Verdandi wrote:
davidalan11235813 wrote:
I completely disagree. Females tend to be socially conditioned to be a lot softer and kinder than males are. As such, it's far more likely for AS girls to be "taken under the wing", so to speak, of NT girls, so they tend to learn social skills much better than males, who are more likely to be socially conditioned to assert their dominance, and ridicule and exclude anyone who doesn't "fit in." And if you don't "fit in" you are immediately marked as "the weird kid" and ostracized from your peers.
Also, since males are socially conditioned to be more aggressive in pursuing a relationship, AS females are more likely to end up in a relationship than females. Consider, NT male is attracted to AS female, and due to his social conditioning, pursues a relationship with her. He may or may not succeed, but on the other hand, NT female is attracted to AS male. Due to social conditioning, she hints with nonverbal signals (which he cannot interpret) that she is attracted to him and expects him to pursue her, which does not happen.
So this is all a matter of theory to you? Your first paragraph is often proposed, but I've found that it didn't play out that way for a lot of autistic girls.
Women From Another Planet? is full of writings by autistic women who didn't have the experience of "being taken under someone's wing."
As for whether AS women are more likely to end up in a relationship, I don't know. I found it difficult to maintain any relationships because I didn't know how, and I am so bad at interpreting flirting and other related social signals that I have been on dates without knowing they were dates at the time. Honestly, I can't imagine what it would be like if my most pressing concern was whether I could get into and maintain a relationship. It would be a lot different from my life as it is now.
I have to say before I go any further, I only have my experiences as an AS male, and the experiences I've read about from AS people of both sexes I've read about, and the (very) few other AS people I've met to draw on when coming to my conclusions. I'm in no way proposing them as a concrete matter of fact, just a theory. The few other autistic people I knew growing up were low functioning, and were kept in special needs classes, so I couldn't observe how any other AS individuals dealt with their upbringings. But from what I've experienced, the sort of competitiveness typical of NT males makes it less common for AS males to even be given a chance among their same sex peers.
Also, I'm not addressing whether or not it's easier for males or females to maintain a relationship. In that case, it's more likely than not a wash. I'm simply saying that since males are both more visually stimulated and more aggressive, it's more likely for an attractive AS female to end up in a relationship than a male.