Balbituate wrote:
I notice this a lot here. It kind of annoys me. I get that aspies resonate with weirdos, but it doesn't automatically make them aspies.
I'm actually more annoyed by people who say it's totally absurd to suspect someone to be aspie no matter who. E.g. there's an old thread were people say it's totally laughable than Eminem could have Aspergers, but we know now he has it (at least he has said that himself).
That's how I see it: 1) People who are creative, inventive, make eccentric, innovative, maybe weird art like music, films etc. have a tendency to be not neurotypical. Being creative often comes with ofter stuff like depression, ADHD, ASD or schizophrenia (with these conditions being comorbid as well...) 2) Many adults are still not diagnosed even though they fit the criteria. There's also many stereotypes like that aspies would always be the kind of "super smart shy computer guy" type, so people in showbiz might not get the idea they could be affected. Also, women are under-diagnosed. 3) Even if diagnosed (or self-diagnosed, self suspected) not everyone will want to talk about it. They might simply not care about it, or they might be afraid to talk about it (having ASD as a prog rock musician is something different than having ASD as a teen popstar).
That means that we only see the tip of the ice berg. In reality, there are way more famous people that are not neurotypical than we currently know of. Just like more people are coming out as homosexuals these days, there will be more and more people coming out as aspies.
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Because it's common for aspies to be seen as weird and be different so autism is the first thing people think of when someone is odd or awkward or a loner and do their own thing or do the same thing all the time and have troubles fitting in.
Social awkwardness, not fitting in and being obsessive belong to the core characteristics of autism. If someone has all of these traits, it's difficult for me to see how this person could NOT be at least borderline autistic (except if these traits are caused by a psychiatric illness by schizophrenia).
DSM-5 ASD criteria consist of two main traits:
-Persistent deficits in social communication and social interaction across multiple contexts
-Restricted, repetitive patterns of behavior, interests, or activities