krex wrote:
I was thinking that it was "odd" ie doesn't fit the stereotype of Aspergers,that I love to read fiction and have always been interested in people...just not in "real life" much.
At least on this board, there are lots who are interested in people, they just aren't so good at understanding them.
Before studying and then working ate up my time, I read about three books a week, plus other stuff, about evenly divided between fiction and science/technical things. You are not alone in liking fiction. But it took me until age 22 before I understood a story that focused on how people think and feel.
A really good writer can give you characters that feel real to some extent, you often get the privilege of witnessing what they think and feel, which you don't get with the people you meet, and the characters in a story won't lie to you or screw you over in some other way. They may do that to each other, but not to you, because you're only an observer, even if you are an observer who cares (if the writer is good enough that you
can care about the characters).
hartzofspace wrote:
Or, the NT in question decides I am just too weird to tolerate any longer, and they dump me, with no warning or explanation.
A familiar experience. I think I just feel wrong to most people. They don't get the little signals they expect, a little alarm bell goes off in their heads (they may not even know why) and off they go.
hartzofspace wrote:
Now I have gotten used to it, but can't help but think that it would be nice to actually get past this "honeymoon phase" in friendships.
I know it's not a cheerful thought, but the "this is just too weird" reaction can happen after up to five years. You'd think that would be long enough to be past the honeymoon period, but it's not. If both people gain more than they lose, that's fair enough, but when the other party just disappears, it's a bit hard to tell how they feel about it, and whether it would be kinder to the next nice person you meet to stay away from them. That sort of consideration makes this cartoon extra funny to me:
Help
And another Dilbert cartoon describes something that has come up here in the cafe:
Laughing