Hasanabi Takes The Autism Test

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  • Опубликовано: 8 сен 2024
  • Hasan takes a test to see if he's on the spectrum after his chat hounds him relentlessly on his OCD/ADHD symptoms that might be autism instead.
    Edited By: / hasanreactions
    Intro Animation By: / hasanreactions
    Outro Animation By: / hasanreactions
    Music Composition By: / hasanreactions
    (Yes, right now it's just me making everything)
    Editor's Note: My edits were all made to keep the video on one, central topic by editing together relevant commentary from many parts of Hasan's streams to create a storyline that is still followable by the viewer. I also edited in commentary of my own in places, in addition to relevant external information that improves the viewing experience. A lot of edits were made for comedy purposes, or to enhance the comedic timing of certain beats, but never to misrepresent Hasan's point of view.
    If you like my edits, leave a Comment, Like, and Subscribe. It helps a lot, thank you :)
    Test Link: www.idrlabs.co...
    Unless otherwise stated, all visuals, audio, and commentary added during the editing process is created and owned by Hasan Reactions.
    Find Hasan Live at: / hasanabi
    #hasanabi #Autism #Test #HasanReactions #reacts #mentalhealth
    About Hasan:
    Hasan Piker is Political Commentator turned Twitch Streamer (#13) known for his Turkish heritage and leftist takes, often speaking on topics like Socialism, Communism, Capitalism, and Marxism (and occasionally 9/11). He loves reacting to political news, and occasionally goes on IRL adventures with his friends such as Ludwig, 100Thieves, Sykkuno, Pokimane, Valkyrae, xQc, and many others. He likes to react to popular media content with his audience as well, such as Jubilee, JCS (Jim Can't Swim), Joe Rogan, Andrew Tate, Ben Shapiro, Tucker Carlson, Danny Gonzalez, Channel 5, OfflineTV, trending twitter posts or TikToks, and other creative videos. He also co-hosts two podcasts, Leftovers, with Ethan Klein of H3H3 fame, and Fear &, with Will Neff. He allegedly sometimes plays games like GTA 5, Dark Souls, Elden Ring, and whatever excites him on the PS5, Switch, or the PC side of gaming.

Комментарии • 583

  • @shweetnectar
    @shweetnectar Год назад +1557

    hasan answered this test like ben shapiro answered the political compass quiz LMAOOO

    • @jroyals_
      @jroyals_ Год назад +31

      💀💀💀

    • @swayback7375
      @swayback7375 Год назад +19

      4:05 top notch comment!
      I just started this but I can already see it coming and thought back to watching all those right wingers political compass test.
      Personally I was thinking Michael Knowles but maybe Has is closer to Shapiro.

    • @Haiirofox
      @Haiirofox Год назад +7

      So true, I just rewatched that video and the comparison is hilarious.

    • @dylanvickers7953
      @dylanvickers7953 Год назад +1

      This is wisdom.

    • @Cottenball.Dossier
      @Cottenball.Dossier Год назад +1

      The best take hahahaha

  • @InsekiJisatsu
    @InsekiJisatsu Год назад +780

    I don't think Hasan realizes getting mad at each individual question, reading too much into them isn't helping his case. lol

    • @rhiannadudley5043
      @rhiannadudley5043 Год назад +72

      Sounds like me during my assessment trying to get more context from the questions 🤣

    • @jein8171
      @jein8171 Год назад +4

      @@rhiannadudley5043 REAL 😭😭😭

    • @masterfamclothingco
      @masterfamclothingco Год назад +2

      Lmaooo I overthink these types of things constantly

    • @LegalVampire
      @LegalVampire Год назад +1

      That's just called being an intelligent who cares about logic 😁

  • @thomasandrewclifford
    @thomasandrewclifford Год назад +1844

    As a teacher who has worked with quite a few students on the spectrum, this test is really really bad. It's based on insane stereotypes that aren't good for a test

    • @rileymachelle4088
      @rileymachelle4088 Год назад +119

      @@ericabbott4864 I mean let's be honest, nobody should be using a test/quiz from the internet as a diagnostic tool. Just in general

    • @dsorpqxh
      @dsorpqxh Год назад +48

      This is a limited test + no online test can diagnose somebody. These questions would be asked by a licensed professional who is interacting with the person while asking these questions. Diagnosis are very complex which is why you can’t do it yourself online. A professional is much more well equipped to comb through overlapping symptoms and finding a correct diagnosis

    • @Unclejamsarmy
      @Unclejamsarmy Год назад

      @@rileymachelle4088 The psych diagnostic tests doctors give are just a serious of questions that are printed or they verbally ask you, it being online is irrelevant. That being said I think mental health medicine is in the dark ages, from the DSM down to the actual practice of it. Part of why the gen z worship and credulity of it is so misplaced. Also from a leftist perspective really misses the point. Ashley Frawley has some great critiques of it though I don’t agree with all of it

    • @hotaruFirefly2
      @hotaruFirefly2 Год назад +2

      The sadness one could be just be depression.

    • @LemonLoafEucharist
      @LemonLoafEucharist Год назад +22

      This test is specifically for autistic people to know vaguely where our support needs lie in an organized graph. There’s more in depth ones as well.

  • @Nick-cy6bn
    @Nick-cy6bn Год назад +848

    This is basically watching a man go through the 7 stages of grief

  • @truebornseeker9767
    @truebornseeker9767 Год назад +1162

    It’s the first question and this man is already describing masking

    • @omiethamsia9009
      @omiethamsia9009 Год назад +90

      i was just going to comment this like😭 straight out the gate

    • @casie6609
      @casie6609 Год назад +47

      It's actually very normal to not enjoy eye contact. It makes a lot of people nervous. It takes practice for some people like Hasan said.

    • @WinterReflections
      @WinterReflections Год назад +60

      Avoiding eye contact can easily be a result of simple anxiety... Or multiple other things not to do with autism. Zoomers go NUTS with the self diagnosis. It's not helpful.

    • @syl59281
      @syl59281 Год назад +66

      @@casie6609 yeah lots of "autistic" things are normal. Autistic doesn't = not normal
      It's like when people say "oh everyone dislikes loud noises" etc but it's not on the same level. Just like how "everyone feels anxious" downplays anxiety disorders

    • @SlavojZiz3k
      @SlavojZiz3k Год назад +8

      @@WinterReflections yeah no shit Sherlock. It's not the avoiding eye contact by itself, it's how prolonged the avoiding is/how often are you doing it/is it affecting your social interactions.

  • @EyeconicLaura
    @EyeconicLaura Год назад +774

    ADHD and Autism are considered “brain cousins” because of how similar they are. Most of the symptoms he’s saying he has are the ones the two share.

