AtticusKane wrote:
Sweetleaf wrote:
AtticusKane wrote:
That's the trouble, isn't it? The only way I was able to avoid such attitudes wwas to focus myself on not being quiet, and trying to be funny. It's a cruel world to live in if you don't meet others halfway
Sucks for those who lack that ability.
That's not to say go along with it, but even if everyone in the world was an aspie, we'd have to learn to interact with each other and express ourselves. I mean what are we talking about on all these threads, if we truly can't express what we're thinking to others? It's the fear of not being accepted, I think, that gets in the way.
Thus the problem of fearing criticism.
I've met quite a few AS people who don't know they have AS but meet literally every requirement of the definition. (including my young brother in high school whose made amazing strides towards normalcy). I've seen how they've "survived" the things they do to get by, and I've seen them "act" out NT behavior, not always well, but you see them trying. To make them aware of their AS may help them out but I can see it as a crutch and an excuse to not try. So yes, it can be done, though you'll always be off a tad (or in the case of my brother, acting the part of a normal person very very well), you can survive and make it in this cruel world.
The story for me is quite different, and there's nothing can change me as it is a physical drawback (my brain that is...) and am far more extreme in some of my symptoms then other AS I've met (and in some cases, less so). But yea, To express myself as I am would probably make me homeless, unemployed, lonely, and suicidal.
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