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General Parenting
Classic Asperger's.
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<blockquote data-quote="Ktllc" data-source="post: 590592" data-attributes="member: 11847"><p>Your emotions are completely understandable. You need time to process it all. What I also find hard to do once we finally get the asnwer (or we know we get the right final answer/diagnosis) is to move on and think of actual interventions and not analyse every single event in order to convince doctors that something is going on. </p><p>It's like you have to do a mind shift: now I know something is off and it is call Asperger's in your case, let's build an effective treatment plan. Having to talk to the school, the recreational programs, talk to the siblings about the diagnosis and it's impact on life, etc... </p><p>It is a process and I think everyone wil do it in its own way.</p><p>Having your husband on your side is very precious! </p><p>I personally saw the diagnosis as good news. Finally the fight was over in a sense: V's difficulties were agknowledge and it opened doors for him (therapy wise).</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Ktllc, post: 590592, member: 11847"] Your emotions are completely understandable. You need time to process it all. What I also find hard to do once we finally get the asnwer (or we know we get the right final answer/diagnosis) is to move on and think of actual interventions and not analyse every single event in order to convince doctors that something is going on. It's like you have to do a mind shift: now I know something is off and it is call Asperger's in your case, let's build an effective treatment plan. Having to talk to the school, the recreational programs, talk to the siblings about the diagnosis and it's impact on life, etc... It is a process and I think everyone wil do it in its own way. Having your husband on your side is very precious! I personally saw the diagnosis as good news. Finally the fight was over in a sense: V's difficulties were agknowledge and it opened doors for him (therapy wise). [/QUOTE]
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