danchrist wrote:
This knowledge has given me a context to understand myself within - my ability to rapidly learn complex systems, the embarrassing, shameful, humiliating events that were seared into my memory when I was younger, my inability to keep contact with some of the friends I've made over the years. I understand both what's "wrong" with me, and what's "wrong" with others.
That lightbulb moment is really quite liberating isn't it? It came to me by having my son diagnosed with Aspergers at the age of 7 and observing as he grew how many of his characteristics were shared by myself. Like you I have never had a formal diagnosis but I have a history of eccentric behaviours which together definitely add up to a place fairly well along the spectrum. It's great to know that you're not just odd and 'not right' and that there is an explanation for the way you are, and as you say it helps when you are trying to deal with the humiliations you have suffered along the way. While I suffer a lot of depression and anxiety from the sense of isolation I often feel, I find I have no great desire to be 'normal' - I suppose I just wish I knew more people who were a bit more like myself.
I can totally get the absent-minded professor thing too, I think that's something I use as a defence when I am too anxious or feeling too tired to engage with people. I was obsessed with history from an early age, specifically military history and specifically the Napoleonic Wars and I find my total immersion in that obsession quite comforting...when coming into work in the morning I put my reading glasses on, get out a book about the Lancers of the Imperial Guard and the crowds become a blur, I feel quite safe from anything the commute might throw my way.
Actually I would like to write a book about something military and/or Napoleonic but not sure whether I could write anything that might be of interest to anyone who isn't similarly obsessive!
Good to have you here, hope you find the support you are looking for.