropriate grade level.
Now, again, I'm not into self diagnoses, but in his case, it's pretty clear. He does not like to play, even around his siblings most of the time, and will head off by himself. He has difficulty expressing emotion and is clearly very stressed when something in his environment changes suddenly.
As I started researching defense mode, though, it made the most sense of any explanation that has ever been given for my own particular issues.
Does it sound like I'm way off base, or do you think this might be a real possibility. And if it is, can you share things that you have done to cope so that defense mode doesn't cripple you in real life situations? Thanks.
I am 45 years old, and usually get along fairly well. But I always find myself limited career wise because I am unable to handle schedules that require frequent contacts, deadlines, and interactions with people. I've been unable to explain this, as it doesn't make sense, and I haven't heard anyone else talk about it.
Until now. Our 8 year old son had extreme difficulty in the public school system, and we attributed his social problems to bullying, but it was more than that. To the point where he was terrified when one of the classmates that harassed him was on a bounce house, and he was in tears because he wanted to be on the bounce house, but not around this individual.
It was more than just typical childhood fear. To me it looked a lot like defense mode. And it explains why, in two years in the public school system, he was unable to learn to read/write; because he was in defense mode. In the year and a half since he has been out, his reading and math skills have come up to his age appropriate grade level.
Now, again, I'm not into self diagnoses, but in his case, it's pretty clear. He does not like to play, even around his siblings most of the time, and will head off by himself. He has difficulty expressing emotion and is clearly very stressed when something in his environment changes suddenly.
As I started researching defense mode, though, it made the most sense of any explanation that has ever been given for my own particular issues.
Does it sound like I'm way off base, or do you think this might be a real possibility. And if it is, can you share things that you have done to cope so that defense mode doesn't cripple you in real life situations? Thanks.