littlebee wrote:
This is to me a very important thread, and thanks skibum.
***As I wrote before on a couple of other threads, understanding how have having a special interest works (becomes amplified, intensified and why), is the key to understanding autism. This said, I think a lot of how special interest works can be understood from a psychological angle re the formation of the personality in that having an intense special interest can compensate for certain internal uncomfortable feelings and/or to fill an inner hole. and why not? Interest is what moves people, not just autistic people, but everyone, actually.
I have also written that I think the genetics angle is way overplayed by people trying to understand autism, and this is to the detriment of individual autistic people who are falling into this glitch. but also to the autistic community and even broader society in general, BUT in the instance of having intense special interests, I think there is a strong genetic component. The only way to understand it, though, is by putting both genetics and the developed/conditioned personality into a social individual/group survival greater context.
Unfortunately I have not read your other writings on this subject but what you are saying here is fascinating to me. Please explain more of what you mean. Thank you so much for responding.
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"I'm bad and that's good. I'll never be good and that's not bad. There's no one I'd rather be than me."
Wreck It Ralph