ah, there's another memory getting audited for Autism - Dad's this time.
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My sib would do something hyperactive, break something and Dad would start in on them for it, and they would start to say, "I didn't think (something)," and Dad would cut them off with, "That's right, you DON'T think (like, period)," and it's still rather shit of Dad, but boy oh boy, don't I, maybe don't we, think that about people sometimes, don't you people ever stop and think, LOL.
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I mean, that's what CBT says too.
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#ND #AuDHD #ActuallyAutistic @autistics #Psychology

@punishmenthurts @autistics This thinking is based on the idea that people with ADHD are able to think in these situations the same way you (presumably) are. It's like berating someone with autism for not recognizing all subtle social signals, or criticizing someone with depression for not feeling motivation to clean their apartment. The problem with ADHD is that the brain mechanisms for recognizing when you should "think" are compromised. That's what "impulsivity" means.

I suspect a practitioner of CBT would disagree with your assessment of how ADHD is viewed through that lens, as well.

@guyjantic @autistics
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oh, of course, I'm sorry. I was framing this all as Autistics VS the world, VS the normals - and counting my sib as a normal - my sibling was high energy but they weren't diagnosed or apparently disabled, they were having a life before they got sick and died.
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Maybe something would have come to light later in life, hard to say. It's possible. Sorry. 💜
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and again, I said, "hyperactive," but I'm talking about Autism, not ADHD, it wasn't about CBT treating ADHD, it was about CBT treating anybody. "Stop and think," is the whole CBT plan.