IsabellaLinton wrote:
How do you know they weren't disabled by their neurotype?
My grandfather held a job and did the best he could before going AWOL and eventually shooting himself in the head. My grandmother had considerable depression from the social requirements of masking, acting neurotypical around other women, wearing uncomfortable clothing, raising children without a moment to herself, and dealing with sensory overload in a house with 24/7 babies and pregnancy despite her sensitivities.
Many people of those generations (including my own) developed considerable mental health struggles which they dealt with in private lest they be shut up in psychiatric care.
I was referring to confusing BAP with autism, BAP is not usually disabling other than social difficulties
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"The reasonable man adapts himself to the world; the unreasonable one persists in trying to adapt the world to himself. Therefore all progress depends upon the unreasonable man."
- George Bernie Shaw