DJRnold wrote:
I don't have all of the flaws associated with AS, and I don't have all of the strengths/advantages either. The problem is, I have more of the flaws than the strengths. I can relate to most of the social problems people always mention in this forum, but when they mention that they can remember when they were three, I get upset because I can't.
I recently read (in The Complete Guide To Asperger's Syndrome) that people with AS are more likely to be hyposensitive to pain than hypersensitive. That is yet another trait I got screwed on. I am hypersensitive to pain and it is one of my biggest fears, so I would love it if pain didn't hurt so much. If I can't be NT, why can't I at least have full-blown AS? I'm sick of being in the middle.
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DJRonald, I'm hypersensitive to pain, too, and while it has been a problem in the past (for example, my menstrual periods are so severe that I can't stand up; a cold puts me out of commission because I can't concentrate over the sore throat; and most medication side effects hit me as though they were guided missiles), it also means I am very aware of what is happening to my body. I can tell if I have even so much as a 99-degree fever without a thermometer (that's just under half a degree above normal--the kind that can happen even when you are just exercising). I can tell when I'm getting a cold within four to six hours of being exposed to it (though I've had a couple of false alarms thanks to dust or dehydration); I even know what my digestive system is doing at any given time. I can detect muscle tension and thereby figure out whether or not I'm anxious. I've learned to ward off a tension headache before it happens because it's caused by tension in the muscles of the neck and shoulders.
A not-so-beneficial effect: A very minor injury is enough to pull me out of a meltdown temporarily. Leading to the obvious (and maladaptive) use of deliberate minor injuries.
While this hypersensitivity did predispose me to hypochondria for a while as a little girl, a good study of the human body cured those tendencies; and while I have never had a serious illness, I am quite sure I would detect one quite early were I to ever have one--let's just hope I wouldn't tell myself, "Oh, you're just being a hypochondriac"! That is a good thing because the women of my family tend to get cancer in their 40s or even earlier; and if you catch that early, it's a Good Thing. Some multiple hundred percent increase in survival rates, last I checked.
Silver lining, 's all I'm saying.