lionesss wrote:
I was a klutz and had trouble fitting in. I had to observe "NT"'s to gain social skills and it was very awkward back then. I don't remember school that well anymore.. perhaps I blocked a lot of those painful moments out.
I could have written that, that was so me.
In school, I figured out pretty quickly that if 300 of them act one way, and I'm different, it's not because they are weird. So I spent a lot of time observing the other students and even the teachers to get the 'NT mindset' down. By HS, I was passable as normal. Now, the only way to tell I'm aspie is to see me during a seizure *I have petit mal seizures that leave me functioning but unaware of what I'm doing* or catch me on a bad day.
I think that being AS left me different, but I've learned to work with those differences. Being normal is vastly overrated anyhow.
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Every time you think you've made it idiot proof, someone comes along and invents a better idiot.
?the end of our exploring, will be to arrive where we started, and know the place for the first time. - T.S. Eliot