You can pretend that clinical significance is the gold standard measure of disability if you like, but you should recognize that you leave a MASSIVE gap in your effectiveness both as a diagnostician and a practitioner if you neglect all the masking your client has been doing to deal with everybody’s demands their whole life. Seeing that bias in someone pretending to treat me would be enough reason for me to walk out of the appointment and schedule with someone more capable and knowledgeable.
Sounds like you just want someone to “fix” the things you don’t like then. Not that they are truly disabilities nor not disappointing issues but it seems you more want someone to “fix” everyone else, or pretend it’s possible to fix you because of a lack of easiness.
You want someone to already agree with you so you can feel better. That’s not professional help that’s just a sweet lie to tell yourself.
I’m neither a diagnostician nor a provider and I don’t pretend to be one. I’m just a nurse. That’s one of many things people seem to ascribe to me. I will say however, something needs to be disabling for it to be a disability.
You can pretend that clinical significance is the gold standard measure of disability if you like, but you should recognize that you leave a MASSIVE gap in your effectiveness both as a diagnostician and a practitioner if you neglect all the masking your client has been doing to deal with everybody’s demands their whole life. Seeing that bias in someone pretending to treat me would be enough reason for me to walk out of the appointment and schedule with someone more capable and knowledgeable.
Sounds like you just want someone to “fix” the things you don’t like then. Not that they are truly disabilities nor not disappointing issues but it seems you more want someone to “fix” everyone else, or pretend it’s possible to fix you because of a lack of easiness.
You want someone to already agree with you so you can feel better. That’s not professional help that’s just a sweet lie to tell yourself.
I’m neither a diagnostician nor a provider and I don’t pretend to be one. I’m just a nurse. That’s one of many things people seem to ascribe to me. I will say however, something needs to be disabling for it to be a disability.