Beware, you wanted feedback.
Fin wrote:
-- Deep-set eyes with a pronounced epicanthic fold, large round eyes (sometimes frog-like), or eyes whose inside corner is lower than the outside corner
Mine's not at all like that. No epicanthic fold either.
Fin wrote:
-- A cupid’s-bow mouth that’s higher in the middle than at the sides
Yeah, if you don't smile much because you can't smile, then the corners of your mouth are often quite low.
Fin wrote:
-- A nasal bridge that lies about 45 degrees from the vertical or is curved like a ski jump, and the nose flares out slightly at the bottom and is often round or triangular and visibly divided into two cartilage lobes
Gosh, mine's huge and everything but you described.
If the bridge of the nose is flat and curvy they probably got Fetal-Alcohol-Syndrome.
Fin wrote:
-- Elf ears that are large, pointed or square
So this sounds as if it could be about
any shape of ears (square or pointed, large but elf like).
Fin wrote:
-- Cheek dimples or a chin dimple
Many people have this and most are not autistic.
Fin wrote:
-- High forehead, or a large head in general
Can't be. Actually studies say that the head size of autistic
toddlers is abnormally high, but not that of adults.
Fin wrote:
-- Fair, often translucent skin
That was already commented on.
Fin wrote:
-- Short fingernails
You know that's entirely due to behaviour. It may be that those with sensory issues prefer short fingernails.
Fin wrote:
-- Fine silky hair
Mine's like straw.
Fin wrote:
-- Thin tapering eyebrows that look like they’ve been penciled in, long lashes
I have thick eye-brows.
Fin wrote:
-- An off-center left eye that’s sometimes slightly higher than the right eye
I don't have that, thank god.
Fin wrote:
-- Glasses for short-sightedness (never far-sightedness)
There are probably a couple of far-sighted folks here. It's just that many people are short-sighted rather than far-sighted.
Fin wrote:
-- Large rabbity incisors, often with a gap between them
A lot of people have this. It might however be true that especially those with sensory issues and social problems are very averse to getting their teeth corrected due to not being able to stand how it feels like or because they're unable to go to the dentist due to their social difficulties and possible co-morbid such as social anxiety.
Fin wrote:
-- Short legs or long legs, pigeon-toed walk
Short or long? About every person has short or long legs.
Fin wrote:
-- Subtle androgyny
I'm rather curvy and I'm not the only one.
I don't fit any but 3 of this list but I'm 100% autistic, fitting both AS and classical autism.
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Autism + ADHD
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The trouble with having an open mind, of course, is that people will insist on coming along and trying to put things in it. Terry Pratchett