Anonymous wrote:I’ve been friends with someone for a long time. I know her kids well. Her teen dd has had a lot of problems over the years and I feel like all signs point to her being on the spectrum. I know you’ll say “the parents know, don’t butt in” but my friend tells me a lot of what’s going on and is constantly puzzled at why her dd is the way she is. The problem is that my friend is very very sensitive, so I worry that implying this or suggesting she get it checked out would throw her and it won’t bode well for her personal mental health. I also worry it could affect our friendship, but I would take that bullet if it would help the dd and the family. I’ve thought this for a few years now and I’ve not said anything. But recently more came up and I thought of it again.
The family is generally wary of mental health professionals, so this is a road block for all of them.
I don’t want to post specifically what I see in case my friend is on here, but they are pretty textbook. Has anyone navigated something like this?
Anonymous wrote:I don’t see much value in getting an autism diagnosis as a teen. It’s not like there is a medication that helps treat it (like there is for ADHD). Therapy is often not helpful.
I don’t think there’s much value in a dx, but plenty of value in treating the symptoms that your friend’s child is struggling with. So if they are having anxiety, encourage them to see a dr for meds. If they are having social skill issues, encourage them to look into a social skills group. If they are having sensory issues or arfid, encourage looking into OT or therapy to help with that.
There is no pill or treatment that addresses autism as a whole, so the dx is less important that figuring out what specific issues she is struggling with, & finding some help for that.
Anonymous wrote:Why do you think she is on the spectrum? If it is just because she is socially awkward, then I think you need to realize that does not mean she has autism. The vast majority of socially awkward people do not have autism -- they are just not adept in social situations, like many others in the world. Let it go.
Anonymous wrote:Everyone’s on the spectrum.
Anonymous wrote:If it's a teen honestly there isn't much professionals do anyway. Maybe instead of the diagnosis comment you can just mention an issue to get looked at.