    • @rileymachelle4088
      @rileymachelle4088 Год назад +49

      It's complicated. There is some overlap in symptoms, but the cause of them is different

    • @bunnipop1867
      @bunnipop1867 Год назад

      Exactly Eyeconic. There are a lot of overlapping symptoms, so a lot of the things on this list that he's agreeing with is probably because of him having ADHD not because he def has autism. When he says 'normal' I think he's talking about normal in the way that HE perceives normality. I don't think he's exclusively saying normal = everyone like some chatters are implying.

    • @nickadams9504
      @nickadams9504 Год назад +73

      Both are neurotypes I think they share “some” common genes. Also I’m pretty sure Autistic people are 50% more likely to be comorbid with ADHD

    • @EyeconicLaura
      @EyeconicLaura Год назад

      @@nickadams9504 something like that yeah. I know a lot of adhd people without autism but only 2 autistic people without adhd

    • @thalmorbiznitch4028
      @thalmorbiznitch4028 Год назад +25

      @@nickadams9504 Yep, and a lot of the things he's saying "NO! I don't do that/I actually enjoy that so I'm obviously not autistic" can be explained by the combo ADHD+Autistim. Like enjoying socializing with fans and stuff, but also being frightened being away from home (also he was debating what the word 'extended' meant when I think the key word is more 'frightened' to leave your home in that question).

  • @onyx3939
    @onyx3939 Год назад +1018

    i dont think its ok to "diagnose" people with stuff like chat is doing but i have to admit the more hasan talks...💀

    • @enider
      @enider Год назад +127

      He started trying to say it is normal to not look at peoples eyes on the first question lmao. Diagnosing only based on this test is not the way to go but but there is a reason avoiding eye contact is its own category on the test

    • @ghostbravo7127
      @ghostbravo7127 Год назад

      I feel the same way, as a medical/pharmaceutical professional, I know it is improper to conduct such a diagnoses without home studies and other testing, however Hasan has hundreds of hours of damning evidence on stream, and he even masks using many of the same techniques I do.

    • @Evadann
      @Evadann Год назад +37

      @@enider WHAT?? Y'all make eye contact??

    • @Justin-ee1mv
      @Justin-ee1mv Год назад +1

      It’s really autistic to stare at people’s eye LULE

    • @froufroudeluxe
      @froufroudeluxe Год назад +51

      @@enider true, and also tests like these are usually the first step for people pursuing a formal diagnosis

  • @Potatoe-f6u
    @Potatoe-f6u Год назад +968

    I love how this man has convinced himself that EVERYONE deeply despises making eye contact so it's not weird that he has to force himself to do it.

    • @syl59281
      @syl59281 Год назад +37

      Lol it's not even that weird if you think about it. How are you to know that other people do/don't feel comfortable making eye contact? You can't tell just based on how much eye contact they make, because they could be forcing it

    • @JaseekaRawr
      @JaseekaRawr Год назад +43

      I was always taught that it's "polite" to make eye contact while speaking to someone. (As a southerner) Also I was raised in a bad neighborhood, so checking ppl's eyes for a vibe is a safety precaution. I know to gtfo of there if they got "scary" eyes lmao. You know what I mean 😆

    • @neonice
      @neonice Год назад +37

      It's literally a fact. It's human nature to dislike constant eye contact because it's threatening. It's very rare for someone to like keeping eye contact.

    • @claracallison8302
      @claracallison8302 Год назад +10

      True. I think before I was diagnosed I thought everyone had to pretend they knew how to make eye contact at the exact right moments/do a trick where you look at their foreheads or noses. Now, I guess I think allistic people have some sort of eye contact vibe sense?

    • @whatever3145
      @whatever3145 Год назад

      @@neonice i love it. I'm scanning for danger/comprehension

  • @Taradoxxi
    @Taradoxxi Год назад +143

    as a person w/both the ‘tism and ADHD I feel like “being a streamer“ should be formally added to the list of ASD symptoms at this point lmfao

    • @jadebaxter8181
      @jadebaxter8181 Год назад +5

      I've heard of professionals considering DnD legitimate diagnosis criteria

  • @SaltySK
    @SaltySK Год назад +327

    Literally about almost every symptom he is agreeing to is adhd

    • @tasman655
      @tasman655 Год назад +75

      Hassan already knows he has ADHD.

    • @mightymeatymech
      @mightymeatymech Год назад +66

      People with autism and ADHD are like brothers from another mother, bro, it's so Weird. Source: ADHD and I somehow sniff out autistic strangers and we just gravitate towards one another. Every single time lmao

    • @donovan.d
      @donovan.d Год назад +11

      @@tasman655 That’s what I was thinking going into this - he has ADHD. That coupled with the fact that ADHD and ASD signs/symptoms can present similarly can lead to that overlap in relating to many of the questions while not relating to many of the others.
      I’ve recently be diagnosed with a pretty high level of inattentive ADHD and lately I’ve wondering if I maybe autistic given what I’ve been leaning about ASD due to my cousin (who is autistic and has high levels of combined ADHD). But then I have to remind myself that the 2 can have a lot of overlap with one another.
      Other comments here have noted the distinctions between ADHD and ASD way better than I ever could, but the gist is in that it’s where the symptoms stem from, how they present themselves, and the intensity of how they’re experienced.
      It’s why those of us with ADHD could be mistaken for being autistic (though people could have a co-morbidity of them both which could add to that confusion)

    • @TheJacquelinia
      @TheJacquelinia Год назад +3

      @@mightymeatymech lmao i've also noticed the adhd + autism unions. I have severe adhd and I love just rambling about interests and fun science facts i've collected over the years. autistic people vibe with that and I also understand them and love asking them about their interests so it makes sense.

    • @temple69
      @temple69 Год назад

      most people who have one, have the other

  • @RobTucker83
    @RobTucker83 Год назад +124

    "Me and all of my totally not autistic Twitch friends don't make eye contact with people, so I'm totally not autistic."

  • @rileymachelle4088
    @rileymachelle4088 Год назад +237

    ADHD and Autism are quite close to eachother, but the context behind the symptoms is different. My brother has Autism, he really struggles to read social cues and situations across the board. I have ADHD so I still can read social cues, I just don't always notice them in the moment, usually I do afterwards though.
    My brother (Autism): Consistently talks loudly in the movie theatre, and must repeatedly be reminded to stay quiet.
    Me (ADHD): Will talk loudly once or twice, then recognize how loud I'm being, and then I'll be quiet for the rest of the movie.

    • @MalMotorDedo
      @MalMotorDedo Год назад +2

      I think i have ADHD, but i won't self diagnose. Outside of that, SAME, I may f up w some things, like speaking a lot or being a bit abnoxious, but by the time someone tells me that I'm doing certain "not good" thing, my brain goes "NAH... wait, fr? damn :(" and I stop lol.

