Paddy McGuiness and Autism Test

Apparently most of society has some autistic tendencies in them, more so when they are children, they usually decrease as people age.

I think that is very true and after watching the actual program, what became obvious was that as we become older and more experienced, we learn how to cope with and hide it. Thinking back to when I was at school all those decades ago, there were many kids with various behaviour issues. Most of us just got on with life, learned what was acceptable in society and muddled along just fine. I remember I was a bit retarded with reading and writing, simply a result of being left handed and the fact the would ties my left hand behind my back, to force me to use my right. That treatment put my back up and made me even less interested in learning, yet in many things - I was well ahead of the rest of the class. I can now work just fine with either hand, but I still write with my right and my hand writing is terrible.

I think it's only really an issue if it has a dramatic effect on ones ability to enjoy a "normal" lifestyle.

Yes, if you low on the spectrum, you do just learn to cope. One of my 'girl friends' had a 10 year old granddaughter, who genuinely was well up the spectrum. The first autism sufferer I had ever come across and I was quite curious as know a bit about it, plus her behaviour problems, so a couple of times I took her out to see the local sights. Very strange, almost like an automaton. Never got exited about anything, everything matter of fact, never smiled or laughed, never acted like a normal 10 year old, I took her for a McD which she wanted and chose, yet she picked out only certain bits of it to eat. I had to keep hold of her all the time, or she would be wandering off. She had to be told to do absolutely everything, but she was brilliant on video games, on tablets. The only time she acted like a 10 year old, was when I took her to Royal Armouries and there they have a section for kids, where they could dress up in Middle Age costumes. Other kids played there together, she on her own just trying one thing on after another.
 
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Where is the test?

I wasn;t able to refind it, but it was devised by a guy at Cambridge who had been studying it for 26 years. There were (Ithink) 50 questions, each with four answers, them at the end it gave your the result. I scored 36, at the bottom end.
 
We did an Autism Awareness night at Scouts and to be honest it was quite uneasy for me (and a bit of an eye opener).

I have some oddities but never thought anything about them before hand.

This doesn't look good but to be honest explains a bit. Hey Ho too late to do anything about it now..

Screenshot_20211202-223534_Samsung Internet.jpg
 
These results indicate that...
you have a strong likelihood of Asperger’s Syndrome or autism.

My score was 24, does that put me in the “undiagnosed” category?
 
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I've always thought I was just miserable to be honest but there was other things that rang a bell, I hate doing anything I haven't pre-planned is one of them, plus I'm a stickler for details.

Maybe that's just life in general!.
 
I've always thought I was just miserable to be honest but there was other things that rang a bell, I hate doing anything I haven't pre-planned is one of them, plus I'm a stickler for details.

Maybe that's just life in general!.

I'm the opposite, I like an impromptu run to the coast, but I don't like things going not to plan and tend to over organise the precautions to ensure the trip goes precisely to plan. I was a terribly shy and easily embarrassed kid and still am in some ways, but managed to mostly overcome it as I got older. My hand would never go up in class, even when I thought I knew the answer, I was so scarred of getting it wrong and the resulting embarrassment.

In our final year at school, it was expected of you that you stand on the stage, with a microphone, in front of hundreds of pupils and read some sort of assembly lesson. I was absolutely terrified, made a complete muck of it, knock the mike over and had to be rescued.
 
Where is the test?
Look for the Baron-Cohen Test (yes, with that name he really is related to Sasha) or the AQ Test which is a basic indication test not proof positive.

The thing is that as stated elsewhere, autism is a spectrum, so everyone is on it, somewhere. In severe cases people with autism can be non-verbal but autistic people are frequently subject to co-morbidity with other traits such a ADHD, OCD behaviour, dyslexia, dyscalculia, over or under sensitivity to light, heat and pain, inability to read or respond to verbal and non-verbal cues in others (such as verbal hints or body language), poor social interaction skills, clumsiness, lack of coordination and poor motor skills, etc.

Far from being another "fiddle" to get benefits, in my limited experience autistic people are badly treated both by society in general and by the authorities such as the DWP some of whose staff take precisely that "they are only working a fiddle" attitude regardless of the medical facts presented to them
 
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I am unable to find it now, but out of curiosity I followed the link to do the same test as used by the McGuiness family, whom Paddy recently found out his entire family, apart from him, were on the spectrum.

Having done the test myself, sort of half heartedly, it seems I am too, but at the very lower end of the spectrum. Autism, once upon a time was simply never heard of, because it was never diagnosed as such, but I am being constantly surprised by the numbers of youngsters who I'm told are on the spectrum.
Increasing year on year, probably due to the amount of chemicals being injected into their young systems from such an early age.
 
Most if it is a load ball cocks imo

all these syndromes to basically excuse the fact that some people are A holes

all diagnosed by dome 200 £ an hour so called expert

we work for a land Lord who has one of these pia tenants with some syndrome ( allegedly)

blokes a total fruit cake who causes nothing but trouble only treatment he needs is a bar of
exlax

biggest syndrome in this country is the whinging syndrome
 
...all these syndromes to basically excuse the fact that some people are A holes...
How very charitably of you! Autism isn't an acquired "syndrome", it is in broad terms the description used to describe a group of neurodevelopmental conditions. You can't catch it, you can't develop it, an MMR jab won"t give you it and it can't be cured - if you are autistic you are born that way, some learn to cope with it, others can't. It is very much a disability in the same way that for example that cerebral palsy is. You should also be aware that people with it are given some protection in law from bigotry and discrimination by the Autism Act in the same way that ethic minorities are protected by racial discrimination legislation.
 
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