JohnnyLurg wrote:
Sometimes I wish I had never found out I had autism when I think back to how blissful I was before I knew I had autism. I felt more interesting and unique, and that I could do anything, instead of "just another Aspie, who cares."
Can someone explain to me what he is talking about?
To me it's like saying "before the doctor diagnosed it I loved being in constant pain from sickle cell anemia" because the pain meant "that I could do anything, and made me feel unique" , but now I am "just another person with sickle cell anemia"...how boring.
You would still be in constant agony, and you still have a rare inborn disease. So if having those two things floats your boat then they are still both true.