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<blockquote data-quote="BusynMember" data-source="post: 683532" data-attributes="member: 1550"><p>My son's first evaluations WERE wrong. If you are in the U.S., I strongly advise. If son is willing, to have a clear neuropsycologist exam that covers all issues but usually takes 6-10 hours. Since it is a neurological difference, rather than a psychiatric disorder, many psychiatrists and therapists don't recognize it and tend to misdiagnosed it.</p><p></p><p>Aspies, even brilliant ones, start out having severe social skills aND life skill gaps and often can't communicate, even though they may have college level vocabularies. Often these bright adults fail in life unless they accept help.</p><p></p><p>Aspies don't think conventionally so they are often seen as "weird." Example. Before my son taught himself to make eye contact, I gently asked why hI'm why he couldn't do it. He said, "eyes are gross."</p><p></p><p>Go figure.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="BusynMember, post: 683532, member: 1550"] My son's first evaluations WERE wrong. If you are in the U.S., I strongly advise. If son is willing, to have a clear neuropsycologist exam that covers all issues but usually takes 6-10 hours. Since it is a neurological difference, rather than a psychiatric disorder, many psychiatrists and therapists don't recognize it and tend to misdiagnosed it. Aspies, even brilliant ones, start out having severe social skills aND life skill gaps and often can't communicate, even though they may have college level vocabularies. Often these bright adults fail in life unless they accept help. Aspies don't think conventionally so they are often seen as "weird." Example. Before my son taught himself to make eye contact, I gently asked why hI'm why he couldn't do it. He said, "eyes are gross." Go figure. [/QUOTE]
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