KT67 wrote:
Dear_one wrote:
When I grew up, you couldn't be an Aspie at all, but "freaks" in several variations were all good, at least with each other.
When I grew up all the nerds hung out together and looked down on normal kids...
Looking back at it I doubt I was the only aspie in the group
Also yes looking back at it that does sound painfully obnoxious...
When I was in school, "creepy" didn't exist. It was just "dork" or "dweeb", both meaning "ugly and lacking social skills". "Nerd" and "geek" were slightly better, although far from complimentary. I think I was a "dweeb" in elementary school and a "dork" in high school. There were no nerd cliques in my high school. Nerds just laid low, and hoped to be left alone. Although by senior year, intelligence and computer skills started to be seen as a good thing, as IT was seen as a lucrative career back then.
"Creepy" in a sense of "ugly" didn't become a thing until early 2000's, and "cringe" existed only as a verb back then. And even then, "cringe" was something a woman did in reaction to a pile of maggots, not an unattractive man asking to dance with her.
Today, I work as a line repair technician (repairing or replacing AV and telecom lines) for a major hospital in my city. It's basically a grunt job. But when I tell women I meet that I work for a hospital, they seem to like it. So I didn't stray very far from my high school age "geek" roots. Although socially, I'm nowhere close to what I was in high school.