If you're considering a professional autism diagnosis, it's worth researching what a diagnosis would do for you.

Depending on individual circumstances, an autism diagnosis can put people in danger and I can't recommend it.

A diagnosis doesn't really give you more information on autism, it just confirms you are autistic. It can mean you get accommodations for school or work, and help you get disability pensions and the like. For those things a diagnosis would be required. You don't need a diagnosis to understand the condition, be part of the community, or start making changes to your life.

So why might a professional diagnosis be bad? It depends on where you live and how marginalised you are as a person.
During 2020 there were many reports out of the UK of diagnosed autistic people being given involuntary Do Not Rescusitate orders by their doctors, to compensate for COVID hospital overwhelm. Some people did die. Autistic people across the world were also put lower on triage lists and received less care when hospitals rationed healthcare in that time. They were given lower priority for ventilation and other life support. This was the case for multiple countries, not just UK.

In the UK and some USA states, having an autism diagnosis can prevent you from accessing gender affirming care (trans healthcare), because of rising rhetoric that autistic people cannot do informed consent (which is bullshit). The expectation is this could get a lot worse and expand to more elective surgeries and treatments. So you need to consider how laws might become worse in the future.

I have heard anecdotal evidence of an autism diagnosis being used as evidence against autistic parents and then having children removed from the family. Sometimes after court the children are returned, but it's an awful process.

If you are a thin, white, cishet man who is unlikely to be thrown under the bus in a medical setting, you are probably pretty safe. If you have concerns about the other things I spoke of, then I would talk to more people and look at the laws where you live that may impact you. I urge BIPOC folks especially to consult the BIPOC autistic community on this.

To clarify, a diagnosis of autism in a vacuum is not dangerous. It's not different to a diagnosis of other things. However due to recent politics, there are risks attached and for some people its a considered decision.

#autistic #autism #actuallyAutistic #neurodivergent #neurodiversity #disability #NEISvoid #disabled
@disability

@essie_is_okay To take this a step further, one or two "scientific" articles have claimed that autistic people are more likely to be trans (I'm not using the specific medical term they used for obvious reasons). The response from the autistic scientific community has been that autistic people are more likely to come out as non-binary or trans because they are less impacted by social norms.
In the same vein, I know trans friends who refuse to identify as autistic because they don't want another medically labelled identification, with the attendant prejudice in our society.
@olireiv @essie_is_okay I’m not so sure it is social norms so much as that most autistic people just fall on the LGBT spectrum (70%), which we know isn’t socially constructed. Straight cis autistics like myself are an outlier. Now the preference for polyamory, which I’ve also practiced, is socially constructed and autistic people are more likely to be polyamorous because of less adherence to social norms. But sexual orientation and gender identity tend to be hard wired. I mean my poor mom wanted a bull-dyke for a daughter. I was a constant disappointment to her because I was too tiny and girly to be that. She was SO disappointed when I told her I liked boys.
@cadenza @essie_is_okay You raise an excellent point, but even certain feelings known to be hardwired or innate are considered by some to be social constructs. [edit: and "psychological construction and neuroconstruction", so I think the both of us are right]
Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Theory_of_constructed_emotion
Theory of constructed emotion - Wikipedia

@olireiv @essie_is_okay well, yeah, how those traits are expressed is definitely affected by society. I mean, in Elizabethan England, homosexuality didn’t exist as a concept, but it “passionate” same-sex friendships were quite common. It was not unusual for a deep intimate friendship to become sexualized. Like marriage was for continuation of property and if you managed to marry for love, bully for you, but it wasn’t considered the *point* of marriage. But friendship was rarer, deeper, and more intimate than we consider it today.
@cadenza @essie_is_okay Since you are a filmmaker, I believe this article/essay may interest you:
https://autcollab.org/2023/06/26/life-is-at-bottom-diversity
Life is, at bottom, diversity

Click here to use Google translate to read in your language. All living systems, from the smallest forms of life to the planetary ecosystem are best understood as complex systems of feedback loops.…

Autistic Collaboration
@olireiv @essie_is_okay hmm this reminds me of what my best friend once said: “The problem with you is that you think so far out of the box.” I responded autisticly, “There is a box? What is this box of which you speak?”

@cadenza @olireiv @essie_is_okay

I find US neurotypicals oversell themselves on the benefits of compliance and conformity.

I don't it at all the same way.