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Sofia Jeppsson's avatar

This tension also comes up when people object to the label "high-functioning", and go "you have no idea how much I really struggle ..." and move on to detail their struggles. Or "you have no idea how badly and suddenly I deteriorate if my needs aren't accommodated and I'm in an unfavourable environment".

I don't have an autism diagnosis (I purposefully phrase it this way because for all I know, I might fit the criteria, might or might not). But I can recognize the impulse to insist that you struggle.

I meet people all the time who assume that once upon a time, I suffered from psychosis, but now, I have long since recovered and become normal. This is just factually wrong (as you know!). I must really take care of myself to avoid another breakdown, I have a whole host of mental tricks and coping mechanisms continuously employed or else I wouldn't function, and despite all this, I sometimes get worse, like last Christmas-new year (which I wrote about on my blog). Last Christmas-new year was not a relapse into full-blown psychosis but it WAS a close call.

So, I wanna explain this to people who erroneously assume that I'm sane and normal now, both because I don't want them to have factually incorrect beliefs about me, but also because the belief that there's a sharp line between psychotic and normal and you're on one side or the other is damaging to madpeople in general.

HOWEVER.

That doesn't mean that it's factually incorrect to say that I'm high-functioning. My function IS pretty damn high most of the time! And it would be wrong to point at some seriously struggling people on the schizo spectrum, I can think of some people I've come across in support groups, and go "we're actually THE SAME it's just that it doesn't SHOW as much on me".

The high-functioning label can absolutely be used in problematic ways. Masking, hard-struggling people close to their breaking point might be dismissed and denied support because they seem so high-functioning anyway. But that doesn't mean there are no real differences.

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Ilias Partsenidis's avatar

Excellent article Awais, thank you.

As per ICD-11 criteria autism/autism spectrum disorder is a neurodevelopmental condition, i.e. it has onset before the age of 18, with two essential features: persistent deficits in initiating and sustaining reciprocal social communication and interaction and restricted, repetitive, and inflexible patterns of behaviour, interests, or activities that are atypical or excessive. Autism can affect different areas e.g. executive functioning, sensory processing, information processing emotional regulation, motor skills, language, social skills etc. with different levels of severity so there is incredible variation in the way autistic people present but this doesn’t change the fact that on the basis of the available evidence at present autism is a single condition. So, I agree that “profound autism” should be just an administrative distinction not a separate condition. Furthermore, “zero level” autism is a very good term for people with subclinical autism or why not simply use “subclinical autism” or use the “Broader Autism Phenotype” (BAP) term?

Lastly, it’s important to note that autism/autism spectrum disorder is associated with increased morbidity (both mental and physical) and mortality and reduced life expectancy even in people who do not have significant support needs, for example there is increased risk of suicide, so clearly autism is a real medical condition not just a “difference” and “neurodiversity/neurodivergence” is neither a medical nor a scientific term.

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