If You Could Cure Your Autism Would You?

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livingwithautism
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21 Jan 2018, 3:21 pm

ASPartOfMe wrote:
livingwithautism wrote:
Arniel wrote:
Autism is only a problem insofar how it affects your mood, relationships and career. In an ideal situation one would manage to insulate themselves within a compatible social circle and manage to pull off a satisfactory job and lead a reasonably happy existence.

Isolation and feeling trapped are definitely relatable feelings. I'm not yet at the point of giving up and wanting to be NT though. Who would want to live on easymode :twisted: #notpsychologicaldefensemechanisms


But if someone doesn't have those supports and still gets on fine then they don't have autism.

Not necessarily. It could mean they have learned social skills or are lucky enough to have people around them that are understanding and share interests.
I had a decade or so where I was doing fine while autistic.


You can’t be diagnosed autistic if you have never been impaired. I should have phrased it differently.



saimand
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21 Jan 2018, 7:19 pm

Yes. Why-id have friends, relationships, wouldnt stand out and would have a typical life . An for the most certain part I would be much happier person.


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Esmerelda Weatherwax
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21 Jan 2018, 7:37 pm

No. It cost me terribly, yet it also gave me everything that I still have that lasted and was worthwhile, and it gave me everyone I ever loved (human or animal) who was worth the time and care.

“The chemists are a strange class of mortals, impelled by an almost insane impulse to seek their pleasures amid smoke and vapour, soot and flame, poisons and poverty; yet among all these evils I seem to live so sweetly that may I die if I were to change places with the Persian king.”

― Johann Joachim Becher


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blazingstar
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21 Jan 2018, 8:07 pm

I wouldn't want a cure. I like who I am today and I couldn't have gotten here, without going through the other stuff. I would not want to be part of a mindless crowd watching TV and drinking themselves silly at parties, and mindlessly chattering while shopping. No, thank you. I think I will stay the way I am. :D

Life's a journey.


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Redxk
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21 Jan 2018, 10:04 pm

Yes, but I would rather cure the executive impairments.



livingwithautism
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21 Jan 2018, 11:41 pm

blazingstar wrote:
I wouldn't want a cure. I like who I am today and I couldn't have gotten here, without going through the other stuff. I would not want to be part of a mindless crowd watching TV and drinking themselves silly at parties, and mindlessly chattering while shopping. No, thank you. I think I will stay the way I am. :D

Life's a journey.


Not every NT does that. I'm sick of all the NT bashing on here. They are people too. Curing your autism would not make you part of a mindless crowd watching TV and drinking themselves silly at parties, and mindlessly chattering while shopping. If that's what you think of NTs you are grossly misinformed and are rather mindless yourself, buying into Aspie elitism.



IntrepidKat
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22 Jan 2018, 12:05 am

No.

But I do wish that the world were led by Aspies.



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22 Jan 2018, 4:27 am

Though I only have Aspergers for this I don't really want to alter anything major about myself so the actual answer is no. But if I had a choice, I would change a few minor things (like how I talk too much or the way I do, my weird body language, my weird gate and speech) so I wouldn't look so god damn goofy all the time. And if it was REALLY up to me to change anything then I'd change a LOT, but MUCH later on (like after I die, but somehow live on). But this is only about Autism.



AntisocialButterfly
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22 Jan 2018, 5:42 am

Autism can make it harder to cope with some things, but I wouldn't say it something that wants curing. I guess sometimes it is frustrating, but it also gives you awesome skills and interests. I like the fact I can get an adrenaline rush out of reading a book, even if I don't get it from socialising, that's okay I have things I love that make me who I am.

I also think there is a lot of value in honest, face value people. The world needs more of them. We may not understand NT's and they may not understand us, but not everyone can be the same, if everyone made chairs who would do anything else?
There is value in our differences!

I think we just need to get this idea out of our heads that everyone should be 'exactly' the same, and to treat someone differently even if they ask for it specifically is not being 'fair'. It's not helpful, some people are strong, some people hate spicy food, some people can spell, and yet other people are different in a myriad of different ways. That is okay, that doesn't mean the person is worth less, to be pitied or to be given more or less respect. You can treat different people differently and value them all the same.

So yer, I don't think autism is something that needs a cure. It makes up a large part of our personality. Who would we be without it? it would be like ripping the wires out of a circuit board and putting them all into completely different holes to create a new set of wiring. It is no longer the same.



xatrix26
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22 Jan 2018, 6:07 am

blazingstar wrote:
I wouldn't want a cure. I like who I am today and I couldn't have gotten here, without going through the other stuff. I would not want to be part of a mindless crowd watching TV and drinking themselves silly at parties, and mindlessly chattering while shopping. No, thank you. I think I will stay the way I am. :D

Life's a journey.


