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by HHC-Hunter 945 days ago
If you're posting on the YC and not on the tism spectrum, something is up.

Also, perhaps you should understand their PoV, it is likely they have deeply thought something through and perhaps they find it best or understand that they simply do not need to communicate with you.

1 comments

If this person has an autism diagnosis then the condition may be strong. When people say "spectrum" they often mean those who don't have a diagnosis. Without more details it's hard to say anything about this situation.
This is blatantly wrong. A person who is "in the spectrum" is a person who is autistic, regardless of whether they had a formal diagnosis or not. They're just different ways of saying the same thing.
"On the spectrum" is both a soft term of art and very often a euphemism for either never seeking professional diagnosis or not being able to convince professionals that you warrant a diagnosis.

The difference between the population of those who have received a diagnosis and those who are on the spectrum is night and day, and it's often the line which separates whether you'll have any reasonable chance at life. The OP suspects his coworker has received such a diagnosis.

So when I hear OP say that his coworker may have a diagnosis, that absolutely changes the picture in my head. It's up to you to decide whether professional medical diagnosis is a signal to you.

Have a watch on this: https://infosec.exchange/@cakeisnotalie/111339054583410032

Next time, please be more empathetic to the people who have not been diagnosed for whatever reason. "On the spectrum" means autistic. Whatever other interpretation you might want to give it is on yourself.

Why would they consider themselves to be on the spectrum then? I mean technically the whole thing could be a spectrum of not austic to autistic. But it seems odd to have the spectrum not end at either point, the diagnosis or the one capturing all people.