• I'm back on my BS 🤪@lemmy.autism.placeM
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    4 months ago

    Wowwww, I can relate to this a lot. Thank you so much for sharing.

    And my teachers were split along one half having given up on me (avoiding judgement and conflict) and the other projecting their own dreams of how an “eccentric, intelligent, troubled child/teenager” should look, supporting me.

    It’s possible a few of them were aware you were autistic. I found out in mid-life. When I did my assessment, the psychologist helped me realize that my parents definitely knew and I was under some sort of individualize plan for autistic kids throughout public school. Another thing is that I always thought I looked weird on video, but wouldn’t think much of it since many people say they don’t like to see themselves on video. After my adult diagnosis, I started looking at videos of level 1 autistic people and then videos of me. I realized it’s super evident that I’m autistic. If someone has experience with level one autistic people, they can probably spot it within minutes. Teachers have lots of experience with kids. They can see a lot more than we realize.

    Good luck at your assessment!

    • Wxnzxn@lemmy.ml
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      4 months ago

      Thank you, it’s going to be a few months, waiting lists are crazy long here. I’m from Germany, and awareness for autism here lacks heavily behind the english speaking world. It’s getting better, see for example how my nephew thankfully got a diagnosis as a child now, but not too long ago, if you were able to mask in any way and not easily identifiable as disabled along a stereotype, people never thought to consider it.

      I wouldn’t rule out completely that some teachers at school could have known or suspected, but they at least never said as much, and I wasn’t in any special programs or got special counseling at school. Especially back then, the idea of autism in the general public and even non-specialised psychologists and psychiatrists over here was still “mutism and barely able to function” - which is probably why the psychologists and psychiatrists I saw as a child and teenager also never considered it.

      I talked a lot with my mother since my nephew was diagnosed and I and my sister started to research what the current understanding of it is, and she at least just outright ruled it out back then. She actually had been trying to find some sort of pathology for me for my “otherness” as a kid, but because she had a mismatched idea of what autism is (ironically from learning a lot about it in, like, the 60s or 70s), she never properly considered that as a possibility. Both her and my (dead by now) father show(ed) at least some signs for autism, too, but neither ever got any diagnosis or help. My mother is too old by now, and doesn’t want to bother with anything like a diagnosis, but she has acknowledged a lot of the signs from the new understanding of ASD fit into her own childhood, youth and overall life too.

      Most of the support by the teachers that liked me was basically behind the scenes, putting a word in for me in conferences and stuff like that. I barely scraped by 10th grade without repeating, by having just enough excelling courses to counteract the ones I was failing (latin and physical education in my case). The system for advancing there is a bit complicated here in Germany, especially because it’s different from state to state, but there ended up being a conference that decided if I was allowed to advance into 11th grade, where the teachers that supported me came in clutch. Similar stuff happened with my massive amount of sick days and days where I simply did not show up without an excuse and how that was handled and how it was not sanctioned as harshly as it could have been. All the while, I acted nonchalant, even a bit arrogant, around teachers, which some of them seemingly found endearing, because I was also clever enough to do well in the subjects I didn’t openly boycott. I also got really good at stuff people probably would not expect, like public speaking and holding presentations as well as acting in the theatre group - which all followed very clear rules about how to act and present yourself that I learned to emulate (but also still was pretty exhausting). But especially back then, I’d expect people taking that as a clear sign that “that kid can’t be autistic”.

      So, long story short, while I wouldn’t rule it out, the lack of awareness for the condition over here - especially back then in the 90s/early 2000s - makes me think that there probably was no one who really suspected autism, and while I was seeing psychologists a lot and was in a psychiatric clinic as a teenager for a while, I never got any special programs suited for autistic people, which over here and back then were extremely rare to begin with.

      Thanks again, and good luck to you too with your future and present! It’s good you got help in recontextualising those parts of your past as well, that is worth a lot.

      • I'm back on my BS 🤪@lemmy.autism.placeM
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        4 months ago

        I wasn’t in any special programs or got special counseling at school.

        I didn’t think so either. I was told that my grandma and I periodically saw a “doctor” to check in on things by talking to him1, rode the little bus because the main bus was full2, that I got leniency with conduct grades because they knew I was a good kid3, and got placed in advanced classes because I was really smart4.

        1: I was seeing a psychologist/psychiatrist 2: It was the literal short bus for special kids 3: Let me slide because they knew I had mental things going on, especially ADHD. I didn’t do things that hurts others, but I couldn’t stay still or stay focused. 4: I was put in gifted even though I couldn’t figure out how to do most things other kids could do naturally, needed very specific instructions, needed to know why for everything, and was quite developmentally delayed with a lot of main milestones

        Most of the support by the teachers that liked me was basically behind the scenes, putting a word in for me in conferences and stuff like that. I barely scraped by 10th grade without repeating, by having just enough excelling courses to counteract the ones I was failing (latin and physical education in my case).

        Me too! I couldn’t read fiction. I loved reading encyclopedias, science books, Nintendo Power, and even comics, but I could not read fiction. It was like I was reading words, but they meant absolutely nothing. Yet, other students would read them and understand the story. My father would even drop me off at a library for hours with a book to read, and I would end up walking around and entertaining myself, figuring out their systems. I couldn’t sit down and read. The only book I naturally did that with was Animal Farm. That was the only fiction book I read until I got to college. Anyway, they let me slide a lot in English/Language Arts until high school when I had to start taking summer school and night classes to make up for failing the regular term.

        I’d expect people taking that as a clear sign that “that kid can’t be autistic”.

        I still encounter this as an adult. If I start paying attention for it, I can tell some people test to see if I am or not as if I was purposely pretending to be autistic for some selfish reason, whatever that may be. How stupid, lol. Yeah, I want to make my life harder and upset people out of selfishness 🙄

        while I was seeing psychologists a lot and was in a psychiatric clinic as a teenager for a while, I never got any special programs suited for autistic people, which over here and back then were extremely rare to begin with.

        That sucks! But I’m happy you finally found out and can now make adjustments. Good luck to you, and I’ll hopefully keep seeing you around here 🙂