Reodor_Felgen wrote:
The chances aren't that big unless they both have AS. Besides, it's not the autism that makes some of the lower-functioning autistics ret*d, but a co-diagnosis (often unspecified).
Actually, it's the testing system. They turn out not to be the "opposite" of very bright
at all, just to almost always be tested using biased instruments that don't allow them to show their intellects. "Severity" of autism has
nothing to do with intellectual skills. There wouldn't be anything wrong if it did, but it doesn't. And because of that I get irked when people (like the original poster) say you can have anything from a very bright child to a severely autistic child, because most children labeled as severely autistic don't even
have an intellectual disability, so why are people acting like they're opposites?
Other thing (this in response more to the OP than anything else) that bothers me is... I just don't like the whole idea of talking to someone to warn them that their kids might be a lot like them. It shouldn't be a
warning.
I'm autistic, and I have a lot of trouble in everyday life by adulthood, and I'm very certain my parents would not have wanted to be talked into not having me (in fact someone tried to talk my mother into not having me and she didn't agree). My father and brother are also autistic. Nobody in my family was unwanted for having a non-standard neurotype, even one so non-standard as mine. And I've been called both "gifted"
and "low functioning" in my lifetime (I consider those both not to be opposites and not to be particularly descriptive of me, and I don't use either term except in discussions such as this one), and my brother was diagnosed as "both gifted and ret*d at once" (those are the exact words) as a kid. Of the three of us I was considered the brightest of the kids and I went on to have the most difficulty functioning in the world as an adult (and about a third of autistic people lose abilities in puberty, in about a sixth that's permanent), so you just can't know these things and you certainly can't treat them as opposites.
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"In my world it's a place of patterns and feel. In my world it's a haven for what is real. It's my world, nobody can steal it, but people like me, we live in the shadows." -Donna Williams