outofplace wrote:
I do much the same thing. I tend to be a "fixer" in that I try to help those in need and make them better people. The bad thing is that it rarely ever works because most of them just want to keep on doing what they do that gets them into trouble to begin with. Logic only goes so far and once I have spent my logical arrow, there is simply nothing left in my quiver to shoot.
I also have a habit of fixing cars for people around me who are poor and can't afford to pay me. I just make them buy parts and then try to make their car as safe as I can within their budget.
There seems to be a fine line between being helpful and being used. I've seen well meaning friends fall apart (financially, mentally) becasue people have taken advantage of their altruism. You need to be pretty savvy to be truly altruistic, because ending up in the gutter yourself isn't helpful to anyone.
'Superiority complex' sounds pejorative, I think it's more of a sense of wellbeing, of purpose and of content that one feels when they 'help' or 'fix' things for others. I mean, you probably wouldn't do it if you felt pretty awful afterwards, right? That's just part of being human. What's great about beign an autistic human is that we can more easily neglect all the social politics that often gets in the way of pursuing this outcome.