Holly Madison published she’s been identified with autism.
“The doctors told me that I have high-executive functioning, which pretty much means that I can go about my life and do things ’normally,’” the previous Playboy bunny mentioned on Friday’s episode of the “Talking To Death” podcast.
Madison, 43, defined that she is “highly functioning,” and understands that her prognosis is probably not “as extreme” as others at the spectrum.
“I’m not the spokesperson for everybody. They call it a spectrum for a reason,” she famous.
Madison went directly to proportion that once she first gained the prognosis, she recalled how the indicators had been there all of the long ago from when she was once a kid.
“I’ve been suspicious of it for a while because my mom told me that she was always suspicious that that was a thing,” she mentioned.
“The first thing she noticed was that I would zone out a lot as a kid and people would always ask her, ‘What is wrong with her? What is she doing?’ And my mom would just be like, ‘She’s thinking.'”
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Madison added that she has “always” struggled with “not recognizing social cues” or “not picking up” on issues “the same way” folks did.
“I just made excuses for it. I thought it was because I grew up in Alaska, and then around middle school, moved to Oregon and I thought, ‘Well that was just a big social change,’” she recalled.
“So I’m just very introverted. Like, that’s kind of always how I wrote it off.”
On the other hand, the “Holly’s World” alum defined that a few of her previous social struggles — now defined through her prognosis — had up to now “rubbed [people] the wrong way.”
“They think I’m, like, stuck up or snobby or think I’m better than everybody else,” she recalled. “I think because I’m more quiet, I’ve only recently learned to make eye contact [and] I’m often off in my own thoughts, so people take that as offensive.”
She added that she doesn’t “have a gauge” to inform when others are completed talking, which leads her to by chance interrupting other folks and “[pissing] people off.”
As of late, Madison mentioned that she's going to “apologize” to others if she realizes she interrupted or spoke over them and can “tell them why” through explaining her prognosis.
Proceeding, Madison instructed others not to “take it personally” when she isn’t hitting the proper social cues, as a result of she’s merely “not on the same social wavelength” as folks.
“Everyone operates differently and maybe I think interacting with anybody, just have a little bit of patience because you don’t know what they’re dealing with or what their level of social function is, you know?”