So shit like this is why autism goes undiagnosed & unrecognized so often.

These will be true of *some* autistic people, but it really has nothing to do with anything.

#ActuallyAutistic

And that's not even mentioning the fact that a lot of questions ignore the possibility that an autistic person may also have ADHD.

Like "It’s important to me to carefully plan any activities I am going to do". Ummm. I have ADHD, motherfuckers. Of course I don't carefully plan all my activities! How tf would I manage that when I'm fucking impulsive as all hell?

I do carefully plan A LOT of my activities, but "all/any" is so silly. It doesn't just ignore ADHD. It ignores the fact that people don't always act the same way in every situation.

It's so weird to put things in such absolute ways.

But the people writing diagnostic questions for autism don't consider that the person answering them might be obsessed with nuance & accuracy, which seems like a failing.

The true test of whether you're autistic is how much time you spend explaining that the diagnostic questions are unanswerable, overgeneralized, & hard to give a clear response to. πŸ˜…
@artemis
During my diagnosis there were like a hundred questionnaires, and several times there was this very annoying and suggestive question:
"Do you think people are talking about you?"
So i always wrote on the forms that it wasn't my thinking, but reality that people were talking about me - i actually heard it with my own ears! πŸ˜‚
It still pisses me off when people tend to ask questions this way.
@HannahCelsius @artemis Knowing how people are, who are they *not* talking about behind their backs? Is that a question to recognize the naive/clueless ones?

@Newstrujew
Could be.
I always thought the question was more about the prejudice that autists are suspicious, and that we think/make up things because of that.

@artemis