    • @BD-yl5mh
      @BD-yl5mh Год назад +4

      Same with me and my sister, she being autistic and me now being pretty sure I have adhd. You’ve given me a bit of an aha.
      Autism runs the red light because they literally don’t even know to look at what the traffic lights are doing, ADHD runs the red light because they were focussed on something else and then goes “oh shit oh shit oh shit! I ran a red!”

    • @Jade0603
      @Jade0603 Год назад +1

      I have autism, and a lot of times I don’t even know that I’m speaking very quietly until someone points it out.

    • @phoebescott6787
      @phoebescott6787 Год назад +1

      I thought accidentally talking loud then realizing it's not appropriate where you are then stopping is just... normal 💀that's just not being perfect and aware of your situation all the time. Maybe that's magnified for you because of your diagnosis but we should be careful how we talk about this bc ppl now think they have a disorder if they aren't perfect in social situations lol

    • @erinw.9256
      @erinw.9256 Год назад

      I was diagnosed with ADHD as a kid and my parents thought there was something wrong with me so I was tested for many things, but sometimes I wonder if I'm autistic as well and it was just missed. I'm a woman so of course the symptoms and everything a girl with autism has are seen as “different” from a guy with autism, and the same goes for ADHD but I show more of the “guy’s symptoms” of ADHD. I wouldn't be surprised tbh if I am ever diagnosed with high-functioning autism but it would be a relief cos I'm struggling here with just my ADHD diagnosis lol

  • @NoOne-go6tc
    @NoOne-go6tc Год назад +64

    You don’t understand I I act this way because I am ….
    A gaymer
    A Tall person with poor posture
    A screamer
    A nail bitter
    A homebody
    A streamer
    A person who likes niche facts
    A person with autism
    It’s cool bro. We love you man. 😊

    • @bluester7177
      @bluester7177 Год назад +2

      His a person with Adhd who probably also has some anxiety, the symptoms can be very similar, that's why a professional is necessary.

  • @regulatedfreestylevideos
    @regulatedfreestylevideos Год назад +54

    If he were on the spectrum, I feel like he's done such a good job creating a setup and lifestyle that works precisely for his needs, so that's pretty cool.

  • @albionmerrick
    @albionmerrick Год назад +155

    We are seeing levels of denial before unseen.

    • @OfficerDva444
      @OfficerDva444 Год назад +5

      u mean Azan being "Not A Weeb?" :P

    • @neonice
      @neonice Год назад +7

      Y'all are ridiculous because he definitely doesn't have autism. Nowadays the threshold has become so low that everyone has ADHD/ASD in people's minds.

    • @Thefire591
      @Thefire591 Год назад

      He definitely doesn't have autism..

    • @user-tz3zy3bu4x
      @user-tz3zy3bu4x Год назад +1

      @@neonice nope, it’s just that there are a lot of people who have disorders that go undiagnosed because they just haven’t seen a psychiatrist. I’m autistic & to me it couldn’t be any more obvious he’s on the spectrum. The symptoms also overlap with adhd so when you have adhd you’re also a lot more likely to have autism too because they’re comorbidities which explains why he scored quite high, some of those could just be because he has adhd or it could be because he’s on the spectrum. I mean he practically went on a rant about why he hated eye contact & described word for word how he literally masks in order to avoid it😭 & also went on about how all the questions are “what normal people do” when that is exactly what an undiagnosed autistic would say because those aren’t actually what “normal” people do

    • @albionmerrick
      @albionmerrick Год назад

      @blokbirb I don't really think he has autism. He was just totally lying to himself on some of the answers. I think he probably should have scored higher. The quiz isn't 100% accurate, though.

  • @CorrectFossa
    @CorrectFossa Год назад +359

    ADHD would throw this test off heavy

    • @hallroney
      @hallroney Год назад +51

      i have both

    • @lyre6820
      @lyre6820 Год назад +101

      @@hallroney my man has layers of neurodivergence

    • @Chorweiler
      @Chorweiler Год назад +3

      @@lyre6820 Good

    • @hallroney
      @hallroney Год назад +31

      @@lyre6820 lmao YES for example i have lack of control of my impulses cause of the AHDH and therefore i turned conversations into monologues about the topic my autism has made me fixed at the point, and keep talking till the sound of my own voice makes me anxious lol

    • @bl4ckfl4g
      @bl4ckfl4g Год назад +11

      They are very related

  • @QueenHalo
    @QueenHalo Год назад +63

    Humans are so complex and the spectrum is a spectrum for a reason. Like there’s so much neurodiversity in people so it’s hard to diagnose one person with a specific label based off of generalized questions. And some diagnoses overlap with other ones which can make it more confusing.

  • @benjaminjameskreger
    @benjaminjameskreger Год назад +197

    Dude tried to prove lack of eye contact is very normal with math. Okay.

    • @thatsinteresting3415
      @thatsinteresting3415 Год назад +17

      There are countries where keeping eye contact is extremely rude.

    • @soyoltoi
      @soyoltoi Год назад +3

      @@thatsinteresting3415 Tell me

    • @GAMEOVER-yy6zj
      @GAMEOVER-yy6zj Год назад +2

      I remember ,back in my college days I was talking to a guy without eye contact just to see his reaction. And man! that guy gone totall berserk on me for a minute for not looking at him.

    • @casie6609
      @casie6609 Год назад +7

      It's actually normal to not like eye contact.

    • @syl59281
      @syl59281 Год назад

      @@casie6609 who said it isn't normal?

  • @tarostartic8833
    @tarostartic8833 Год назад +37

    he’s giving the most adhd explanations ever lmao

  • @TheChelseaHanna
    @TheChelseaHanna Год назад +22

    Honestly his responses to the majority of the questions is exactly how I responded taking it. "No one WANTS to make eye contact, people who do that are psychos" "It's NORMAL for people to get scared to leave their house for long periods of time." and I was like haha, I'm definitely not autistic this test is crazy. And then I sent it to a bunch of people I thought were "weird" or "quirky" like me and was like, I'm sure the test will say they're autistic too... and nope, none of them were lol. And I was like, wait. Hold up. Am I autistic????? And then I got professionally evaluated, and sure enough, I am lol.

  • @dokidokiduckie
    @dokidokiduckie Год назад +188

    Honestly, as an autistic person I also really dislike this quiz. It seems heavily catered towards a lot of the common stereotypes about autism instead of the actual lived experience of autistic people. It's honestly kind of insulting and demeaning how many questions are angled towards the classic stereotype of autistic people being hunchbacked social rejects instead of normal fucking people.

    • @neonice
      @neonice Год назад

      If you are a normal fcking person then you're not going to be diagnosed. A diagnosis starts with either personaly struggling or being a threat to others. If none of the two criteria are met then there is no basis for a diagnosis.

