Aspies...when did you finally realize you're not a kid

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muslimmetalhead
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05 May 2012, 4:07 pm

Due to AS, my emotional maturity came a lot later, and I only seriously considered myself a man since last February when I liked this girl (err...woman) in one of my classes.

I finally figured out what I was doing wrong.

This is my life and I need to do something with it.

Men relate by doing things together; it's how nature works. The guys go out and work, the women organize socialization, you know how it is.

I figured a lot out when I finally realized "I am grown up"


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Steven_Tyler77
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05 May 2012, 4:54 pm

I'm 25 years old now and I haven't yet realized that I'm not a teenager anymore. I still feel like a teenager and I am totally puzzled when I see former high school classmates of mine now turned into what appears as responsible adults, with jobs and families of their own...


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Who_Am_I
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05 May 2012, 5:14 pm

Quote:
The guys go out and work


You may be surprised to learn that many women also have jobs.

And that men enjoy socialisation too! 8O


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UnLoser
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05 May 2012, 9:55 pm

For me, it wasn't so much a sudden realization, as a gradual shift in the way I think about myself. I definitely don't consider myself a man yet, though. I'm not sure if I'll ever be able to identify with that particular label.



muslimmetalhead
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06 May 2012, 7:51 am

UnLoser wrote:
For me, it wasn't so much a sudden realization, as a gradual shift in the way I think about myself. I definitely don't consider myself a man yet, though. I'm not sure if I'll ever be able to identify with that particular label.

Just because you have a neurological disorder does not mean you are not a man, albeit one with a disorder


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muslimmetalhead
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06 May 2012, 7:51 am

UnLoser wrote:
For me, it wasn't so much a sudden realization, as a gradual shift in the way I think about myself. I definitely don't consider myself a man yet, though. I'm not sure if I'll ever be able to identify with that particular label.

Just because you have a neurological disorder does not mean you are not a man, albeit one with a disorder


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muslimmetalhead
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06 May 2012, 7:51 am

UnLoser wrote:
For me, it wasn't so much a sudden realization, as a gradual shift in the way I think about myself. I definitely don't consider myself a man yet, though. I'm not sure if I'll ever be able to identify with that particular label.

Just because you have a neurological disorder does not mean you are not a man, albeit one with a disorder


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muslimmetalhead
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06 May 2012, 7:52 am

UnLoser wrote:
For me, it wasn't so much a sudden realization, as a gradual shift in the way I think about myself. I definitely don't consider myself a man yet, though. I'm not sure if I'll ever be able to identify with that particular label.

Just because you have a neurological disorder does not mean you are not a man, albeit one with a disorder


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Steven_Tyler77
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07 May 2012, 5:16 pm

It's not about being a man from a biological standoint (i.e. an adult male of the human species), but about feeling like a man, about the way one self-identifies.

It's the same for me. Biologically I am a young woman, but it's hard for me to feel like that, since I don't feel like an adult in any way. I don't feel like a girl either, so this is just strange...


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MakaylaTheAspie
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07 May 2012, 7:59 pm

Never really was a kid. I take interest in a few kid-friendly things, but for the most part I'd consider myself well into adolescence.


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StarTrekker
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11 May 2012, 11:13 pm

Hard to say really, I still don't fully consider myself to be a "grown woman" in the conventional sense. It's weird, parts of me, like school and work responsibilities, almost seemed to skip straight from childhood into adulthood with nothing in between, while the rest of me, emotional maturity, pleasure activities, ways of communicating, all seem to be stuck in this perpetual childhood. I still talk to my imaginary friend, play in cardboard boxes, and love running around in toy stores, while at the same time I'm going to college, working, and going downtown with my friends, all of whom seem so much more "grown up" than me, even though we're the same age. Most days I wish I were still a kid, life was simpler back then, not to mention more fun!


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