I couldn't agree with you more. NTs don't seem to mind being mindless do they? Such perplexing creatures they are. Zoning out and drinking until they drop at parties would be the closest thing to death and NOT something I would want to engage in that's for sure.

Like most Aspies I require constant intellectual stimulation and recitation. My enhanced memory allows me to remember most of what I read and my above average intelligence allows me to comprehend most of what I read. And if somebody found a cure for that -- even if we were talking about a disease here -- then I would not want it either!

Life's a journey indeed!

:D


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22 Jan 2018, 9:55 am

We are not talking level 3 autism though are we?

For that I would especially love a cure OR better more effective therapies (+ easily accessible) and WAY more support from society. My son is facing a lifetime of extreme hardship because of how severe his autism is.

EzraS here gives me hope because he comes off as intellectual, fun, and wise. I don’t sense despair and depression from his writing, at all, yet he too is non-verbal and faced a battle, since birth. And now therapies are supposedly improved, so who knows.

Either way severely affected and also extremely delayed (like my son) Autistic kids need a loving understanding world and a brighter future and if for that a cure is the answer Then that’s what I want.


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redrobin62
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22 Jan 2018, 11:00 am

Maybe if I was younger, like from my teens to 30, but I'm old and set in my ways, so it's too late. I've since adjusted to my extreme loneliness and isolation and accept it as inevitable with people like me.



ASPartOfMe
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22 Jan 2018, 12:14 pm

livingwithautism wrote:
blazingstar wrote:
I wouldn't want a cure. I like who I am today and I couldn't have gotten here, without going through the other stuff. I would not want to be part of a mindless crowd watching TV and drinking themselves silly at parties, and mindlessly chattering while shopping. No, thank you. I think I will stay the way I am. :D

Life's a journey.


Not every NT does that. I'm sick of all the NT bashing on here. They are people too. Curing your autism would not make you part of a mindless crowd watching TV and drinking themselves silly at parties, and mindlessly chattering while shopping. If that's what you think of NTs you are grossly misinformed and are rather mindless yourself, buying into Aspie elitism.

^^^^
This
I think the problem is for various and understandable reasons aspies do not meet enough NT’s and when they do it often does not go well.
One advantage of growing up undiagnosed and unaware was that I was forced to interact with NT people.


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ASPartOfMe
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22 Jan 2018, 12:28 pm

blooiejagwa wrote:
We are not talking level 3 autism though are we?

For that I would especially love a cure OR better more effective therapies (+ easily accessible) and WAY more support from society. My son is facing a lifetime of extreme hardship because of how severe his autism is.

EzraS here gives me hope because he comes off as intellectual, fun, and wise. I don’t sense despair and depression from his writing, at all, yet he too is non-verbal and faced a battle, since birth. And now therapies are supposedly improved, so who knows.

Either way severely affected and also extremely delayed (like my son) Autistic kids need a loving understanding world and a brighter future and if for that a cure is the answer Then that’s what I want.


This post is a going down an ableist slippery slope. We assume severe autistics are misreable because of their autism based on our experiences. The issue is we (and that includes level 1) really do not know. Instead of spending time and money on cures I would rather spend it on finding a way to commuicate with them and they with us. We take that approach with people with hearing and vision impairments.


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blazingstar
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22 Jan 2018, 12:43 pm

ASPartOfMe wrote:
livingwithautism wrote:
blazingstar wrote:
I wouldn't want a cure. I like who I am today and I couldn't have gotten here, without going through the other stuff. I would not want to be part of a mindless crowd watching TV and drinking themselves silly at parties, and mindlessly chattering while shopping. No, thank you. I think I will stay the way I am. :D

Life's a journey.


Not every NT does that. I'm sick of all the NT bashing on here. They are people too. Curing your autism would not make you part of a mindless crowd watching TV and drinking themselves silly at parties, and mindlessly chattering while shopping. If that's what you think of NTs you are grossly misinformed and are rather mindless yourself, buying into Aspie elitism.

^^^^
This
I think the problem is for various and understandable reasons aspies do not meet enough NT’s and when they do it often does not go well.
One advantage of growing up undiagnosed and unaware was that I was forced to interact with NT people.


I apologize to anyone I offended. The remark was meant to be a bit tongue in cheek, especially considering how many aspies feel lonely and left out. Of course not all NTs are like that, just like people everywhere are different. Many of the things we feel "left out" of, aren't things we would really like anyway.


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ASPartOfMe
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22 Jan 2018, 12:48 pm

A good idea if posting a tongue and cheek remarks is to do this
NT’s are dumb(sarcasm). Or put an emoji that convays you are not being serious.


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“My autism is not a superpower. It also isn’t some kind of god-forsaken, endless fountain of suffering inflicted on my family. It’s just part of who I am as a person”. - Sara Luterman