Danthemayne wrote:
Hi there,
I'm wondering whether it's aspies in general, or just me who seems generally disliked by people.
I have the feeling that a lot of people definitely don't like me. I'm in a music boarding school, and I've been getting a lot of sh** recently; for example, I got a dick drawn on my face in my sleep, a dirty condom in my bed, I get picked on in rehearsals. And there was recently a whole elaborate plot that a new DJ was coming to school who was apparently fantastic, and had a name that made fun of my surname. I got a lot of piss taken out of me for that. People have drawn dicks on the posters on my wall...
One of the most fun times (<-this is heavy sarcasm) of my life was at boarding school. One morning I discovered that all of my "friends" and all of their associates were actively shunning me. Amish-like shunning. No one would speak to me. When I entered a room, everyone left. Within a morning I realized that this group--perhaps 20 people, 10% of the student body, had all met to discuss how to punish me for my social crimes--crimes about which I was completely clueless.
It came down to this: I was not sufficiently friendly when people were being nice to me.
I made people feel bad when they mentioned something about one of my passionate interests that I knew to be wrong and I pointed this out, perhaps with excessive detail.
I was generally weird.
Having been found guilty and sentenced in absentia, I was suddenly returned to the very familiar state of being friendless and alone. I was highly experienced at living this way, so I just went on--though the knowledge that a very large group of people were intentionally hurting me was extremely painful. I mostly retreated into my interests. I did make an impassioned plea to the friend who had seemed most compassionate and sympathetic and she launched some sort of appellate procedure. And then one day it was over.
To this day (30 years later) I don't really understand what took place. But I would count it as evidence that people are highly intolerant of certain types of nonconformity, including typical Aspergian behaviors.