DiabloDave363 wrote:
sharkattack wrote:
I guess people are trying to be positive and not dwell on the negative.
But your right having Aspergers sucks and I am almost 39.
You just have to get on with it and not put yourself down.
What's improved in your life over the last twenty years if you don't mind me asking?
You didn't ask this of me but I'll answer anyway. In the last 20 years I've gotten better at understanding unspoken social rules. Not enough to be "normal" but enough to be socially acceptable. Which is satisfying in a way. I've also figured out that most people are totally weird or nuts in some way and I'm actually not as odd as I think I am. Also, regarding how sad you feel that you're not "normal": this morning on the walk to work I thought about how my teen years were pretty abnormal. I wasn't a child soldier or a prostitute or anything, but I didn't live with my family and I went away to school when I was 15. I didn't get to forge friendships while cruising around town in beat up hoopties or go to house parties or get stoned. The thing is, almost everyone I know IRL had THAT adolescence. Part of my thinking-while-walking was along the lines of "what do I have to offer" and one of the things I have to offer is a deeper and wider understanding and acceptance of the abnormal, the kink and the weird. I absolutely never mean any harm, and I think that surprises people and takes a while for them to accept. I give compliments because I mean them and not because I want something back. I can simultaneously really like someone and also know that they've broken into my home and/or stalked me. (It's happened a couple of times.) People have things going on. All this pretending to be normal stresses EVERYONE out.
What I actually really LIKE about other people is generally the cracks I can see in the perfection or the full-on crazy shining through. I mean, what's wrong with accepting and enjoying yourself and other people? Otherwise we're all crammed into these uptight boxes.
eta: Granted, I'm apparently at my halfway point, life-wise (I'm closing on 40), so I don't have to contend with that feeling that EVERYTHING IS SO IMPORTANT that we humans generally seem to have from 12ish - 24ish years of age. It gets better. Just ride it out.