Edna3362 wrote:
In my case, not much had actually changed.
What really changed, however, is how I take it and the standards of what the are those around me expects.
So the biggest factor for me is the environment (how people thinks and do, and how messy/orderly the places are, chances and opportunities, etc...), physical/mental/emotional state/health (how I'll take it and the capacity to) and personal outlook/experiences (how I approach and do it).
Not really the 'severity' of autism itself that changed. Even if I did gain, lost, and regained something overtime that makes it more or less manageable -- my main point is 'why' with the change.
I live at best times at childhood, going bad to worse at on going and during teenage years, then getting better around when approaching adulthood.
I could rise more, or crash anytime. All I could do, is take uncertainty.
Actually perhaps this is true for me too. Thanks for putting it up.
_________________
Take defeat as an urge to greater effort.
-Napoleon Hill