I'd say I'm doing pretty well. I've noticed that even with certain social shortcomings in an immediate sense I can smooth them over with most people, even to the point where when they see something strange they're more apt to question themselves.
As far as working/business social skills, its not really a stuck issue. Anyone can improve them by leaps and bounds, it does take bold character though or at least enough drive from behind to commit to that sort of thing. So far I've had jobs almost constantly since I was 17, have worked most of them for more than two years, even had a restaurant job through college for about seven years. My current professional job, auditing, I've been in for three years now and the jump from college to real world application was shaky but I thankfully came to an employer who understood the difference between getting good grades and having 10 or 20 years experience, they've trained very well and been very compassionate in that endeavor. I have to take on a lot of management responsibilities and I will find myself speaking to accounting managers and controllers on a regular basis for meetings and presentations, it doesn't bother me too much as a) they're mere humans themselves and b) they're usually pretty down to earth and friendly regardless.
As far as the overall economic state of Aspies in general though? I think horridly underutilized. I get the impression that we have a problem from both ends - ie. the psychological community still hasn't figured it out in a broader sense or what to do with it, I think a lot of people could function on an NT level without selling 'themselves' out, just that its a very rigorous and personal path and having good/useful mentoring means a lot. Also, I'd say this with any minority group - victim culture is terrible, ie. its the antithesis to progress. It seems like its simmered down a lot on WP, where we're largely unfriendly to Aspie/Autie supremecy ideas or people who want to play the blame game, but for those who do - its resignation to have less and to be less successful in life; when it comes to that, that much is a choice and a very poorly made one.
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The loneliest part of life: it's not just that no one is on your cloud, few can even see your cloud.