XxZer0xX
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- Seen Jun 24, 2009
I've got a prescription for ADHD, when they haven't even tested me for it yet. I've also got manic-depression and OCD problems.
Do you guys ever have sleep problems? I read somewhere that people with autism are prone to having problems with going to sleep.
I have a really bad case of insomnia. I've tried everyhting to make me sleep and the one thing I won't give up is watching a movie before I go to bed. I mean duh, Autism? I have a huge ritual when it comes to movies. If I can't watch one before I go to bed, guess what? I won't sleep.
It's hard for me to sleep when I'm away from home and traveling with my parents. I can't sleep enough when I'm forced to sleep on a hard bed because it makes me restless. I have terrible soulder problems that cause some impairment when I move them.
I wake up in the middle of the night though.
Once again, Chibi, i'll say something to you. Did you know that EVERYONE is on the autistic spectrum? Even you're on it.
Quote 2 said:There may be thin lines between the symptoms that autistic people and neurotypical people experience, they are still there. Also note that i used the word "neurotypical". It's an actual word from the dictionary that is penned by psychoanalysts for "non-autistic" people.
Chibi Chan said:No. If everyone was on the autistic spectrum, autism wouldn't be a disorder. Disorders are when you have a disorder. It's not a disorder if everyone has a form of it. It's like calling people with lighter or darker skin color having a pigment disorder.
Chibi Chan said:You just said everyone was autistic later. :|
Actually, it really isn't. at all. And everyone IS on the autistic spectrum because it doesn't just apply to disorders per se. The spectrum represents different levels and extremeties, from which doctors can confirm a diagnosis. basically, everybody is in the spectrum, but some are at different levels than others. Just because it has the word "Autistic" in it does not mean that that is all it applies to. Plus, comparing it to skin color now? The situation at hand isn't so "Black and white" (No pun intended)
Once again, i didn't say that.That would be foolish in more than just the slightest. i said everyone is on the autistic spectrum. And i've already explained that above.
I am completely fine with your view on aspergers. With the story you have said i can see perfectly why you would say so. All that i'd want to say is: We've been told, some of us likely quite recently, that we have a disorder called autism. We don't know much about it, because not many people do. Like it or not, we are connected to that term, and then you say quite bluntly that you think it doesn't exist..It's not that you said it that's bad, i think it was just the way it was said..
Still, there's no need to rant on about that. You say that not liking certain foods and sensitive palates and breakdowns etc. happen to everyone. Well, yes they do. How could i disagree? But that's why EVERYONE is on the autistic spectrum, no? It's not about just doing a certain behaviour, it's the extent and the way it is done that is analysed. And of course someone will be wrongly diagnosed; There must be one person who gets it wrong.
Also, i didn't say "neurotypical" to isolate myself. Although i see why you might've thought that, It's just a term. I try my best to fit in with other people, and act social, yet i still have been dignosed: How does that make aspergers a label for being "socially inept"?
Still, lets face it. We could probably dissect each others point forever over this subject. Whatever you believe about aspergers i will not make you change, and i am fine with it. This is my view, but all i'm saying is be a little more sensitive, okay? cause some of the things you've said can make a big impact if the right person hears it, you know?
I kind of have to agree with Chibi. I mean there is no way everyone can be on the spectrum of Autism. Autism has to have at least 6 or more symptoms and depends on the severity.
Sleep problems come with Autism though, just like any other disorder. They can come with depression, anxiety, ADHD or hell, even naturally. Saying everyone is on the spectrum is way too much.
That's the kind of thing that makes people call us brats or fakes because there are so many people that are saying everyone is being diagnosed.
Chibi said what she had and if your saying she is just in the spectrum, I say your wrong. Chibi is just like everyone else and everyone else has certain things that can set them off. But in order for it to be SO bad that it's disabling to have to hear noise around you or probably to not be able to wear clothes with tags or seams or even doing behaviors with repition, that is Autism.
It's not leading to a spectrum, iot's leading to the severity of it.
I can understand that. ^^ I was told that everyone is on the autistic spectrum, because the symptoms of autism can also relate to people who aren't even diagnosed. And that just because everyone was on the spectrum didn't mean that everyone was autistic. When i say that though, i don't mean everyone is on the same "level" of the spectrum, because obvously, like you said, it's the severity of the behaviour, of which i very much agree. But i've always been told that on the spectrum, some people were more severe than others and "higher" up in the spectrum due to the severity of the disorder. All i can say in defense is that that was the way i was told things. Maybe that's why people use the autistic spectrum, no?
Don't think of the autistic spectrum as a way of saying "everyone has autism" because that's not the point i want to get across. The spectrum is more of a way of..well, not really "measuring" but a way to know the levels of severity that come with disorders such as autism.
At the end of the day, it's just a way-Maybe even just my way- of thinking through the subject. I don't want to offend anyone.
I found out I wasn't diagnosed with Autism until ten but like Kylie, my parents were SURE something wasn't right about me. They got me in testing for everything, turns out I had mild to moderate autism. It wasn't as bad as it has gotten now and I think being older and not getting the right therapy, I wasn't able to control my feelings.
I'm pretty knowledgable as well. I'll definitely admit that and I know I am way more knowledable than my mother.
See, my mom doesn't seem to understand my autism. It can be hard because she gets mad at me so easily. I end up slamming around and throwing things. It causes outbursts and terrible meltdowns for me but it's something she just can't understand.
She also doesn't get it when I tell her to get out of my room. I yell at her to get out because see, my room is like my escape. I really prefer just being alone. I can even get scared easily and not just like a child would but to the point where I end up just crying out of nowhere.
I know it's normal for a child but for me it's not right. Last night, my mom discovered I was covered in this rash (turns out something made me break into hives so I'm on benadryl and anitbiotics and I'm fine now.) Anyway, she scared me when she insisted she was worried and thinking it was serious and I started to cry.
It took a while for this to subside and then finally I was able to settle down and go to sleep.
There was also today, at the emergency room for my hives, this person who was getting information for me came in and asked me questions. Some of them I didn't know and I was getting nervous over it and filled with anger, my mom could even see it and she snapped.
It got to the point where I ended up almost crying and my mom had to rudely, almost, tell the lady to wait and explain my autism, learning disability and ADHD. She let my mom answer this time.
See, I usually don't have very good language or a very good brain to be able to answer hard questions. It can cause me lots of frustration.
I realize its getting worse because I seem to get even more overwhelmed by these things. I know today at UPS the guy who was mailing a box to my aunt, and he was placing the tape over the box to seal it. The sound was DELIBRATING like so hard on my ears I had to walk away, but still couldn't escape it.
It was like ear splitting and so painful. That's just stuff that's happened recently and I've started a personal journal to write down things.
I hope next month I can show them to my psychiatrist. I got one just yesterday so, I'll be seeing her every month and I hope this might help get me more confidence over things.