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#1 |
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Andy Gibb aged 12
Forum 3000 Club Member
Join Date: Dec 03, 2004
Location: Courthouse Square, Hill Valley, beside the clocktower, 10:04 p.m., November 12th 1955
Posts: 3,912
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Since there are quite a lot of people around with a form of autism I thought it might be interesting for people to post their experience or knowledge of it - either knowing someone who is autistic or being autistic yourself. Talk about your struggles with it and the problems having it can cause, or even talk about the good side of it.
I'm supposed to have Asperger's Syndrome which is quite a mild form of autism although I think that even AS can come in different stages, some more mild than the other. (I say "supposed" because I've never been diagnosed and have never even seen a professional about it, but I do fit a lo of the main criteria and my mother has strongly believed for several years that I have AS.) I like to have a comfortable routine and can become uncomfotable, and, at times, distressed, over sudden changes, even quite minor ones. I do also tend to have an obsessive nature (not in a dangerous way, mind! ) but I tend to obssess over things, again, even small things, and when I worry about something, that's it, it's in my head all day and I can't get away from it until the situation is resolved.Social problems...I've always been shy around people and didn't have many close friends in secondary school (high school.) Also, making friends wasn't very important to me back then. However, since about the age of about 17, I have finally realised how nice having actual friends is, having friends offline that you can hang out with, go and have a drink with, have coffee with, etc. Going to university has improved me socially. I'm still shy and it's not always easy for me to talk to people but I'm a lot better than I was when I was 12/13. I was even worse when I was REALLY young, 8/9. I hardly spoke at all in school then and always used to stand by myself instead of playing with anyone. I do regret now that I didn't make more of an effort to form stronger friendships when I was in my early teens. I've also known several people who ae autistic and my friend Kris has ADHD. |
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http://rainbowlight.proboards102.com My new astral projection forums Doc: Don't worry! As long as you hit that wire with the connecting hook at precisely 88 miles per hour, the instant the lightning strikes the tower, everything will be fine! |
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#2 |
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Member
Forum Superstar
Join Date: Dec 05, 2007
Location: Opelika, AL
Posts: 29,510
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Count me in as one of those who was diagnosed with autism at the age of 3, but even though I'm trying not to let it get to me too much right now, it was part of the reason why I had so many bad school years growing up.
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#3 |
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veteran member
Forum 4000 Club Member
Join Date: May 23, 2001
Location: Pulaski, Tennessee
Posts: 4,766
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I have a mild form of autism
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#4 |
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Two Valeries! <3
Forum Addict
Join Date: Jul 15, 2002
Location: I'm STILL missing NYC. :(
Posts: 78,223
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I do not have AS or autism, but I do know of one other poster here who has autism - Brian. That's his username... Brian. He doesn't post here on CC much anymore, altho I see his name pop up on the CC subforums often. He's talked about his autism before - he's very high-functioning and actually wrote something about autism that got published. I need to go find the thread, it was just VERY recently (earlier this year).
Okay, here it is. http://www.sitcomsonline.com/boards/...d.php?t=227139 I have to say, I'm mighty proud of him, because he's accomplished so much.
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#5 |
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Member
Eternal Member
![]() Forum 4000 Club Member Join Date: Aug 09, 2003
Posts: 4,195
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As most people know here, my brother has Aspergers Syndrome. I think his must be a more severe case though. He's not like others with AS I have seen. It's a constant struggle. He's good when he takes his pills but he refuses to take his pills
He hates doing anything hygenic so when we have to force him...oy not good.
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#6 | |
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Drew Carey from Hell
Forum Star
Join Date: Nov 10, 2007
Location: The City of Cleveland, in The State of Cleveland, in The United States of Cleveland
Posts: 14,222
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Quote:
I am the oldest child in my family, but I still live at home, I still can't drive, and I still don't have a girlfriend. It takes me longer to get these things and I feel like a boy rather than a man. |
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__________________
Thank God for kids that love Obscure Things. Lee Hazlewood (1929-2007) You ARE Special to God! Rev. Ernest Angely (August 1921-May 2021)
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#7 |
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Member
Senior Member
Join Date: Sep 27, 2006
Location: Craptown
Posts: 2,054
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My brother has autism. He is definatley not high functioning but he's not really severe either. He has tantrums, he has really strong food preferences, and he flaps his hands. He also has seizures, loves to be naked because he doesn't like being hot, and doesn't like to be touched. All connected to sensory of course because it si a neurogical disorder.