    • @dokidokiduckie
      @dokidokiduckie Год назад +18

      @@neonice I've been diagnosed since the 2nd grade. I'm a normal fucking person. I'm stunted in many ways and have had to overcome a lot of things most people haven't, but my autism doesn't define me.

    • @theyfukenwmesubliminally
      @theyfukenwmesubliminally Год назад

      @@dokidokiduckie if autistic people are just normal people then why are they diagnosed with autism spacturm disorder? Lmao

    • @jadebaxter8181
      @jadebaxter8181 Год назад +2

      also the ones that described symptoms of depression not autism.. ??

    • @phoebescott6787
      @phoebescott6787 Год назад +1

      A disorder inherently means you are abnormal though. The issue occurs when people who have an abnormality are treated badly and underrepresented in decisions that are made for society

  • @riley._.5332
    @riley._.5332 Год назад +51

    I love how he manages to drive himself absolutely nuts, pureely by automatically assuming every answer has a "right" or "wrong" answer (a trait commonly found in autistics-)

  • @neurofunkie
    @neurofunkie Год назад +83

    This test gave me a moderate score because of the symptoms that overlap with PTSD. Noise sensitivity, depressive symptoms, emotional control, and anxiety were all high. really not a great thing to take if you're prone to feeling invalidated :")

    • @AnarchoTak
      @AnarchoTak Год назад

      yeah...

    • @claracallison8302
      @claracallison8302 Год назад

      You can be autistic and also have PTSD, they aren't mutually exclusive.

    • @neurofunkie
      @neurofunkie Год назад

      @@claracallison8302 Didn't say they were but ok. It still dinged me as moderate due to the symptoms I know are from PTSD and tried to say it was autism instead.

    • @ionabab7274
      @ionabab7274 Год назад

      Same here. The depression related questions in particular really bothered me. I have autism and I took the test, and I got very high on the depression area - but that’s not because I have autism, it’s because I have PTSD. It’s a really weird way to categorise things. I know autistic people are more likely to develop depression, but that by no means equals depression as an autistic trait since there are so many possible causes.
      “Noise sensitivity” also bothered me as a category, since it’s usually not just noises but all the other senses too. I have to wear sunglasses outside because it’s too bright for me to see otherwise, and certain overwhelming smells like cigarettes or celery make me feel viscerally ill. Sensory difficulties extend far beyond just noises.
      While I’m sure many autistic people can relate to questions asked in the test, the questions tend to either be far too broad so that they could apply to too many people, or far too specific so that it could exclude autistic people. All in all I think it was based on a lot of stereotypes.

  • @jjmitch1411
    @jjmitch1411 Год назад +56

    For ppl in the comments, getting a diagnosis is not all easy and positive. There are pros and cons to getting tested.
    Pros to a diagnosis include getting the support and healthcare you need. As well as the ability to work on yourself with knowledge gained from the medical professionals.
    Cons include how ppl in society may treat you, as well as view you. If you need to file for disability, you are less likely to be able to adopt/foster youth and are more likely to live in poverty or severe poverty.
    Not to mention things that make getting diagnosed harder include but are not limited to if you fall under any of the following demographics; BIPOC, AFAB, poor, older than about 10-12, or even just your nationality.

    • @syl59281
      @syl59281 Год назад +8

      That's a good point. There are pros and cons. The thing about society treating you different is totally true, but also interesting because to some extent you already get treated differently, not because of a label/diagnosis but because you act "weird" or "quirky" from neurotypical standards

    • @jjmitch1411
      @jjmitch1411 Год назад +1

      Agree 1000%

    • @neonice
      @neonice Год назад

      Getting a diagnosis has nothing to do with filing for disability. You don't have to tell shit about what you get yourself diagnosed with. Btw if you want to get diagnosed with ADHD it doesn't really matter if you have it or not, doctors easily diagnose it even with basic symptom descriptions.

    • @swayback7375
      @swayback7375 Год назад +3

      The cons are insignificant compared to the pros, you cannot work on or react to something you know nothing about

    • @bluester7177
      @bluester7177 Год назад +3

      @@swayback7375 And people with undiagnosed disabilities are already more likely to live in poverty, so its a con with and without a diagnosis.

  • @Artemis0798
    @Artemis0798 Год назад +37

    Ngl Hasan staring at you while your sitting at home saying hi like that is scary af

    • @dusk2308
      @dusk2308 Год назад

      yea and the dude is fucking tall as fuck right?

  • @TaikaApina
    @TaikaApina Год назад +20

    I have no idea if he is on the spectrum or not but there is one thing I've noticed about him. Hasan struggles a lot on identifying sarcasm in real life conversations. He also seems fairly gullible and easily trusts ppl when they jokingly make things up. It's almost like he thinks everyone always means everything they say exactly as they say it.

    • @user-tz3zy3bu4x
      @user-tz3zy3bu4x Год назад +3

      Yes I’ve noticed this too!! I’m autistic & I’m exactly the same as him, he tends to get defensive & frustrated too with the chat when he thinks they’re being serious when a lot of the time it’s hyperbole lol

  • @Blackfyre741
    @Blackfyre741 Год назад +15

    As a person who has autism these test are actually pretty accurate to the screening testing they give you when you go to get diagnosed.

    • @bigbugbabey
      @bigbugbabey Год назад +6

      I was thinking the same thing. I love Hasan but i mean what other questions does he think would be on the screening?

    • @user-tz3zy3bu4x
      @user-tz3zy3bu4x Год назад +9

      @@bigbugbabeyhim saying how “isn’t this everyone?” Or “this is normal” scream autism to me cause that’s what I thought when I took the test myself & then later on i literally get diagnosed with autism💀 Any non autistic people I’ve gotten to take the test seem to be very aware it’s not normal & score low so idk

  • @chi-chiiitvvv9984
    @chi-chiiitvvv9984 Год назад +21

    Like Dr. K said, self dx can be fine but there are so many overlapping symptoms for different diagnoses that only a trained psychiatrist can differentiate. These were sooo similar to ADHD, anxiety disorder, and depression. This test is bad💀

  • @lich109
    @lich109 Год назад +46

    It was both funny and sad to see Hasan try to justify what he thinks is normal. He seems to think everyone works like he does.

  • @fdub301
    @fdub301 Год назад +157

    This is better than when Bill Burr did an adhd test with his wife. At least Bill has some amount of self reflection

    • @missraincanyon
      @missraincanyon Год назад +38

      I WAS LITERALLY JUST THINKING HASAN RATIONALIZING WAS SO SIMILAR TO BILL BURR TAKING THAT TEST

    • @missraincanyon
      @missraincanyon Год назад +6

      Best top comment ever

    • @hallroney
      @hallroney Год назад +6

      It s hard to deal with it, i acept my diagnosis but hide it from most people so i understand why a lot of people hide it even from themselves (same thing that happens inside the lgbtq comunity i guess)

    • @bluester7177
      @bluester7177 Год назад +2

      But the thing is Hasan has Adhd and there is a lot of overlap, he was formally diagnosed, if he had ASD his doctor would have said.
      I'm in a third world country and when I was diagnosed my doctor try to eliminate other things like anxiety and depression to actually say I have Adhd.

