ArtlyBookly wrote:
So I'm reading all this stuff online about girls with Asperger's, and they say that girls with the syndrome have an easier time fitting in than boys. Well, I certainly didn't, and it's left lasting scars to this day. I was cute as a little girl, then got fat all of a sudden when I hit puberty, wore loose-fitting shirts and pants all the time because they were comfortable, and didn't like washing my hair, so that all the boys would make fun of me every day about my dandruff and my weight, among other things. I guess being Black didn't help, either. Things are different now, but I still don't wear makeup, have lost weight but still struggle with it (I love to eat) and have very little desire to dress up unless it's for someone I really like. I wish I was lucky like some of you and had a natural interest in those things. Sometimes I don't even enjoy being a woman.
I think that being black is also a big issue because I'm also black and I don't and never fit into the 'norms' expected of a black person, a female, and even more so a black female. The first 10 years of my life was spent in a very urban area, which was a big struggle for me, and since then I've lived in a predominately white, rural area, which is also a struggle for me because people say to me, "You're not what I expected in a black person," and the few black people that live in the area are like, "Yo, whassup shorty. Or, Yo, why you ain't down wit us?!," and I'm like, "Hi, excuse me, do I know you? Please step away from my person." And I am 'chubby'/fat, very very rarely use makeup, and would prefer to dress down rather than dress up. So put in all of these social, racial, gender issues and stereotypes along with Aspergers and you have a world of turmoil. No matter where I went, my experience was the worst.