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On Fri, 2003-07-18 at 13:57, jypsy [ janet norman-bain ] wrote:

> The crux of the matter.

> So what personalities do people with SPD have? To

> be exact, no two schizoids are completely alike,

> but one trait they all share is reclusiveness.

Have you ever read the book _Party of One: The Loners' Manifesto_ by

Anneli Rufus?

It's interesting.

--

" Organising a group of autistics is rather like herding cats. " -FAQ,

alt.support.autism

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***

I don't agree with Lorna Wing's statement that Asperger's syndrome should be

included in Schizoid Personality Disorder.

***

Neither do I Colin!!

Only earlier today I remarked that I am far more cut off from human contact

than most people here. As an Aspie I am probably high function, it's the

Schizoid PD that's the killer...

I am constantly aware of the difference between the two within myself...

AS = Hardware

SPD = Software (aka LEARNED)

Yet Jypsey is right...these conditions aren't specific viruses that can be

isolated definitively, they are a spectrum of humanity.

I was thinking today that the DSM might make more sense if we looked upon it

as we do a color chart for paint...a communication tool.

AS and SPD can be so similar in appearance that you would have to go back to

the cause to distinguish them from the outside. For instance it is very

unlikely that a child raised in a loving, nurturing family with no other

trauma would develop SPD, but he could certainly have AS.

I was raised with saturation childhood abuse, however, most people, even

from WORSE situations recover far more social and interactive functionality

than I did, the AS is the reason I couldn't.

Gaye

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Hi,

I'm so sorry about your childhood. I was abused (battered really

badly once and neglected -somewhat), but certainly not to that

extent. I don't think that my sympathy helps really, but still I

wanted to stay that it stinks that you were abused.

Camille

> ***

> I don't agree with Lorna Wing's statement that Asperger's syndrome

should be

> included in Schizoid Personality Disorder.

> ***

>

> Neither do I Colin!!

>

> Only earlier today I remarked that I am far more cut off from human

contact

> than most people here. As an Aspie I am probably high function,

it's the

> Schizoid PD that's the killer...

>

> I am constantly aware of the difference between the two within

myself...

>

> AS = Hardware

> SPD = Software (aka LEARNED)

>

> Yet Jypsey is right...these conditions aren't specific viruses that

can be

> isolated definitively, they are a spectrum of humanity.

>

> I was thinking today that the DSM might make more sense if we

looked upon it

> as we do a color chart for paint...a communication tool.

>

> AS and SPD can be so similar in appearance that you would have to

go back to

> the cause to distinguish them from the outside. For instance it is

very

> unlikely that a child raised in a loving, nurturing family with no

other

> trauma would develop SPD, but he could certainly have AS.

>

> I was raised with saturation childhood abuse, however, most people,

even

> from WORSE situations recover far more social and interactive

functionality

> than I did, the AS is the reason I couldn't.

>

> Gaye

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As long as we are talking about SPD...

Some time ago on this list, there was talk of a test for personality

disorders. I retook it, and my results are:

Paranoid PD, Schizoid PD, Schizotypal PD, Antisocial PD, Narcissistic

PD, Avoidant PD, Obsessive-compulsive PD: High

Antisocial, Borderline: Moderate

Histrionic, Dependent: Low

The URL is:

http://www.4degreez.com/misc/personality_disorder_test.mv

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wrote:

>

>

> > Some time ago on this list, there was talk of a test for

> > personality disorders. I retook it, and my results are:

>

> > Paranoid PD, Schizoid PD, Schizotypal PD, Antisocial PD,

> > Narcissistic PD, Avoidant PD, Obsessive-compulsive PD: High

> > Antisocial, Borderline: Moderate Histrionic, Dependent: Low

>

> You wrote antisocial twice, in different score ranges.

Ack... so I did. The " high " one was incorrect.

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> Some time ago on this list, there was talk of a test for personality

> disorders. I retook it, and my results are:

> Paranoid PD, Schizoid PD, Schizotypal PD, Antisocial PD, Narcissistic

> PD, Avoidant PD, Obsessive-compulsive PD: High

> Antisocial, Borderline: Moderate

> Histrionic, Dependent: Low

You wrote antisocial twice, in different score ranges.

