Hey there! It’s time I make a post that I can refer back to regularly for this!
You clicked on the thing, didn’t you? Well, welcome to class! This is being taught by a VERY inexperienced teacher who has neither a teaching nor psychology degree. Still, I have gathered the utmost basic of basics that are needed to explain SPCD.
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Social (Pragmatic) Communication Disorder (SPCD) is basically one part of what happened to Asperger’s syndrome.
Yes. You read that right. The thing everyone says turned into Autism? Well, there’s always an exception.
Hi, I’m one of those exceptions!
Okay, the more nuanced and complicated part is in the further reading. What’s important here is that with the dissolution of Asperger’s syndrome and other autism-like syndromes my psychiatrist couldn’t place me in the Asperger’s category (which I fit full criteria for) nor the Autism category (which I’m 1 away from). Here’s basically what I mean as an image:
It’s very very simplified and a lot more was involved but this is what’s important for understanding what I mean.
Everyone who was previously diagnosed with Asperger’s now has Autism, but going forward they stick to the current criteria.
This is one of my issues with broadening the autism category, it makes the people like me feel alienated. I’m a stickler for only saying I (personally) have something if I have a diagnosis. Why? Well, it could be so many other things. I don’t tell others they have to do that though, I’m just big on doing it myself, y’know, to keep it very transparent.
I’m going to utilise a tumblr-ification one of the further reading things really quickly so you get an idea of what’s going on:
>Constantly struggling to:
->Talk to people in a way that says greets someone or explains something with the correct communication for the context (ex: most people don’t want to have a full breakdown of SPCD every time I talk about it, but they still may want a simpler one. It goes the other way too)
->Change tone and formality level. They specifically say “avoiding the use of overly formal language” and I think that sums this one up perfectly
->”[Follow] rules for conversation and storytelling, such as taking turns in conversation, rephrasing when misunderstood, and knowing how to use verbal and nonverbal signals.” I didn’t even know there were rules for that. Basically: Struggles to not yap at you like you’re a brick wall and doesn’t realise it’s the wording that’s tripping you up. Oh, and the verbal+nonverbal signals, I’m gonna put eye rolling as an example. I had no clue it wasn’t around the eye but a short look up. My life makes so much more sense now
->Understand vague statements like when the person is not being literal (your fly is down) and/or when a sentence can mean multiple things depending on ✨context✨
>These limit communication and social skills, causing it to be a disorder
>Symptoms started early in life. This can be overlooked easily as the kid just “being smarter” or “knowing more words” when really the other kids are just better at not doing these things. (Ex: I still call a rhombus a parallelogram, and I have for my entire life. Except when I couldn’t read and called it a diamond because of cards but that ended in kindergarten with a shape card that said parallelogram.)
>The person doesn’t have a different disorder that also explains these. Basically: There are not kids with autism or language disorders that already explain these, thanks!
(Further reading: IACC)
Questions I think will come up:
So what even is this disorder anyway?
It’s the people on the edges of autism that have one category of Autism but not the other. As an example, I qualify for the social aspect of Autsim but am 1 part away from the behavioural aspect. The name sort of says it and the pragmatic is typically in parentheses. Social Communication Disorder, where social skills don’t work right. It’s extremely similar to autism because of this, but still isn’t autism. It’s a new autism-like disorder.
Why do I need to know?
Well, it’s nice to know these things and I have it, and I’m talking about it. You clicked the link and it sent you here!
Am I open for discussing this?
Completely and fully. I want to learn as much about my own disorder as I can, and who knows, maybe I got part of this wrong! I could quite easily be giving an example that isn’t SPCD but rather a different disorder! Do remember though, I’m gonna wanna see the sources, ‘cause then I can read them and link them!
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Further reading:














