ESA re-assessment face to face interview on Wednesday

Hi all, sorry I only really seem to post when there is something worrying me. I do read the forums most days but I rarely post as most of the time I have no useful experience to contribute to people, and where I am still waiting for assessment I still massively fear that I may be wrong about ASD, even though it seems like an amazingly good fit for my life experiences.

I have been on ESA for a long time now in the work focused activity group, and the last two times I have come up for re-assessment I have had to go all the way through to tribunal to be awarded ESA for the next period. It is true that the previous times I was not particularly aware of the specifics of my difficulties and just being diagnosed with Generalised Anxiety, I purely thought that my issues were fear based and that most of what I experienced was part of being a regular human being - I just somehow sucked big time at coping for some reason that must be my fault. I didn't then recognise my tendency to give answers that I thought people wanted to hear etc. I came up for reassessment at the end of November last year and filled out the ESA 50 to the best of my ability with I think about 9 pages in Ms-Word answering the questions. I am scared though as I have no medical evidence for any of it, and they finally got back in touch recently with a letter saying I needed to attend a face-to-face this coming Wednesday. I am still on the waiting list for assessment and I did send them a copy of the NHS letter confirming that, but until someone qualified sees me and says yes or no and writes a report I feel ridiculously vulnerable.

I should probably say that I did not try to diagnose myself on the form, but did mention briefly at the beginning how after being pointed in this direction I had researched and found myself to closely fit a lot of things and so asked my GP who agreed and referred. I then just focused on the difficulties. In the past a lot of the time despite being seen as intelligent in an academic sense I couldn't but my finger on what exactly I found hard about situations - it's not until I came across something that described a similar situation that I had lightbulb moments and realised the whys and whats of situations I had encountered. 

I am scared that on Wednesday I am going to either shut down to one word replies or even worse go all meek and answer purely to speed things up towards getting out again. I am very honest and despite the advice people give to "always make it your worst day" I am terrified of being twisted into compromises (its happened before, but I didn't realise it until much much later) Eg: if asked can I go to the shops alone an honest answer would be yes, but not reliably, and there is a fair chance that I would forget something I went in for due to getting stressed etc. In the past even though that additional stuff is relevant to their legal descriptors they chipped away at me, suggesting that if x y or z was not a factor could I then go to the shop etc.

Does anyone have any tips for how I can maybe fortify myself against that sort of thing for a short time? I will be driven to the appointment by my parents, and they will accompany me into the waiting room, but for various reasons (Mum suffers a lot from anxiety and is currently in the process of switching medications, Dad is bipolar and tends to dominate and talk over without meaning to, plus I recognise some of my difficulties in them and so they think they are normal things) I won't take one of them into the interview with me. I am also more likely to not say things that I think would worry them if one of them was there, they are getting on in age now and I'd rather they worried about themselves.     

  • Hi all, I figured in this current environment sharing a bit of good news would be nice. I got one of the dreaded brown envelopes today and it said that my reassessment result was being moved to the support group! Such a relief!

  • I joined Benefits and Work back when the form first landed on the doormat last November. I can also get someone to take me to Citizens Advice if needed. I will appeal if it comes to it, but I'm fairly sure there was some signs present as I went blank a couple of times, couldn't look at her and was in full on boring voice mode. Oh well, time will tell.

  • Hi,  I think some assessors are fair , but there's many who will try and trip you up. I would say that if your assessment doesn't go how you would like it to then request a mandatory reconsideration and appeal .  I would say if you don't have evidence of your  condition at the assessment or it's overlooked then present that at mandatory reconsideration or appeal process. Is there anyone who could help you with forms or the process?

  • Thanks for the reply, the assessor was very nice today and did not seem to be trying to trip me up or get me to compromise like at my previous assessments. As far as I could tell it seemed like I was taken seriously, I was given time to think and no suggestions were offered for me to trap myself with when I couldn't think of how to explain difficult things - she just told me it was ok to take my time. Its hard to tell as I've been through this before twice, felt hopeful and then had to appeal so I'm wary of too much thinking it will all be ok - better to be prepared than disappointed.

    As far as diagnosis goes I have been referred by my GP and received a letter from South London and Maudsley that I am on their waiting list (about a year as of last summer). I don't know if I need to chase things up to check how they stand but if I do I'll handle that when the dust is settled on the ESA thing. I'm not good at focusing on more than one major thing at once.

  • Hi Kras83,

    You might want to look at the pages here on the NAS site about anxiety - https://www.autism.org.uk/about/behaviour/anxiety.aspx - we have a guide for managing anxiety, potential causes and triggers, relaxation techniques and links to outside resources on the subject, which might be helpful in managing the stress during your assessment. If you want to learn more about the process for getting an autism diagnosis, that is outlined here - https://www.autism.org.uk/about/diagnosis/adults.aspx - it might help to be familiar with how it works so that you can be prepared for all eventualities?

    Best of luck,
    Ross - mod

  • Also I should add that this weekend I have come down with an extremely mild cough/cold - its not the big scary thing as I've been nowhere to catch it, I rarely leave the house except for some recent dental appointments, plus the symptoms don't match (not a 'dry' cough, although that may be TMI). So considering the broad cross section of humanity you see in the waiting rooms at places like that I'm now worried someone will get confrontational if I cough with all the media scare surrounding it...