As for me:

Schizoid, Schizotypal: Very High

Obsessive-Compulsive: High

Borderline, Narcissistic, Avoidant: Moderate

Paranoid, Antisocial, Histrionic, Dependent: Low

--

" Killing people with ignoring their humanness is a lowly righteous act. "

- Eastham

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Could it be??? am I hearing emotion expressed from a spectrum person?

Empathy, too??

Excuse the sarcasm, but it merely stresses a point I made before about the

fact that we *do* have both emotions and empathy, although not the way NTs

want to see them.

Like I said before, maybe one of us logically beautiful people should

rewrite the DSM - it would be easier to read 7 apply and would probably be

shorter.

Colin.

Re: Schizoid....

> Hi,

>

> I'm so sorry about your childhood. I was abused (battered really

> badly once and neglected -somewhat), but certainly not to that

> extent. I don't think that my sympathy helps really, but still I

> wanted to stay that it stinks that you were abused.

>

> Camille

>

>

>

> > ***

> > I don't agree with Lorna Wing's statement that Asperger's syndrome

> should be

> > included in Schizoid Personality Disorder.

> > ***

> >

> > Neither do I Colin!!

> >

> > Only earlier today I remarked that I am far more cut off from human

> contact

> > than most people here. As an Aspie I am probably high function,

> it's the

> > Schizoid PD that's the killer...

> >

> > I am constantly aware of the difference between the two within

> myself...

> >

> > AS = Hardware

> > SPD = Software (aka LEARNED)

> >

> > Yet Jypsey is right...these conditions aren't specific viruses that

> can be

> > isolated definitively, they are a spectrum of humanity.

> >

> > I was thinking today that the DSM might make more sense if we

> looked upon it

> > as we do a color chart for paint...a communication tool.

> >

> > AS and SPD can be so similar in appearance that you would have to

> go back to

> > the cause to distinguish them from the outside. For instance it is

> very

> > unlikely that a child raised in a loving, nurturing family with no

> other

> > trauma would develop SPD, but he could certainly have AS.

> >

> > I was raised with saturation childhood abuse, however, most people,

> even

> > from WORSE situations recover far more social and interactive

> functionality

> > than I did, the AS is the reason I couldn't.

> >

> > Gaye

>

>

>

>

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Mine:

Disorder | Rating

Paranoid: High

Schizoid: High

Schizotypal: High

Antisocial: Moderate

Borderline: Low

Histrionic: High

Narcissistic: High

Avoidant: Moderate

Dependent: Moderate

Obsessive-Compulsive: High

This does not sound like me! I know that who I am is a combination of

neuro-biological and environmental factors (some very negative), but some of

those labels I do not feel apply.

Re: Schizoid....

> wrote:

>

> >

> >

> > > Some time ago on this list, there was talk of a test for

> > > personality disorders. I retook it, and my results are:

> >

> > > Paranoid PD, Schizoid PD, Schizotypal PD, Antisocial PD,

> > > Narcissistic PD, Avoidant PD, Obsessive-compulsive PD: High

> > > Antisocial, Borderline: Moderate Histrionic, Dependent: Low

> >

> > You wrote antisocial twice, in different score ranges.

>

> Ack... so I did. The " high " one was incorrect.

>

>

>

>

>

>

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Gaye,

I hope I didn't offend you with my earlier remarks about empathy. That was

not my intention. Maybe I can't feel & share your pain, but I do

understand.

My father (SPD Supremo, Master Manipulator of " lesser mortals - like me) was

a bully in all respects of the word. I was the (obvious) weirdo/eccentric

freak in the family (even though my mother, three brothers & most of their

offspring appear to be on the spectrum). I was also the " runt of the

litter " with medical problems to boot, and a total embarrassment to my

father. He also sees money as more important than people. My second

brother has been a diligent student.

