idontlikepinkandimstillfemale ·
18/10/2018 22:23
I'd love to know if anyone has anything to share on studies to do with autism and girls transitioning. I use as a disclaimer here that these are just some of my personal ideas and anecdotal, I welcome anyone who has any research to contribute.
I have a friend with a daughter diagnosed with Aspergers. There were many things about her that I identified with myself. I subsequently did a lot of reading into Aspergers (at least 30 books, countless articles online, not just a few websites) in females, and sought a diagnosis for myself. Good god, I had a job getting to see anyone, there are so few experts on this due to the ways in which autism presents itself differently in girls, and the historical gender bias in the data. Because it took so long I eventually left the country before I had the chance to go through the diagnostic process. So in any case, I can't claim to have a diagnosis (as a lot of women don't, for the same reasons as mine), so I won't say absolutely I am on the spectrum, but I do have a wide variety of traits.
Autistic people (I don't use person centred language as a lot of autistic people themselves don't like it) tend to be gender non-conforming. This could be due to lesser sensitivity to social conditioning which go along with impaired issues with processing social information. I'm personally gender non-conforming, from my earliest memories I felt 'different' to other girls, I didn't identify with how they reacted to social interaction, expressed themselves, their interests. I have always hated it when girls and boys are put into separate groups, when there were separate dress codes, any separate rules at all really made me feel really uncomfortable and still do. Girls are socialised to be nurturing and caring and generally expected to be better at social behaviour than boys. Once they get to puberty and social communication becomes more complex, particularly for girls, this can be where they start to have real problems. Autistic kids often describe feeling like an alien that has somehow landed on a planet where they don't belong, and this is how I felt too. I said countless times right into my late teens that I wondered if I was really male, or if I should be male, despite having no issue with my actual body. A disproportionate amount of autistic people are also gay or bisexual. All this adds up to looking very similar to being trans. But it's not, it's being autistic, and possibly also gay. I'm trying to suggest that because there is so little knowledge on the presentation of autism in females, this could cause problems in correctly determining which issues are to do with autism and which are to do with gender identity.