In echoing what JoanDarris mentioned, I've become fairly convinced that people on the autistic spectrum do tend to have emotional integration troubles. Emotions are there, but how autistics process and interpret them seems consistently very different than how "normal" people experience things. This "difference" is a thing that can get autistics and Aspies into trouble sometimes (and it has certainly happened to me); "normal" people come to expect a certain emotional response (often a reciprocal one), and when that is not displayed or reciprocated in someone with autism, we are often perceived as behaving poorly. I do nothing think it is necessarily a bad thing; it is yet another difference, something that needs to be better understood.
I do have emotions; I feel things strongly and deeply; everything seems to be there, "good" and "bad: hate, love, anger, jealousy, happiness, passion, humor, appreciation, etc... But, yes, there certainly seems to a clear "difference" for how I express and feel things compared to "normal" folks. I do have two general modes of "emotions suppressed", and "emotions wild"; I favor the suppressed state because "wild" really does mean "wild", and it can be unbalancing for me, and frighten those around me (in a scary way, not a truly dangerous way). And "suppressed" is not necessarily a bad state; yeah I can come off as cold; but I can also be "cool" when "normal" folks are unable to be. It seems to be yet another doubled-edged sword, not necessarily just a deficit.
Good fortune,
- Icarus has Kenderlike fear immunity…
_________________
Please forgive me if, in the heat of battle, I sometimes forget which side I'm on.