I am sorry, I am ranting again. Where was I? Oh, I agree with you. I used

to be trusting to the point of gullibility, thinking that most human beings

operated under some code or set of rules. When I wised up, I became very

distrusting. I have experienced a hard time " bouncing back " because of my

aspie nature.

I hope I explained myself this time. This has been very emotional for me.

Colin (without NT emotions or empathy).

RE: Schizoid....

> ***

> I don't agree with Lorna Wing's statement that Asperger's syndrome should

be

> included in Schizoid Personality Disorder.

> ***

>

> Neither do I Colin!!

>

> Only earlier today I remarked that I am far more cut off from human

contact

> than most people here. As an Aspie I am probably high function, it's the

> Schizoid PD that's the killer...

>

> I am constantly aware of the difference between the two within myself...

>

> AS = Hardware

> SPD = Software (aka LEARNED)

>

> Yet Jypsey is right...these conditions aren't specific viruses that can be

> isolated definitively, they are a spectrum of humanity.

>

> I was thinking today that the DSM might make more sense if we looked upon

it

> as we do a color chart for paint...a communication tool.

>

> AS and SPD can be so similar in appearance that you would have to go back

to

> the cause to distinguish them from the outside. For instance it is very

> unlikely that a child raised in a loving, nurturing family with no other

> trauma would develop SPD, but he could certainly have AS.

>

> I was raised with saturation childhood abuse, however, most people, even

> from WORSE situations recover far more social and interactive

functionality

> than I did, the AS is the reason I couldn't.

>

> Gaye

>

>

>

>

>

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Hi,

NTs can only guess at what autistics feel. They guess wrong, often.

I think that professionals working with AS (kids of course for the

main part) say that people with AS are totally aware of their own

emotions. I mean if you listen to some of the young people

especially on some lists, they really want to talk about how they

feel; afraid, lonely, neglected, unapreciated, gleeful. Maybe the

adults do to, but I think adults post things that are more cerebral.

At any rate. For me, it is definately a cerebral process, but I can

empathize because I know that that person probably felt like I felt.

If I felt really scared and my heart pounded and I couldn't figure

out what to do about various situations I faced as a kid, I can

reasonably assume that other Aspies also felt that way. Then I

think, That stinks!!

Wording sympathetic responses is hard. I don't know if I am sounding

too sappy or if I am being annoying, etc.

I have a kind of moral imperative that I try to follow that

says, " you should try to help lighten other people's loads if you

can " .

BUT, I also laugh at people's hardships if I judge that

they " deserved " them. I think that's common in AS, but I don't

know. I can be really mean sometimes inside.

Camille

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.... which is why I can write a great business letter, report etc. Add some

emotions and I'm sunk.

Re: Schizoid....

>

>

> > NTs can only guess at what autistics feel. They guess wrong, often.

>

> Agreed.

>

> > At any rate. For me, it is definately a cerebral process, but I can

> > empathize because I know that that person probably felt like I felt.

>

> > If I felt really scared and my heart pounded and I couldn't figure

> > out what to do about various situations I faced as a kid, I can

> > reasonably assume that other Aspies also felt that way. Then I

> > think, That stinks!!

>

> For me, I actually have a fairly high rate of automatic non-cerebralized

> ability to interpret autistic emotional body language. I don't have the

> same thing with NTs.

>

> > Wording sympathetic responses is hard. I don't know if I am sounding

> > too sappy or if I am being annoying, etc.

>

> I don't know how to respond that way either.

>

> > BUT, I also laugh at people's hardships if I judge that

> > they " deserved " them. I think that's common in AS, but I don't

> > know. I can be really mean sometimes inside.

>

> I think that's actually common in general. I've seen a lot of NTs do it

> too.

>

>

>

> --

> One meets his destiny often on the road he takes to avoid it

>

>

>

>

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Hi,

In the past maybe 10 years I think that I can just get the " vibe " of

who someone is and how sincere they are etc, I think it is

subconscious reading of body language. I am comfortable with the few

autistic people I have been around. I don't know if I can read their

body language, I haven't really thought about it. I posted that I

think that my friend Jimmy (low functioning Fragile X and autism)

spotted me as a kindred spirit immediately. And I know that his odd

movements and noises; rocking, mouthing his finger tips...never

bugged me.

