IstominFan wrote:
I was fortunate to have a high I.Q., a good memory and good organizational skills, but unfortunate because I spent a large part of my life alone due to my differences. However, I have been getting out more and have more friends now. There are still a lot of ordinary things I don't have, but I'm working on attaining them.
Likewise on many points here IstominFan. Personally I'm happier now when I'm alone, but I'd started to realise that a few years before diagnosis explained why it might be. I'd simply accepted that I must be intensely empathetic, as I couldn't "tune in" to any single person while in a group, and one-on-one I couldn't handle being around anger, upset, excitement, pensiveness, etc etc, without soon feeling exactly that myself, then exhaustion, then soon a need to expedite myself to somewhere solitary and do something logical to format my brain.
This stunted, logical, delayed-then-intense way of understanding/categorising/processing human interactions was the source of so many "situations" that I'd given up on maintaining any semblance of a neurotypical social life by my own accord, -but diagnosis was a release from continually trying and failing.
Thank you very much for your input, IstominFan =]
Grammar Geek wrote:
I never got the high-IQ bonus, which is one reason I'm bitter.
Neither did I, when I was younger. I was always high functioning enough to teach myself anything I got interested in, but the things I got interested in never coincided with things that might be useful for school or an IQ test.
Thank you again for your input GG =]