Importance of being totally honest during Autism assessment

This morning I wrote the paragraphs below in a separate discussion thread on this site. Do you have thoughts on it, based on your/your loved one’s experiences being assessed?



“For what it’s worth, some advice I would share regarding going through the assessment process is to be extremely honest in answering all questions, regardless of how “bad“ or “cold“ or “messed up“ you might think it makes you appear.

I found that I answered the test questions and replied to the interview questions in ways I would not have done even one month prior, because I had realized ahead of time that I would need to be extraordinarily honest with myself and with my clinician about my true feelings and my true preferred behaviours, when I wasn’t masking and camouflaging.

My impression in talking to my psychologist is that, especially for women, it’s common to go into the assessment process and minimize or even omit mentioning their true feelings and behaviours. By not doing that, I was able to emerge from the assessment process with the feeling that the result reflected who I am – not who I have worked over two decades to appear to be.”

Parents
  • My biggest concern at the moment is that I have read so much on here and absorbed a lot of information, that I could work out the answer they want to get the diagnosis I want. Then the diagnosis becomes false. I’m not even sure that is possible, but I am so unsure who I am at the moment, it scares.

    ROCK-ME-HARD PLACE

  • I agree with you here. I’m on the last bit of my assessment on Monday and I found so much about the process on here like the tasks and the frog book and I feel like some was false so I’m going into my last bit with a clear head and forcing myself to be honest as I can. Or I feel like I don’t understand some of what they say and interpret it differently and then leave that part of the assessment and thing oh yeah I do or don’t do that so feel like it give a false response 

    im also at the stage where sometimes I don’t think I’m autistic and then some times I’m like yes that’s what I have it makes sense etc. 

  • the frog book completely stumped me !

Reply Children
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