Fnord wrote:
Masking is something that everybody does, to greater or lesser degrees.
I mean, when you treat any one person different from another, you are masking for at least one of them.
People have their family masks, their work masks, their friend masks . . . different masks for every context.
Those sorts of masking is different from the autistic related kind of masking.
Such masking is usually to do with one's levels of responsibility, emotional guard, or some weird social roles dynamic and is very much tied to one's will over self control.
The personality is simply stretched or molded into or with that particular state of change.
A type of "masking" in reaction to environment and social change makes a shift in personality and behaviors -- and is ultimately relevant to one's self restraint and adaptability.
But not autism related masking.
It is akin to being deaf and pretend you can hear people by reading lips.
Because people doesn't want to deal with that -- and when people refuses to see any possible equipment to help you communicate because they'd rather see and do things the "normal" way.
And so refuse to use equipments and communicate the fact that you're deaf.
Worse, is that not everyone can do the same -- and not any person could typically relate to that kind of adaptability.
A high risk, high effort and low reward game for all I know where burnout is inevitable.
It's not your typical everyday masking by shifting between worlds from home and work. Or the kind where one pretends to not be depressed and anxious, or discomfort, hurt and cold.
I don't mask enough to pretend what I like and dislike, or what I can and cannot do, about what I feel or thought, or lie stuff about myself and to the world.
But I blend enough to be responsible. To not do anything stupid or unreasonable, and make the best sound judgement I could over a situation.
And sometimes stand out well for reasons I usually don't understand.

I'm also aware that not everyone could or would. And I understand why...