I might have asperger's. I was never formally diagnosed but I have read books describing symptoms and it sounds alot like me. I'd rather be home watching tv or reading a book than go to party most days. I also have attention problems that go hand and hand with a.s. Well, now that I told my whole life story....
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#8 |
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Member
Forum Star
Join Date: Dec 01, 2000
Location: Between a rock and a hard place.
Posts: 11,235
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I have worked with several students who have milder forms of Aspergers. I think one of my cousins has it. He has never been diagnosed, but he meets some of the criteria.
I can't believe how much autism and similar disorders have increased these past few years. Are we just getting better at diagnosing the problem (Even back when I was a kid, they were just the "weird kids" or "mentally ill".) or is there truly something in the environment causing it? |
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#9 |
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Member
Forum Veteran
Join Date: Oct 22, 2006
Location: Örnsköldsvik, Sweden
Posts: 6,277
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I think autism has always existed, but people just weren't diagnosed. The severely autistic people were just considered as "********", and the mildly autistic people were just considered as "weird".
And yeah, I'm an aspie too. |
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#10 | |
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Member
Forum Icon
Join Date: Jan 04, 2001
Posts: 53,128
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Quote:
![]() Anyhow, I work with kids with these abnormalities. We had one kid who was just hard to deal with. He'd get very angry at not getting his way and throw the loudest tantrums imaginable. He's in a special school now and I hear he's made a very big turn around. Our school is so pathetically ill-equipped to handle autistic kids. Makes me sad for them. They are forced to sit through gen ed classes when to be honest, they have no place there. The autistic kids who don't speak and are so far locked in their own world need 1-1 instruction specifically adapted for them and sorry, but gen ed classes and public schools can't do it. I understand integration, but I think that only works for higher functioning children. We have a child who I heard may be mildly autistic (he certainly seems to have DPD), but he can talk normally, understand to a degree what you are teaching him, and he plays well with peers. Public school is fine for him. Kids whose only method of communication is the occasional wail need a better suited school. If I were the parent of an autistic child, I would look into a special school before I ever considered public school. |
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#11 |
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Member
Forum Veteran
Join Date: Oct 22, 2006
Location: Örnsköldsvik, Sweden
Posts: 6,277
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I think most of us really have problems, when the doctors give us a diagnosis. I sure know I have problems.
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#12 |
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Member
Senior Member
Join Date: Sep 27, 2006
Location: Craptown
Posts: 2,054
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^ Thank you for saying that!!! They say intergration is good so that both genre of children can get something out of seeing one another. Frankly, I think it just opens up a new can of worms of ignorance on the functioning child's part and more frustration on the autistic child's part.
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#13 | ||
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Member
Forum Icon
Join Date: Jan 04, 2001
Posts: 53,128
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#14 |
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Member
Forum Regular
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I have Aspergers, wasn't diagnosed until I was 28 (the age I am now).
I think that autism was a four letter word up until a few years ago and people always associated the disorder with being like Rain Man, and more and more people are getting diagnosed with it and are high functioning. It's good that more and more people are starting to get the right diagnosis instead of the old days where you were "weird" or "********" or "quirky" or whatever label people like to throw around. I was always a little bit on the outside at school or wherever... I used to think it was because I was gay (even tho I wasn't out until 17 and even then I wasn't out to anyone at school, just family and out of school friends) but even when I'd go to gay bars and the sort, I still didn't fit in. I just have a hard time striking up conversations with people I don't know and I also am a passionately private person. I admit that I love to drift off into my own world and hate getting distracted when I'm in deep thought. |
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#15 |
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Member
Forum Veteran
Join Date: Oct 22, 2006
Location: Örnsköldsvik, Sweden
Posts: 6,277
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Why weren't you diagnosed until so recently? Didn't the school start to notice these things in the 90s? I was diagnosed when I was fourteen, and some people thought that was late.
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