Published on 12, July, 2020
Pleased to meet you all. I'm in the process of being assessed/waiting for the next stage of assessment. I'm 41, male, and caring full-time for my father at the moment.
Sorry didnt mean to say its an odd question, meant something along the lines of relation. Sure there are many genetic things that will go alongside it when they map it all.
Hi, yes I know how that feels sometimes it can be hard to get the motivation back again and everything just stops. That can happen quite a lot unfortunately. A few days ago I was low and had no motivation and haven't done any coding since.
My projects "graveyard" is growing all the time lmfao . . . but I do have a Pokémon project I've managed to stick to.
Hi, welcome.
People in school used to say I was double jointed. I studied Tang So Do for many years as a child and was deemed by my Sensa his flexable friend..
Thanks :) I notice you like to code - I'm also from a programming/sysadmin background, although unfortunately I have a lot of problems with concentration and motivation - my main complaint, really.
I keep starting projects and not finishing them. I probably have over 100 projects I've started and not got to a useful state over the years.
Hello, welcome to the community.
Sure. I didn't mean to imply that everyone with loose joints is autistic. I just find it an odd correlation and wonder what the cause of it is, biologically speaking.
Think ehlers danlos syndrome has a high rate of people with autism, pretty sure not everyone is more flexible without eds who are autistic? Bit of an odd question really
Interesting, isn't it? I used to take karate lessons, and a lot of the joint locks and things like that just wouldn't work on me because putting my joints at their limit of movement doesn't seem to hurt me like it does other people.
I asked my doctor about it a while back. He did a few tests but didn't find anything. I don't understand how such things are related to autism? Possibly a common gene involved?
I also have very flexible joints (hypermobile I belive it's called) and a high pain threshold too.
Thanks for the welcome, everyone. I don't suppose anyone knows what the overall delays are with the lancashire autism service at the moment?
My GP submitted the request for an assessment in november 2019. In may/june 2020 I got an initial triage telephone appointment, had some online forms to fill in in september 2020 (AQ50, EQ50, family questionnaire). Six months later I emailed them for an update and was told they'd tried to phone me and hadn't gotten through - got a cancellation for an interview the next week. That was the end of march 2020 though. They say they'll need a sit-down meeting with the whole staff, which can't happen for a while because of covid. Plus the psychologist that did my interview went on maternity leave. So I'm 2 years 2 months in at the moment. Getting a bit antsy.
The interview was interesting though - some things came up that I didn't realise were connected, such as "Do you have very flexible joints?" and "Do you have a high pain threshold?". Well, yes I do but I didn't know that was an autistic thing? Who else has these. Her closing statement was "You're in the right place", which is a little ambiguous.
Hi Osmosis. Pleased to meet you :)
Hi, and welcome.
Hello Osmosis
Welcome ozzy!
Hello and welcome.. You're in the right place :)