    • @CreatEr1n
      @CreatEr1n Год назад

      ​@@bluester7177 People on the low end of the spectrum are so commonly misdiagnosed because of people's ideas of what an autistic person looks like. In Hasan's case, there's a high possibility the psychologist didn't factor autism into the equation. (I'm not implying he has it whatsoever. I'm merely using him as an example) He has social skills, no obvious tics, etc. Some people's autistic traits are subtle enough to go undetected, especially if they have learned techniques to hide them. ADHD, mood disorders, and anxiety are typically what doctors look for when they review the results of a person who doesn't fit the stereotype. They often don't even administer the tests that specifically check for autism, viewing it as a waste of time and resources. I have first-hand experience with it. It happened to me. I've also done research about it.

  • @alohaXamanda
    @alohaXamanda Год назад +5

    "I've trained myself to look into people's eyes" relatable, except I look at a spot above their heads.

  • @thalmorbiznitch4028
    @thalmorbiznitch4028 Год назад +52

    When hasan talks about enjoying things or doing things that autistic people "most likely" wouldn't enjoy, like being center of attention or going to events and talking to fans and stuff, he's literally talking about the combo ADHD-Autistic. He's literally describing what it's like having both (I also have both). You're also more likely to have both if you already have one diagnosis.

    • @envadeh
      @envadeh Год назад

      I think I may too have both lmao

    • @rhiannadudley5043
      @rhiannadudley5043 Год назад

      Ye lol I agree, I also am diagnosed with both. I’m glad the education is getting out there tho!

    • @AnarchoTak
      @AnarchoTak Год назад

      @@rhiannadudley5043 I disagree. he almost is certainly neuroptypical or ADHD. like he doesn't even have at least 2 autistic traits. also this test is flawed. autism is a spectrum but he isn't enough to be considered "mildly autistic"
      he should be diagnosed by a professional. adult autism is difficult to diagnose tho

    • @yungeyez8734
      @yungeyez8734 Год назад

      Or... he just doesnt have the autism at all? Fr how far is this community reaching, "oooh you are a literal opposite of a stereotypical autistic person in this matter, you must be autistic".

    • @sofeyah
      @sofeyah Год назад +1

      I am the same. My whole life it’s been a constant yoyo - then then meltdowns from socialising. Hasan often speaks on autism like he knows the ins and outs of it when he is fairly uneducated.

  • @KRAPYBARA84
    @KRAPYBARA84 Год назад +75

    You don't look have to in someone's eyes constantly. To be "normal", you look at someones eyes or that area for no more than a few moments (like 5 seconds or maybe at most 15 seconds) as you are acknowledging them (if engaged in a convo) but then you also look around at other things around you or maybe at their shirt or something behind them. Its not about how long you engage with them. It is just easy to communicate with your eyes (body language) that you, the receiver, understood the message by the messenger. Sometimes to combat this I stand next to the person (the messenger)as they are talking. If we are both facing something (like a wall or a person) I dont have to look at them. I can easily nod my head or go "yes, I agree" or "ok, sounds good". Its very effective. It doesnt mean I have autism it just means that either I am not in the mood to look at someone's dumb face or maybe direct eye contact can not happen in that moment. I have a cousin with autism and he can easily carry a conversation. He talks a bit differently than a neuro-typical person but its not that obvious. He has worked on his autism with a lot of professionals because he was nonverbal and antisocial from age 3 to age 9. He is 20 now. It's not always about the eyes all ye untouched grassed chattards.

    • @WinterReflections
      @WinterReflections Год назад +1

      There also is such a thing as TOO MUCH EYE CONTACT. Lol. You wanna do it just enough to communicate you're listening and hearing what someone is saying, and not intensely staring into someone's eyes so long you risk making them uncomfortable.

    • @neonice
      @neonice Год назад +1

      "Most people become uncomfortable with sustained eye contact, the threshold for this discomfort is lower for people with autism" -Nouchine Hadjikhani (director of Harvard’s Neurolimbic Research Lab)

  • @katiieeardley
    @katiieeardley Год назад +16

    Since chat seemed to echo that it's typical to yell when you're angry or frustrated, I hardly ever yell when I'm angry... I might speak more sternly or coldly or not at all but you'd ave to really, really push me to actually raise my voice/yell.

  • @syl59281
    @syl59281 Год назад +14

    Ya know all these things he's calling "being a normal human being" doesn't contradict being autistic? It makes it sound like autistic people aren't normal. Of course it's normal to them, and it's a part of "being a human being "

    • @phoebescott6787
      @phoebescott6787 Год назад +1

      I agree that he could be more careful about the words he uses in a negative way, but things like autism and ADD and ADHD have been scientifically/medically considered disorders, abnormalities, which are by definition not "normal". But describing things as "abnormal" sounds negative because people often do consider disorders to be inherently negative and therefore treat the person who had a disorder badly, or underrepresent those people in everyday life which makes life much more difficult for people with a disorder.

  • @TheDudeManBro
    @TheDudeManBro Год назад +24

    If you actually truly wanna figure this stuff out, see a specialist, this stuff is called armchair diagnosing for a reason. That said, I understand it’s not easily done but if you can afford it please see someone for evaluation. One of the most frustrating things is people diagnosing themselves over singular symptoms, it’s not as bad but pretty similar to saying you have IBS but no you just got food poisoned, you’re dealing with that thing for a moment under certain circumstances while others live a lifetime with it.

    • @nellapatella
      @nellapatella Год назад +1

      I am too scared to watch this because of what it will do to me, since I was officially diagnosed a few months ago and it is a rollercoaster of emotions. the first few seconds already felt invalidating... Is the video watchable or dangerous?

    • @bluester7177
      @bluester7177 Год назад +1

      I think a professional is really important because a lot of the symptoms are normal to a certain extent, anyone can have a hard time concentration or hyper focus on something, can have a hard time making eye contact once in a while or be awkward socially, it needs to be dysfunctional and be a detrimental to the persons life and it needs to follow certain criteria of symptoms being together for a period of time, also, lots of symptoms are common in more than one possible diagnosis.