Camille

> For me, I actually have a fairly high rate of automatic non-

cerebralized

> ability to interpret autistic emotional body language. I don't

have the

> same thing with NTs.

>

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> NTs can only guess at what autistics feel. They guess wrong, often.

Agreed.

> At any rate. For me, it is definately a cerebral process, but I can

> empathize because I know that that person probably felt like I felt.

> If I felt really scared and my heart pounded and I couldn't figure

> out what to do about various situations I faced as a kid, I can

> reasonably assume that other Aspies also felt that way. Then I

> think, That stinks!!

For me, I actually have a fairly high rate of automatic non-cerebralized

ability to interpret autistic emotional body language. I don't have the

same thing with NTs.

> Wording sympathetic responses is hard. I don't know if I am sounding

> too sappy or if I am being annoying, etc.

I don't know how to respond that way either.

> BUT, I also laugh at people's hardships if I judge that

> they " deserved " them. I think that's common in AS, but I don't

> know. I can be really mean sometimes inside.

I think that's actually common in general. I've seen a lot of NTs do it

too.

--

One meets his destiny often on the road he takes to avoid it

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Hi Camille,

***

NTs can only guess at what autistics feel. They guess wrong, often.

***

Sometime last night, looking up some peripheral stuff with a search engine,

I caught a doozy...a one paragraph definition of aspergers " disease " here:

http://www.netalive.org/topics/12428?show=all

" Asperger's Disease

The plague of those who 'cannot feel', sufferers of this disease simply can

not empathises and it is said many criminals suffer from this disorder. It

is named after the man Hans Asperger who studied the disease in NAZI youth

during the NAZI youth movement. "

Yes, I am speechless too...

***

I have a kind of moral imperative that I try to follow that

says, " you should try to help lighten other people's loads if you

can " .

***

I suffer from that...but I think it's ok to?

;o)

Gaye

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Oh no Colin,

Of course you didn't offend me...I actually felt we were saying the same

thing from both sides! Let me stress that I agree with you completely. It

seems to me that you are sure SPD and AS are seperate because you are sure

you do not has SPD. I am sure they are seperate because am sure that I DO

have both quite seperately.

I am sure, in my heart of hearts, that if I'd had at least one nurturing

parent, or access to a little common or garden humanity and kindness as a

child, even just the experience of another human being it wasn't dangerous

to trust young enough, I would be nowhere near as withdrawn as I am, and yet

just as Aspie. To me that is as certain a proof that SPD is a seperate

disorder as not having it!

The DSM offends me a lot, apparently I have AT LEAST as double dose of " no

empathy " from the SPD and the AS, wish somebody had told me that sooner then

I might not have got myself into so much hot water all my life trying to

help out others who were in a worse case than myself! *chuckles*

Of course there is no way of knowing whether the motivation is true empathy

or projective identification, which can be the fast road to gullability...

....and I can definately relate to the need to recalibrate one's

gullability...I just used to assume that people were either exactly like me,

or (in rarer cases) covertly monsterous like my parents...I have now learned

that it is safer to assume " monsterous " , whether that is accurate or

not...but heck, who needs an accurate assessment of people outside to hide

in a hole in the ground? ;o)

Gaye

Re: Schizoid....

Gaye,

I hope I didn't offend you with my earlier remarks about empathy. That was

not my intention. Maybe I can't feel & share your pain, but I do

understand.

My father (SPD Supremo, Master Manipulator of " lesser mortals - like me) was

a bully in all respects of the word. I was the (obvious) weirdo/eccentric

freak in the family (even though my mother, three brothers & most of their

offspring appear to be on the spectrum). I was also the " runt of the

litter " with medical problems to boot, and a total embarrassment to my

father. He also sees money as more important than people. My second

brother has been a diligent student.

