crystaltermination wrote:
Lunella wrote:
We have it just as bad in the UK.
I frequently get bothered by builders when I'm trying to go somewhere since builders are EVERYWHERE. The typical "Y'ALLRIGHT LOVE" grates on me, ughhh. "SMILE LOVE, CAN'T BE THAT BAD" or "FANCY A SHAG?" pls no. Even when I'm with my bf they're like "FUTURE MARRIED COUPLE EH?!" SO awkwaaaard. And the NTs say us autistic people have no filter... Jesus.
In fact why do these absolute bastards even feel the need to cat call when they have absolutely NO chance and they know that? It's like a never ending cycle of idiot. I'm starting to think they just do it to show off to their builder mates.
I think the showing off to their mates part is spot on. It's somehow ingrained into so many - men and women - in a group to prove they are 'alpha' in some way. I've heard some women appreciate catcalls, but I find that very hard to believe. It's unwanted objectification that can quickly escalate into abuse, but is so often defended as horseplay alongside the inevitable demand to stop being so sensitive.
And that is exactly word for word how I feel about the entire thing.
Someone said to me once that if someone says to not show that it bothers you, like saying you're being too sensitive and you should just deal with it but not show it bothered you - it's apparently the lightest form of Gaslighting because they're essentially saying "shut up and suffer in silence" when you are allowed to be mad/upset about things because that's being healthy, not suffering in silence. -_-
I've heard of people liking the cat calls too but I'm putting that down to them being some kind of narcissistic attention seeker.
When you react to it and they act like they were just playing around, it's kind of manipulative I think because clearly the intent was to get a rise out of you or some kind of reaction, so by doing so you fall into a trap and then they deny that's what the intent was to fuel more reaction? I sort of think it's like that in a lot of the scenarios.
_________________
The term Aspergers is no longer officially used in the UK - it is now regarded as High Functioning Autism.