  • @VULVOLINE009
    @VULVOLINE009 Год назад +33

    "I don't like being away from home for extended periods of times", repeated "i don't 8 times ... that's different from being FRIGHTENED!!! :/

    • @JesusChrist-dv2zu
      @JesusChrist-dv2zu Год назад +11

      little does he know it’s not very normal to feel doom after leaving the house

    • @bluester7177
      @bluester7177 Год назад

      @@JesusChrist-dv2zu that's not necessarily a ASD thing only, it can be pretty normal in people with anxiety.

  • @LemonLoafEucharist
    @LemonLoafEucharist Год назад +11

    This isn’t a diagnostic test. It’s a test for those of us who already know we are autistic to get an idea of where our support needs are. A diagnostic test would be the RAADS-R, as well as the Autistic Quotient test.

  • @arm10kjohn
    @arm10kjohn Год назад +7

    Posture is actually a huge issue in kids on the spectrum. Behavior tech here. We have kiddos who sit on their knees with their feet out to their sides, one kiddo often will walk while holding hands while hunching his back over and hanging his head down low, there are also kiddos who flat out can't/won't (I'm not sure if they can't or won't) sit criss-cross applesauce so posture is not a determining factor but it often is an issue with people on the spectrum.

  • @Strawberrysalvatore
    @Strawberrysalvatore Год назад +30

    I like how he took the question about idioms literally. As in… he thought they were only talking about those specific idioms.

  • @HumanOperatedBotAccount
    @HumanOperatedBotAccount Год назад +10

    Autism is a developmental disability, not a form of mental illness. Mental illness develops over time for various reasons. All peer reviewed studies suggest that autism is genetic.

  • @JesusChrist-dv2zu
    @JesusChrist-dv2zu Год назад +33

    also hasan… not everyone is on the spectrum. i just find the reductive to actual people who are on the spectrum and experience the inability to play into weird social mannerisms people engage in every day

    • @Dani-tv2kd
      @Dani-tv2kd Год назад +4

      That's what I thought too. I think neurotypical people can certainly have some symptoms (such as aggression or not liking loud sounds), but that does not mean one is on the spectrum.

    • @supereero9
      @supereero9 Год назад +1

      It's weird not to engage or understand those mannerisms

    • @Evadann
      @Evadann Год назад +9

      Well, I mean... we all agree autism is a spectrum, thus, normal people are on the scale, just not in the same spot as people with autism.

    • @omgitsabbie
      @omgitsabbie Год назад +4

      @@Evadann it really helped me when I learned I was on the Spectrum so I don't see why people are gatekeeping its not a competion, we are just learning about ourselves.

    • @thatsinteresting3415
      @thatsinteresting3415 Год назад +1

      @@Evadann These people are saying "this spectrum is not a spectrum"

  • @0hgre
    @0hgre Год назад +2

    "Nah... okay, I'll put it right here... okay, I'll put it over there..." "That doesn't mean anything!" 🤣

  • @trapper-orbiter6284
    @trapper-orbiter6284 Год назад +29

    My mom literally trained me to always look into peoples eyes.
    When we we were talking and I wasn't making eye contact she would snap her fingers and sternly say " EYE CONTACT".

    • @attomicchicken
      @attomicchicken Год назад +11

      Well I hope it didn't turn into something where you eye fk the other individual. Looking is ok but it can turn into staring real quick if that's all you do.

    • @thatsinteresting3415
      @thatsinteresting3415 Год назад

      Feeling the need to force your way of thinking on others is part of being on the spectrum.
      So your mom is autistic

    • @Unclejamsarmy
      @Unclejamsarmy Год назад

      @@attomicchicken eye contact is actually rizzape #genz #mentalhealth

    • @00maniacmanny00
      @00maniacmanny00 Год назад +1

      @@attomicchicken can be sexy or even a fetish sometimes mate

    • @xtcyrafa
      @xtcyrafa Год назад

      @@attomicchicken good point but ur reply made me laugh💀

  • @Lumifire
    @Lumifire Год назад +4

    I like how Hasan in the intro says “I’m not sayin” and then your intro says the “I’m sayin it” line. That made me smile

  • @ruthtruswell2170
    @ruthtruswell2170 Год назад +4

    You really cheer me up Hasan. Thank you for letting us in x

  • @corvusclones
    @corvusclones Год назад +2

    the social anxiety thing when it comes to autism isn't about gaining confidence, the pain from it doesn't go away, they train you to ignore it. It's one of the reason so many of us talk about the most common therapy, ABA, or autism conversaion therapy, to be so abusive

  • @K.pendragon
    @K.pendragon Год назад +8

    Forcing myself to make eye contact is so horrible. I feel compelled to look away the second eye contact is made

  • @masterfamclothingco
    @masterfamclothingco Год назад +6

    When he agreed with the neurodivergence denying wrestler I lost my shit😂. The fact that he understands xqc is on the spectrum but won’t admit he is makes it funny as shit

  • @AraClaire
    @AraClaire Год назад +19

    I have been officially diagnosed with complex ADHD, OCD, Generalized Anxiety Disorder, and Misophonia...so I wasn't surprised that when I took the test I came out as "high" on the spectrum scale despite not actually having an official diagnosis of ASD. While I don't have ASD, ADHD shares much of the same symptoms as those on the Autism spectrum, but they are still different in a few significant ways (I can hold eye contact...and in fact can creep people out by looking into their eyes too long lol). OCD, GAD, and Misophonia are also common traits with folks on the spectrum, but not everyone with one or all of these are actually on the spectrum.
    Thankfully, there are more technical and accurate ways of determining which disorder one has (if any) by going to a Neurologist rather than answering 50 highly subjective online questions that will never be able to tell you with any amount of accuracy if you are indeed neurodivergent/neuroatypical and if so, what exact category you fall under.
    So I'm with Hasan...this is utter bullshyte. Lol

    • @neonice
      @neonice Год назад

      All humans are neurodivergent because it's just a way to describe how well someone is adapted to modern living. No one is 100% neurotypical because there is no rigid, universal norm. Everyone can get themselves diagnosed with ADHD/ASD if they want, they just need to find a doctor whose subjective analysis only requires certain symptom descriptions.

  • @msteerie
    @msteerie Год назад +7

    7:29 yes. I genuinely believe 90% of content creators are Neuro Divergent in some way, whether its ADHD, Autism, or something else :P

  • @bunnipop1867
    @bunnipop1867 Год назад +6

    Like I purposefully remove my glasses so I can't see people and don't have to look into their eyes, recognize them, or 'feel' them looking at me and notice them doing so. lmao

  • @r4dbit416
    @r4dbit416 Год назад +19

    I just get the feel that Hasan is highly insecure about being normative. However, I think he just misunderstood most of the questions. That's why you need a professional to interpret and explain the various results/questions

    • @nevadanate4957
      @nevadanate4957 Год назад

      Yeah, asking if you hate something isn't implying that normal people "love" it, it's asking if there are things you can't tolerate that the average person can.

