What do you think of self-identification?

Hi everyone,

I would really appreciate your opinion please. I have had a therapist and GP say I have ASD, but no formal diagnosis. Apparently that's as elusive as matching socks. I've just been on a 3 day research binge and I no longer know which way is up. In your opinion is self- identifying acceptable? I honestly don't know if it would make me a fraud or others would see me as a fraud. All I've ever wanted is to just make sense of myself and find a place where I feel I belong. I would really appreciate your thoughts, right now I have too many of my own. Thank you Slight smile

Parents
  • On the flip-side, I know a number of people who claim to be self-diagnosed autistics - including my sister-in-law - she's an attention seeking narcissistic nutcase who has every fashionable problem going - but she's not consistent with her stories so just looks stupid.

    There's also the army of benefit fakers who try try on with the DWP - anything that cannot be directly measured (like missing a leg) is faked these days, especially autism..   It makes them very suspicious of us and complicates our PIP applications.

  • I have some attention seeking family members, they make me sick. I would never disclose anything to them, they would jump on it immediately. I understand what you're saying about fakers, and now I'm thinking I do need that diagnosis. I honestly don't need any benefits, nor do I want any for the sake of it. That should be for people who need the support. It's about me understanding and helping myself. At the same time I wouldn't want anyone to think I was a fraud.

  • You could think of your autism as a religion - something you don't discuss with anyone but it's a way of living that gives you peace.  Smiley

  • Hi Dickie, sorry but for some reason I can't directly reply to you. I'm happy that you've found things make a lot more sense for you, they do for me also. As you said like a mist has cleared. Completely understand why you're not seeking a formal diagnosis,  sometimes it's enough that you know. It was a therapist who told me, quite bluntly. I don't mind though. I don't NEED to have a diagnosis, it's just that I'm afraid that I've finally made sense of myself but have that niggling fear of what if I'm wrong and I am just weird, with a flawed personality. I move between self acceptance and doubt. I think it's because I always have to have definitive answers, yes or no, I don't like grey areas, even if I believe them to be true.

Reply
  • Hi Dickie, sorry but for some reason I can't directly reply to you. I'm happy that you've found things make a lot more sense for you, they do for me also. As you said like a mist has cleared. Completely understand why you're not seeking a formal diagnosis,  sometimes it's enough that you know. It was a therapist who told me, quite bluntly. I don't mind though. I don't NEED to have a diagnosis, it's just that I'm afraid that I've finally made sense of myself but have that niggling fear of what if I'm wrong and I am just weird, with a flawed personality. I move between self acceptance and doubt. I think it's because I always have to have definitive answers, yes or no, I don't like grey areas, even if I believe them to be true.

Children
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