Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My DD was diagnosed at 7 and we told her. We took younger DS in for an evaluation a few years later and received the same diagnosis for him but we didn’t tell him or anyone else for that matter because how the school and her peers treated my daughter was really harmful to her quality of life. DS is now 21, in college, was his class valedictorian, has a great group of friends and great girlfriend and is really happy. DD is doing well too, but has long term PTSD and social anxiety issues due to the trauma and bullying she experienced from her peers because of the diagnosis.
Your son does not have a lot of friends, a girlfriend and Asperger's top. That doesn't happen. It sounds like your children had terrible evaluators.
Anonymous wrote:My DD was diagnosed at 7 and we told her. We took younger DS in for an evaluation a few years later and received the same diagnosis for him but we didn’t tell him or anyone else for that matter because how the school and her peers treated my daughter was really harmful to her quality of life. DS is now 21, in college, was his class valedictorian, has a great group of friends and great girlfriend and is really happy. DD is doing well too, but has long term PTSD and social anxiety issues due to the trauma and bullying she experienced from her peers because of the diagnosis.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My DD was diagnosed at 7 and we told her. We took younger DS in for an evaluation a few years later and received the same diagnosis for him but we didn’t tell him or anyone else for that matter because how the school and her peers treated my daughter was really harmful to her quality of life. DS is now 21, in college, was his class valedictorian, has a great group of friends and great girlfriend and is really happy. DD is doing well too, but has long term PTSD and social anxiety issues due to the trauma and bullying she experienced from her peers because of the diagnosis.
I'm genuinely trying to understand this.
Are you saying that your daughter was bullied because people knew she was diagnosed as HFA? And that she wouldn't have been if she and others didn't know her Dx? Or that your son would have been bullied if his Dx had been disclosed to him and others?
Anonymous wrote:My DD was diagnosed at 7 and we told her. We took younger DS in for an evaluation a few years later and received the same diagnosis for him but we didn’t tell him or anyone else for that matter because how the school and her peers treated my daughter was really harmful to her quality of life. DS is now 21, in college, was his class valedictorian, has a great group of friends and great girlfriend and is really happy. DD is doing well too, but has long term PTSD and social anxiety issues due to the trauma and bullying she experienced from her peers because of the diagnosis.
Anonymous wrote:My DD was diagnosed at 7 and we told her. We took younger DS in for an evaluation a few years later and received the same diagnosis for him but we didn’t tell him or anyone else for that matter because how the school and her peers treated my daughter was really harmful to her quality of life. DS is now 21, in college, was his class valedictorian, has a great group of friends and great girlfriend and is really happy. DD is doing well too, but has long term PTSD and social anxiety issues due to the trauma and bullying she experienced from her peers because of the diagnosis.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We have explained every strength and challenge to our kid. Against most of what I read here, we opted out of telling our kid about HFA. We know he would do google research and find out most school shooters have the same label and freak out. He knows everything he needs to know to advocate for himself and he does it well. I'm sure people will say I am crazy, but not giving him that label. Have told him his other labels...ADHD, hyperlexia, etc.
BS. Maybe you should do a Google search, to find out that's not true.
Anonymous wrote:We have explained every strength and challenge to our kid. Against most of what I read here, we opted out of telling our kid about HFA. We know he would do google research and find out most school shooters have the same label and freak out. He knows everything he needs to know to advocate for himself and he does it well. I'm sure people will say I am crazy, but not giving him that label. Have told him his other labels...ADHD, hyperlexia, etc.

