aspergers and gender dysmorphia

Hi - I have a 31year old son whom I think may have a mild form Aspergers but has never been diagnosed as it never entered our heads before my neice started having "problems" with her young son and he was diagnosed with autism (which made us do a lot of reading and research with her).  My son has an extremely high IQ and always been good at mathematics and computer programming and has always had obsessions in the past which have always fizzled out when he finds another.  He finds it extremely difficult to make friends, keep a job and has always had relationships with girls but when they end he gets depressed and suicidal.

Last year he revealed he has gender dysmorphia since having counselling sessions after when a psychologist suggested his failed relationships could be because he feels uncomfortable in his male role and I am concerned that this may be yet another obsession which will be irreversible if he does become a woman.  He has now been gioven the go-ahead to take hormones after 4 hours of specialist couselling and 1 seesion with a specialist psychiatrist.

Have any other parents been through this sort of thing or do they think I am just clutching at straws and just watch him go ahead?

Parents
  • Former Member
    Former Member

    NAS7937 said:

    Surely everyone has  behaviours that can be destructive if left unchecked and unrecognised. Its not unique to being autistic

    Indeed, I wasn't intending to suggest that we are all broken and that we are the source of the world's problems. I'm just trying to suggest that some leaders and some individuals who have problems may have autistic traits.

    Most autistic people are honest, decent and lovely people and actually we have problems with being too honest sometimes. Inability to tell a "white lie" is a common problem for autistic people.

    The problem comes when someone generalises and then discriminates on the basis of what a few members of a group have done.

Reply
  • Former Member
    Former Member

    NAS7937 said:

    Surely everyone has  behaviours that can be destructive if left unchecked and unrecognised. Its not unique to being autistic

    Indeed, I wasn't intending to suggest that we are all broken and that we are the source of the world's problems. I'm just trying to suggest that some leaders and some individuals who have problems may have autistic traits.

    Most autistic people are honest, decent and lovely people and actually we have problems with being too honest sometimes. Inability to tell a "white lie" is a common problem for autistic people.

    The problem comes when someone generalises and then discriminates on the basis of what a few members of a group have done.

Children
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