Metal Rat wrote:
Besides, I wonder how many of you were into dinosaurs when you were young?
This is part of how I was weird actually. Dinosaurs are pretty normal. I was into that plus astronomy and space, math, chemistry, and I chased my parents around to both take me to natural science museums (we lived near Ann Arbor MI at the time so the options weren't bad) as well as go to some of the stores that were selling raw gem stones - I still have a box of citrines, amethysts, quartz, etc. from almost thirty-five years ago sitting around here somewhere.
I used to hear psychologists, in describing Asperger's, use an analogy of a little boy who had all kinds of star maps and was fascinated with them and asked a parent or therapist with a straight face how we discovered their names. I'm half afraid I literally could have been that kid.
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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.