Brittany2907 wrote:
According to the doctor who diagnosed me it's common for people with AS to have less intense interests as they get older, mainly because they have more things to do and less time to just do what they enjoy doing. She also said that obsessions can be a substitute for social interraction so as someone gets older and learns more social skills, they obsessions might come down on the priority list.
I'm not sure how correct this is but it seems true in my case. The times when I was the most socially isolated from everyone else was also the times when my interests were the most obsessive.
Me too, I think......every time I got a serious girlfriend or any other promising social thing in my life, my more geeky special interests would go on hold. Then when the relationships soured and I'd run out of ideas on how to put them right, I'd find myself reverting to the geeky stuff again. I often felt bad about not getting enough time for my special interests while the social things were good, but I always felt it was a price worth paying - almost as if social interaction is simply the most important special interest I have, and one which I only stop working on when I've completely run out of ideas to keep it working. To this day, if I had to choose between a good, lone special interest and a good friendship, I'd go for the good friendship, though my ideal would be to share an obsession with somebody who was a fascinated as I was about the obsession, like the Wright brothers might have been. But the nearest I've had to that was a girfriend who was a music performer like I am, and although it was really great at times, other things about our relationship forced me to end it.