  • @bryanrivera3240
    @bryanrivera3240 Год назад +9

    Damn I actually really like looking into peoples eyes while talking to them (of course I’ll look away from time to time) I’ve been told multiple times that they really appreciate it

  • @Rylee_G
    @Rylee_G Год назад +6

    i love how much hes deflecting

  • @euphausiacea8326
    @euphausiacea8326 Год назад +5

    As someone with OCD the fact that Has said he doesn’t have bad or violent intrusive thoughts or do anything with numbers gets me to say nah, I think he’s just got ADHD which he knows he has anyways.

    • @user-tz3zy3bu4x
      @user-tz3zy3bu4x Год назад

      That’s more of an ocd thing I think cause I’m diagnosed with autism & I don’t fixate on numbers or get violent intrusive thoughts but idk maybe it’s just different for everyone

  • @lounamhb
    @lounamhb Год назад +1

    i’ve feel so much the part about nail biting and anxiety, first time i hear it from someone on the internet, nice to hear it

  • @romeoalpha68
    @romeoalpha68 Год назад +8

    I love the reaction about XQC

  • @claracallison8302
    @claracallison8302 Год назад +4

    My advice for Hasan, as an autistic person w/ ADHD, is that he should read "Unmasking autism" by Devon Price PhD.

  • @urmothermia
    @urmothermia Год назад +5

    Yeah as an autistic person with ADHD as well, most of my symptoms overlap and contradict each other and it’s really debilitating lmao. Hasan seems very much ADHD not autistic, these symptoms often get mistaken for one another.

  • @arm10kjohn
    @arm10kjohn Год назад +4

    I thought Has was a little more in touch? It's not talking about do you follow a rigid routine... It's asking if you ARE RIGID about following routines, meaning you feel like it's detrimental if you do not do something like eat breakfast at precisely 8:04am. Also, it's not saying you're autistic if you "like learning." It's asking if you fixate on learning things about very specific and special interests. To the point that you're like studying only those things multiple times daily regularly.

    • @bluester7177
      @bluester7177 Год назад +5

      We have to remember he has ADHD , so often we are bad at reading and some of these things are sensitive, Hasan has said in the past that he life's pretty much falls apart if he does not stick to a routine and routine is often one of the first things we are asked to create when we are in treatment for ADHD, so he does stick to a routine pretty rigidly but it does not come naturally and people with Adhd do fixate on learning things, we just move on from interest to interest, we fixate for some time and than get bored.
      This video just shows how it can be bad to do this kinds of things without a professional to actually interpret the information correctly.

  • @thehalobrony9050
    @thehalobrony9050 Год назад +4

    I have ADD and when he says questions 17 is a stupid question, he does not understand to the degree of it. The moment a subject picks my intres, it will turn into an obsetion, at least for a time. In one week, i became fluent in a Rune Alphabet. And the weeks following, i tried to make an actual Rune Stone. Then i got board and moved on like it was nothing.

  • @matcha_zuki5597
    @matcha_zuki5597 Год назад +20

    Yeah nah, I am Autistic and have Adhd I got diagnosed when I wad 19... it is a very different experience than the Neurotypical experience..I have government insurance for my disability, its a strict regulated process here in Australia.

    • @finnameme8108
      @finnameme8108 Год назад +20

      Sorry you have to live in Australia

    • @frost1183
      @frost1183 Год назад +8

      Ya It’s kinda cringe when people act like everyone is mentally ill especially when for a lot of us it’s difficult to do every day tasks. But ya I guess everyone is just like us. Everyone can be quirky for the aesthetic lmao 😂

    • @MidnightEkaki
      @MidnightEkaki Год назад +1

      @@finnameme8108 one of the best countries in the world? why sorry

    • @matcha_zuki5597
      @matcha_zuki5597 Год назад +3

      @@finnameme8108 Australia has free health care and I love it here I don't wanna live in America.

    • @matcha_zuki5597
      @matcha_zuki5597 Год назад +3

      @@frost1183 THIS!! Like ND symptoms aren't quirks it impacts daily NT societal/ social tasks. The Disability isn't being autistic its its being in a society make for only NT people, thats what I have been told by NDIS.

  • @spritelass6712
    @spritelass6712 3 месяца назад +1

    my granddaughter was recently diagnosed as autistic. My husband said he thought that was silly, that she is just like he was as a little kid. she even walks on her toes exactly like he does. I don't have the heart to tell him. I'm hoping he comes to the realization on his own at his own pace.

  • @Spawnofwitches
    @Spawnofwitches Год назад +16

    Y’all are quick good lord

  • @trwortham
    @trwortham 6 месяцев назад +1

    For the curious, pursue professional testing if you score high on the Autism Quotient (gold standard for self-diagnosis.)
    I went through one of the worst ways to be told that I know of, and I'm still thankful that I know. It didn't require a lifetime of harrowing dramatic acceptance either; it was maybe a month of confusion and curiosity followed by 20 years of gratitude.

  • @attomicchicken
    @attomicchicken Год назад +8

    Even though certain cultures avert looking into someone's eyes; I can confidently say that it isn't the norm in our culture (Turkish) to be staring at a wall.
    He seems to be conflating looking into someone's eyes with the creepy wide eye, non blinking staring that the demon spawn do.

  • @DespressoEspresso43
    @DespressoEspresso43 Год назад +8

    The Copium is insane 😂

  • @spartnfish
    @spartnfish Год назад +17

    Jesus bro this literally happened like an hour ago these dudes are cracked

    • @Aristochronic
      @Aristochronic Год назад +7

      The Hasanabi Industrial Complex does not fuck around, lol

  • @corvusclones
    @corvusclones Год назад +1

    the rigid structure thing is like if your morning routine is in the wrong order, it fucks yoru whole day up

  • @sofeyah
    @sofeyah Год назад +1

    What people need to remember is ASD and ADHD are on a spectrum. You can’t be on the spectrum if you’re neurotypical, but if you meet the criteria for these conditions. One person could barely notice their symptoms, whilst they could be debilitating for another. Comparing isn’t always helpful

  • @arianaink100
    @arianaink100 Год назад +3

    Okay so looking in the eyes always bothers me as a question: I grew up fighting in martial arts and the key times to look at peoples eyes was to fight/grapple/spar. You have to go face to face and look at the other person you can’t avoid that before a fight.
    When I have to hold eye contact with people I always feel like we’re starting a match and the bells gonna ring because it’s such direct and confrontational contact in close proximity and right before physical contact. Avoiding conflict/intimacy varies for so many places and reasons.
    It’s a stare down a bit it freaks more people out on average to hold eye contact as it feels intensely intimate for many. It’s normals to avoid eye contact/confrontation wether it’s because of fight/flight/sex/romance/commands-work
    so it’s normal to look between the eyes or above them at their eyebrows to avoid direct contact on behalf of everyone and making less confrontational encounters in general.

