madhousefluent wrote:
Oh, I'm anti-social too -- I think it's more that girls are expected to be more sociable, and so we have to work harder at learning to fit in than the boys necessarily have to. If that makes any sense, which I doubt since it's nearly one in the morning and the froshies next door are obnoxious.
When I read about ASD's I often feel like the dx'd person being described sounds more like my NT boyfriend than me. It's a consequence of the stereotype (how accurate that is, time & research will tell) of ASD's as being the extreme "male" brain. Most couples that I know of (from reading about, I haven't met anyone else IRL) are comprised of a dx'd male & an "NT" female, which is the opposite of my situation. It's pretty confusing, one minute I'm on one side (empathizing or sympathizing with the role of female NT) & the next, I'm on the other side (that of the dx'd male) of the interaction. Sorta' like the "Mars/Venus" books-know they're not about ASD's, and I read one of them 15 yrs. ago-just an easy example to illustrate my point. I'm alternately logical & utilitarian (male stereotype) & irrationally emotional (female stereotype), so I don't fit either side/faction/role-and neither do my boyfriend, my ex-husband, or my best friend. I'm drawn to (and they are drawn to me) males who defy stereotypes, who have some "macho" traits but also plenty of "so-called feminine" qualities.
In some ways, my being female makes my ASD
less severe bc. of my inherent biochemistry as a female (brain, hormones) & how I was raised/treated by peers, than if I had ASD but was a male. In other ways, it's
harder being ASD as a female, bc. I defy expectations for my gender more than if I were male. Parts of me clash with other parts of me more (the ASD aspects that are considered more "male" & the aspects of me that are "NT" female), and create conflict with my own self: if I were male, maybe I'd be more in agreement with myself ?
starlighter wrote:
Yes, just curious the difference exists between men-women, .. no one is better than the other, but I know what are you talking about cause I'm a woman myself in this case, ...
So little has been studied about females w/ASD, rather than males w/ASD ! Just saying neither gender is assured to have an easier time of it in comparison to each other-there are plenty of areas in which to have difficulty, some more common for males & some more common for females. Tough sorting out which of these problems are caused or worsened by assumptions & reactions within society & culture, rather than part of the package of being neurologically atypical.
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