I am sorry, I am ranting again. Where was I? Oh, I agree with you. I used

to be trusting to the point of gullibility, thinking that most human beings

operated under some code or set of rules. When I wised up, I became very

distrusting. I have experienced a hard time " bouncing back " because of my

aspie nature.

I hope I explained myself this time. This has been very emotional for me.

Colin (without NT emotions or empathy).

RE: Schizoid....

> ***

> I don't agree with Lorna Wing's statement that Asperger's syndrome should

be

> included in Schizoid Personality Disorder.

> ***

>

> Neither do I Colin!!

>

> Only earlier today I remarked that I am far more cut off from human

contact

> than most people here. As an Aspie I am probably high function, it's the

> Schizoid PD that's the killer...

>

> I am constantly aware of the difference between the two within myself...

>

> AS = Hardware

> SPD = Software (aka LEARNED)

>

> Yet Jypsey is right...these conditions aren't specific viruses that can be

> isolated definitively, they are a spectrum of humanity.

>

> I was thinking today that the DSM might make more sense if we looked upon

it

> as we do a color chart for paint...a communication tool.

>

> AS and SPD can be so similar in appearance that you would have to go back

to

> the cause to distinguish them from the outside. For instance it is very

> unlikely that a child raised in a loving, nurturing family with no other

> trauma would develop SPD, but he could certainly have AS.

>

> I was raised with saturation childhood abuse, however, most people, even

> from WORSE situations recover far more social and interactive

functionality

> than I did, the AS is the reason I couldn't.

>

> Gaye

>

>

>

>

>

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Well, I took the test, and seem to have all things in moderation...EXCEPT

Anti-social and histrionic, which are low...

Methinks this test lacks a certain je ne sais quoi in terms of accuracy?

Gaye

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> As long as we are talking about SPD...

Jypsy's post yesterday about SPD really worried me, and I spent

a LOT of time considering it's possibility as a Dx for me. I

read (and printed out) the ICD 10 description, and compared it

to the DSM IV for AS. While I was going to college, in 1975,

I ran across some info that made me think I was schizoid. I

wrote a poem about it, a long, weird one, that is included in

my web page. www.mogulmarketing.com/clay/chipsy/htm

I took the test this morning, and here are the results:

Disorder / Rating

Paranoid: High

Schizoid: High

Schizotypal: High

Antisocial: Moderate

Borderline: Low

Histrionic: Low

Narcissistic: Moderate

Avoidant: Very high

Dependent: Moderate

Obsessive-Compulsive: High

So now, I don't know what to think. I fit a lot of the

descriptions for schizoid personality, but I think the

descriptions for AS fit even better. Could I be both?

Clay

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> Well, I took the test, and seem to have all things in moderation...EXCEPT

> Anti-social and histrionic, which are low...

> Methinks this test lacks a certain je ne sais quoi in terms of accuracy?

Well for one thing, it counts being *called* manipulative or cruel as

*being* manipulative or cruel. When in fact they are two separate

things.

--

" Organising a group of autistics is rather like herding cats. " -FAQ,

alt.support.autism

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***

Well for one thing, it counts being *called* manipulative or cruel as

*being* manipulative or cruel. When in fact they are two separate

things.

***

Further to that and at a slight tangent ...look at questions like

this:

" Do others see you as being cold and distant? "

As a very true Schizoid, people do not see me to hold an opinion, and even

if they did, I don't know them well enough to know what their opinion

is...so how does a " yes/no " answer show anything?

My feeling is that it is a very crude " teen magazine " level test that means

little or nothing...

Gaye

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Clay wrote:

> So now, I don't know what to think. I fit a lot of the descriptions

> for schizoid personality, but I think the descriptions for AS fit

> even better. Could I be both?

The short answer IMO is yes, I think you can be both, although that is

probably not the case.

AS makes people have social difficulties. It is neurodevelopmental in

nature; it is not caused by any bad experience with people. People with

AS range from those that are social and friendly and want to have

friends and a social life, but are rejected by their peers because they

are weird, to people that are mostly asocial and hate social contact.

