Guest guest Posted March 29, 2010 Report Share Posted March 29, 2010 Good ‘Eavens, Breezy, So your husband only discovered that he belongs to the noble breed in his 70s?  Bill and I, both in our 70s at least discovered it all in our 60s.  I was perhaps pretty fortunate, in that I had been studying myself for many years, and just getting boxed up with the puzzles, and so when I learned about AS over a period of some 6 years or so, it came as no shock at the diagnosis.  It was a big relief and brought excitement as well as enlightenment.  My best wishes to him, Ron. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 29, 2010 Report Share Posted March 29, 2010 Thank you Ron. It came as a huge relief for my husband too. He said all his life he felt "out of sync" with the rest of the world and now finally he knows why. Learning about Aspergers has been a literal life changing event for him and a marriage altering event for both of us. Im glad we figured it out. Best Wishes Breezy Subject: RE: Breezy and AS hubby.To: aspires-relationships Date: Sunday, March 28, 2010, 7:35 PM Good ‘Eavens, Breezy, So your husband only discovered that he belongs to the noble breed in his 70s? Bill and I, both in our 70s at least discovered it all in our 60s. I was perhaps pretty fortunate, in that I had been studying myself for many years, and just getting boxed up with the puzzles, and so when I learned about AS over a period of some 6 years or so, it came as no shock at the diagnosis. It was a big relief and brought excitement as well as enlightenment. My best wishes to him, Ron. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 29, 2010 Report Share Posted March 29, 2010 I may felt out of sync at first, but I refuse to allow AS and ADHD to dictate how I live my life and carry out my dreams. > > > > Subject: RE: Breezy and AS hubby. > To: aspires-relationships > Date: Sunday, March 28, 2010, 7:35 PM > > >  > > > > > > Good ‘Eavens, Breezy, > So your husband only discovered that he belongs to the noble breed in his 70s?  Bill and I, both in our 70s at least discovered it all in our 60s.  I was perhaps pretty fortunate, in that I had been studying myself for many years, and just getting boxed up with the puzzles, and so when I learned about AS over a period of some 6 years or so, it came as no shock at the diagnosis.  It was a big relief and brought excitement as well as enlightenment.  My best wishes to him, > Ron. >  > > >  >  >  > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 29, 2010 Report Share Posted March 29, 2010 > >Good 'Eavens, Breezy, > >So your husband only discovered that he belongs to the noble breed in his 70s? Bill and I, both in our 70s at least >discovered it all in our 60s. I was perhaps pretty fortunate, in that I had been studying myself for many years, and just >getting boxed up with the puzzles, and so when I learned about AS over a period of some 6 years or so, it came as no >shock at the diagnosis. It was a big relief and brought excitement as well as enlightenment. My best wishes to him, Hm. I was 73 actually. Before that, like Ron, I'd studied myself for years; maybe 65 of them! So I *knew* all along I was *something*. But In those early days there weren't settled names, or descriptions, for what years later were called autism, Asperger's and the like. Yes, like so many others I was *relieved*, in fact elated, with the formal evaluation as autistic. Among other things it opened to me the large and growing body of knowledge *about people like me*. It allowed me a much more directed self-education, a sharper focus, than was possible before. No, I don't see autism _per_se_ as a disability. It's a different " way of being " . The cognitive style actually is an asset. Sometimes, *not always*, autism is accompanied by co-morbidities. The *same ones* NTs have by the way, just with different and sometimes higher incidence. Some of the co-morbidities (just like with NTs) can be pretty serious; and *those* often *are* disabilities. I have a few. None are serious enough to be " disabilities " . I do *not* have a disability! - Bill, dx AS WD " Bill " Loughman - Berkeley, California USA http://home.earthlink.net/~wdloughman/wdl.htm Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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