AngryReptileKeeper wrote:
I used to want to be like NT's. But the older I get, the less I feel that way. I've become more accepting of myself and the way I am, and that there's nothing that can be done about it.
I've heard it said that it becomes harder to change yourself as you age; specifically that it's unwise to try after age 25 - You'd be wasting your energy. Not only that, but it seems ungrateful to mother nature (who has no way of avoiding mistakes) or what-have-you to carry on like the bad-tempered kid who always wants more - In this case, more SELF. God knows what 'karma' I built up during my many years spent on 'self-transformation' to the exclusion of anything useful
For me, the truth is that we are just less complex than NTs, but that it's best for us not to dwell on the difference. An aspie friend of mine is so confident that he's able to get any girl he wants; if he was able to apprehend how much less he has than others, maybe he wouldn't get along so well.
AngryReptileKeeper wrote:
Even if there was, I wouldn't do it. I like being the way I am. NT's with kids on the spectrum like to act horrified and shocked when I say that.
I guess that's because it's dawning on them that their own kids will have to feel the same way if they're to contribute anything to society. It would be easier on everyone, least of all the people I see here who HAVE to develop a case of sour grapes just to get by, if no-one had to be born autistic, but, as I've said before, Murphy's Law guarantees that they will_
I wouldn't recommend my way to anyone, but now that 'endless longing' (as one thinker wrote) for 'NT' reality is a stable part of me, I'm happy to keep it, keep it in check, and use it (in writing etc.) where I can.