Sora wrote:
I may the odd one out here,
but I totally loved how I didn't interact with anybody my age at all and how I only had short bouts of acknowledgement when forced until I was in my pre-teens.
I really like being with people these days, I like my social job, my friends because all that foreign stuff is pretty fascinating, don't get me wrong. However, the time during which I did not have to deal with kids and playing and stuff - even naturally ignored them and did not recognise them as playmates and persons - that was the best time of my life.
Like, the best time ever.
I had an amazing and most happy childhood despite the autistic symptoms.
I agree with this totally, but I would like to add something to the OP (and others):
Normal is overrated. The idea of what someone
should be, rather than who we
are, is what causes autistics to think that there's something wrong. The other thing that you have to understand is that it's not who you are that makes you unhappy, it's fighting who you are. Be who you are, and you will be free.
Edit: By the way, this presents another advantage and disadvantage of autism. We don't feel the need to follow the norm naturally, so we can reject it easier. However, we must fight who we are more than neurotypicals in order to follow the norm. Thus, we can be happy much more easily, but we also have much more stress when we feel the need to follow the norm.
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"Let reason be your only sovereign." ~Wizard's Sixth Rule
I'm working my way up to Attending Crazy Taoist. For now, just call me Dr. Crazy Taoist.