sluice wrote:
I think the stereotype is a logical and serious-minded individual. A cross between Spock and a bar-know-it-all who has little sense of humor or simply misses the joke as it flies overhead.
I am the opposite. I have a very difficult time taking anything too seriously. Arguments, deaths, break-ups, and personal failure all are examples were I feel like I have to put on an appropriate face for others. Someone will console me with a face full of tears and give me a big hug, and then it is like shouldn't I feel worse since it my loss and not theirs. I feel bad in my own way, but not the way I think people expect that I should. It does often take me longer to get over some loss and move on from it than most people for instance.
Similarly, when someone is asking for serious advice about their relationship with their S.O., a career problem or some other personal problem, I usually will have to stop myself from saying some wisecrack or just dismiss the importance of the problem. I don't know if my perspective puts less value on any one event, or if I don't have the maturity that I am supposed to have by this point. I can see it one day that I will be on my deathbed and some young doctor will give me the bad news and I will ask if he thinks if I have enough time left to finish the movie I am watching or something equally as dismissive. Is this aspergers or my own personal weirdness?
100% me. Some of my innapropriate replys have been;
When a friend told me his wife had just lost their unborn child my reply was "that was a bit careless wasn't it"
When told a friend had been run over and killed, "was the car damaged much"
When in the hearse going to my fathers funeral I started asking questions about the engine size of the car, it's top speed etc.
I turn every conversation into a joke.