ensabah6 wrote:
the pattern included " a lack of empathy, little ability to form friendships, one-sided conversation, intense absorption in a special interest, and clumsy movements." Asperger called children with AS "little professors" because of their ability to talk about their favorite subject in great detail. It is commonly said that the paper was based on only four boys.
I can remember all my childhood, so will outline traits in relation to your list.
I had limited empathy, but was compassionate and concerned with social justice. I couldn't exchange emotional gestures, particularly with family. I've never expressed love to a family member (and couldn't, even if I were to become capable of feeling it). I couldn't/cannot express concern for them, even if I feel it, and I rarely feel what they might be experiencing.
I had little ability to form friendships and would passively accept anyone's advances. I had no emotional bond to the people I knew. It's only quite recently I've felt capable of it. It's painful, but also pleasant.
I rarely conversed, but did like to concentrate on only my side when I did. Being very quiet disguises this trait; it encouraged others to take advantage of me, offloading all their problems, and I'd have no idea how to get them to stop.
The majority of my free time would be spent alone and absorbed in interests for hours, even though I had siblings.
I wasn't clumsy, but always felt very awkward walking and don't have a good posture. My other motor skills seem fine.
I wasn't a "raging aspie" until my teens. In childhood, I fit the commonly described female presentation very well and relate to that better than the original descriptions. For instance, I was more a "little philosopher" in childhood, and became the full-blown "little professor" in my teens.
ensabah6 wrote:
If you are a woman what is your obsessive interest?
In adulthood, the most pronounced ones (some beginning in my teens) have been:
Star Trek
Physics
Psychology
Genealogy
Autism
I won't list the offshoots and short-term obsessions.