  • @realxy2049
    @realxy2049 Год назад +2

    After the first question I thought “who’s gonna tell him”

  • @taylove1461
    @taylove1461 Год назад +9

    Hasan seems like he's in such denial wth, online tests aren't the best but maybe yk

  • @notaperson9831
    @notaperson9831 Год назад +6

    Nooo i literally thought the balloon thing was a phobia that I’ve always had 😫 I came to terms with having autism years ago but goddamnit there’s literally nothing unique about me lol

  • @potatoluna3389
    @potatoluna3389 4 месяца назад +1

    Not even a minute in and bro literally says “Ive trained myself to look into peoples eyes” …. Baby

  • @nevadanate4957
    @nevadanate4957 Год назад +1

    A lot of issues with these questions are because they're not being read properly. "Do you hate fire alarms" =/= "do you not love fire alarms" it means "do you start freaking out and want it to be turned off immediately" vs tolerating it like a normal person.

  • @shooglechic
    @shooglechic Год назад +1

    I'd like to think Autism and ADHD is just a very wide generalization of different "operating systems" people run on.

  • @Amanda-rg1dy
    @Amanda-rg1dy Год назад +1

    By the second question he had me dying. “It’s going to make a loud noise” 😂

  • @LOGAN_BURNS
    @LOGAN_BURNS Год назад +3

    He needs that shirt “Be Kind I Have The Tism”

  • @mohsensali1469
    @mohsensali1469 Год назад +3

    Bro me and hasan almost have the exact same answers. I'm pretty sure we just have adhd.

  • @misa6440
    @misa6440 Год назад +3

    I’m an autistic girl and did. the test and most of it is so far away from what I am. The things that I had most was eye contact and anxiety/depression, the other things were very low. Me being autistic makes me often feel so exhausted, I feel way too much. There weren’t really questions about that lol

    • @bluester7177
      @bluester7177 Год назад

      This tests often are more catered to how it presents on males, is the same thing with Adhd assessments.

  • @corvusclones
    @corvusclones Год назад +1

    it's funny that you mentioned the father thing, I'm autistic and my father is an electrical engineer turned lawyer with hyperfixations on cars, watches, and sound systems who doesn't think he's mentally ill

    • @corvusclones
      @corvusclones Год назад

      also, nevermind being rude, you try to tell one of them that they also have autism, and you'll probably be assaulted because there are few people who look down on autistic people as much as fathers of autistic people

  • @GraysonDyed
    @GraysonDyed Год назад +6

    some of these are just symptoms of other disorders too wtf people are way too quick to diagnose themselves and others. avoid diagnosing yourself and others. not even students who take psychology in college are supposed to do that and are advised to not pretend they are professionals.

    • @neurofunkie
      @neurofunkie Год назад +3

      the amount of students I've seen on twitter use the fact they're studying to try and weaponize that and claim xyz has a personality disorder because they had a bad take is staggering

    • @GraysonDyed
      @GraysonDyed Год назад +2

      @@neurofunkieit’s so annoying. zoomers learn what anxiety means and then all of a sudden act like they’ve gone through medical school to become a psychiatrist.

    • @neurofunkie
      @neurofunkie Год назад +1

      @@GraysonDyed They're the students too, which should tell you what the quality of the next therapists will be.

  • @EmbryW
    @EmbryW Год назад +4

    Did anyone just start laughing when he read the one about yelling while frustrated or stressed

  • @APairOfOldSkoolVans
    @APairOfOldSkoolVans Год назад +2

    Hasan yelling at text on a screen will never not be fucking hilarious

  • @mostradamus108
    @mostradamus108 Год назад +1

    As an autistic person myself, a lot of these questions are stupid. The yelling one and sad one was just like okay so they’re a human being…that’s not unique to autistic people or neurodivergent people.

  • @simonethevvitch
    @simonethevvitch Год назад +1

    ASD has so much comorbitity with ADHD his results make sense. He's def not Austistic tho bc he lacks the social difficulty and sensory issues. As some one who has both, they're both challenging but in diff ways.

  • @AoeUshida
    @AoeUshida Год назад +3

    Backed down by the first question😂😂

  • @lonewolfx499
    @lonewolfx499 Год назад +1

    Saying you prefer to make eye contact with someone is like saying you'd prefer to go to college to get a Ph.D. You don't prefer it, you just accept that it's the "proper" way to communicate, but of course with regards to disabilities like autism, there really is no proper way of communication; rather, it's how individuals are comfortable with it.

  • @robotprincess1711
    @robotprincess1711 Год назад +1

    never take online tests as seriously as a professional evaluation, and it's weird to speculate/assume/armchair diagnose people you don't know but. it is fun to watch a guy go nuts over this dumb test

  • @inkandesk
    @inkandesk Год назад +1

    As someone with bpd and adhd, I feel the same way Hasan does about most of these questions. But there’s a lot of key ones I don’t hit at all though like, you know the diagnostic criteria for autism ones

    • @quadmalitia2277
      @quadmalitia2277 Год назад

      There is alot of overlap between autism and bpd. Especially if u have adhd too. ( saying this as someone with all three lol)

  • @mvk72
    @mvk72 Год назад +1

    I just did this test and I came up moderate. I have been diagnosed with generalized anxiety.

  • @babyJes444
    @babyJes444 Год назад +1

    *"Im not bisexual..... posts a picture kissing the bisexual male Curtis Conner!*

  • @rileyp1506
    @rileyp1506 Год назад +1

    Incredibly hard watch !! Stun locked by chat

  • @evabrachfeld5552
    @evabrachfeld5552 Год назад +3

    ok wait its kind of annoying that of all the online autism self asessments he did this one and not any of the other way better ones like the RAADS-R, apie quiz, or CAT-Q

  • @tigimer_0393
    @tigimer_0393 Год назад +1

    "I put most of the pressure on the front of my feet when walking." For this question, I only do that when I'm going upstairs. Is that the same?

  • @MrBojangles1984
    @MrBojangles1984 Год назад +2

    Eye contact is normal. It shows that you are paying attention to what the other person is saying...

  • @yoyohayli
    @yoyohayli Год назад +1

    First question: yeah, I'm not autistic at all and I am constantly self conscious looking into people's eyes, wondering if I'm doing it too much, but I want them to know I'm paying attention, so I naturally look at one eye. Then the other, then look away for a second, and repeat.

  • @clockworkpanda8
    @clockworkpanda8 Год назад +6

    I am moderately autistic I took this test and Its funny watching how worried Hasan is that he might be autistic haha. For me when I found out it was relieving, I finally had a lable to explain why I always felt different than everyone, why it always felt like I was looking at the world from a different angle.