wigglyspider wrote:
Coadunate wrote:
wigglyspider wrote:
Quote:
so I'm sometimes in danger of being recognized, and it would only take one slip and people would know my deep dark secret. D: D:
Good grief man, be proud of your AS, I am.
I guess I just have something against labels.
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And it's a pretty strong one.
So do I actually, particularly if the label is disparaging to the individual and only describes what they would be like on a very bad day viewed from a negative angle. I found some of the criteria very offensive as they seemed to be directed at personality traits that my family and I have no problems with at all.
I've always been happy with who I am, however, I've never ever been happy with other people deciding that my personality is "defective".
I'm all for people getting the help they need, but others often view a label as an excuse to put others down for their so called "deficits".
If my AS label had meant that I had got access to understanding and appropriate social help that really helped me to connect with the other kids; people didn't pity for my differences; and expert private curriculum relevant, gifted fast-track tuition was thrown in for free, my parents would have been all for that.
The thing was, that my label made it harder for me to mingle with the other kids because they were afraid of the label; so were some of the support staff. Many assumed that I was "stupid" just because of a label.
Where I live, I'd get some very questioning looks if I said that I was proud to have a "syndrome". It would be as illogical to them as someone being "proud" of having cancer.
Perhaps this is just the country I live in, I don't know, but many "pity" the labeled and disabled. I have physically disabled relatives who are fed up with this attitude.
Gosh, if people were more understanding and I'd been given sensible information to start with, I would have been more open. But the fact is, people aren't open and don't want you to unnecessarily label yourself. Some might even see a label as a sort of "excuse" used by "lazy and uncooperative" people.
I don't know. This whole AS thing does sound like some of my friends and family: it probably is genetic. But, I don't honestly think that any of them are "disordered": they're very nice people.
That's probably why they aren't happy with this whole concept of labeling. People are individuals. Some don't like to be pigeon-holed like that.