These latter people would fit the SPD definition pretty well. The

syndrome covers everything that is in SPD, so if you have the SPD

definition met (as I do), but you also have an AS/autism diagnosis, I

would say that you have AS or autism and not SPD.

Now, I can see a caveat to this. Since SPD is a personality disorder,

it can be the result of traumatic experience, like being constantly

rejected and taunted (or pummeled) by your peers. This is where the

aspie that is " active but odd, " the one who tries to be friendly but

always ends up with people hating him for his efforts, can be so

traumatized by the abuse that he develops SPD. Rather than being

friendly and weird, he becomes aloof and solitary. Although this may

look like part of AS, in this case, it would not be, since the aloofness

and asociality came from the abuse, not from within.

I would expect that most people on the spectrum, having had negative

social experiences in life, may be a mix of innate solitary and learned

solitary traits. In addition, the ICD-10 does seem to prohibit dual dx

of SPD and AS, so I would have to say that the learned asociality

portion of AS is just considered part of AS, not a separate PD.

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> The short answer IMO is yes,

> I think you can be both, although

> that is probably not the case.

Thanks, ,

I was thinking pretty much the same thing awhile ago,

when I realized that I was " different " long before

anything bad had happened to me. Here's the thing -

I was an " aware " baby. I don't know how to say it

any other way. I can remember thinking, " They don't

know I'm (inside) here. " A sentient infant. My mother

said I starting walking and talking at 10 months, but

I was *thinking* long before that. This inner-directed

thinking has been the mainstay of my existence. I'm

also hypersensitive in every way, I don't see anything

about that under SPD. Or the hyperlexia, or........

Clay

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

" National events detemine our ideals, as much as

our ideals determine national events. - Jane Addams -

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***

I would expect that most people on the spectrum, having had negative

social experiences in life, may be a mix of innate solitary and learned

solitary traits. In addition, the ICD-10 does seem to prohibit dual dx

of SPD and AS, so I would have to say that the learned asociality

portion of AS is just considered part of AS, not a separate PD.

***

ICD-10 doesn't PROHIBIT Dual diagnosis...it " excludes " the following from

SPD as not being the same disorder:

* Asperger's syndrome

* delusional disorder

* schizoid disorder of childhood

* schizophrenia

* schizotypal disorder

And includes and excludes the following from AS:

Includes:

* autistic psychopathy

* schizoid disorder of childhood

Excludes:

* anakastic personality disorder

* attachment disorders of childhood

* obsessive-compulsive disorder

* schizotypical disorder

* simple schizophrenia

If you look at other disorders it becomes apparent that the " excludes " and

" includes " are intended to establish which are true synonyms among a

plethora of US and European Terms, and which are similar disorders (and

anybody who is unhappy with the " P " word featuring among the " includes " can

come and join my club! *shudders*).

Apart from which

I agree there is a range of asociality, in response to " normal "

circumstances that is most definately an almost unavoidable part of AS, but

there is also an abnormal range in response to abnormal circumstances that

is not part of AS...and yet does not exclude it.

Gaye

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wrote:

>Some time ago on this list, there was talk of a test for personality

>disorders. I retook it, and my results are:

>Paranoid PD, Schizoid PD, Schizotypal PD, Antisocial PD, Narcissistic

>PD, Avoidant PD, Obsessive-compulsive PD: High

>Antisocial, Borderline: Moderate

>Histrionic, Dependent: Low

>The URL is:

>http://www.4degreez.com/misc/personality_disorder_test.mv

I was back at work (which means back to web access)

yesterday after taking Friday and Monday off for a

visit from one of my sisters. (She's just about the

best guest imaginable for me, but having her here used

up all my energy nevertheless.) So I took that " test. "

Results: " Low " on everything except Narcissistic (moderate)

and Schizoid, Schizotypal, Obsessive Compulsive (all high);.

IMO, that test is not worth a fig. (Took me a while to

come up with a polite way to say that.) I base that

opinion not on the " results " it gave in my case but on the

ludicrousness of expecting questions like that to tell

anything useful about anyone, esp. at long distance.

Jane

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