Well, I've had many years to "smooth" out some quirks, but I'm still pretty damn odd in the eyes of most...I was a strange kid, was told day in and day out that I was weird, and I KNEW I was different, but could never understand why. I spent most of my life embarrassed, confused, and pissed off. It's only been during the last three years or so that I've embraced who I am, and for that I thank my darling twelve-year-old girl, who has AS. If she'd not been born, I would likely have never researched AS, thus finding myself.
I now tell stories to my kids about how I was as a kid and young adult, and it's wonderful to be able to laugh now instead of cringe...or cry...at those memories. Tonight, for instance, I was telling them how, when I was in 7th grade, I would stare at an older boy whom I'd found attractive -- just sit sideways in my bus seat and openly stare...Me with my thick glasses, owl jewelry and owl T-shirts and stupid hair, just sitting there staring, like it was a perfectly normal thing to do.
I said to my kids, "No wonder I had no friends!" But I was laughing as I said that.