I think I'm the luckiest person on these boards now that I've said this stuff! My parents have always been around to help me and my differences, always encouraging and keeping me on my feet. Recently Mum told me that, during Primary, I was to be moved into a class the next year, but she knew I would get upset because there would be very few people I knew in that class. Mum went to the Principal to suggest a change. When the Principal suggested that I was 'just a bit more eccentric than the other kids', my Mum said 'Well, you just don't understand his situation, do you?', and left feeling angry. She managed to win over eventually, and I got my good friend Jeremy in that class.
Because of this, as Starr has said, I've had a very positive outlook on life. As a result, I've been able to snag a whole bunch of friends. With NZ's friendly nature, it helps out even more. The fact that I'm lower on the spectrum than others has helped, but then I know another student who is higher on the spectrum than me and he's had a similarly great life to the one I've lived. We both have friends who accept us for who we are and appreciate us and can have fun with. I'm only sixteen and I'm having the greatest time of my life right now, and I don't think it'll ever stop!
At first my parents didn't know what was up with me. Because I was their first child (the other is Lisa, whom we're on very friendly terms), they just thought it was just a part of growing up. After my first epilliptic fit, a nurse at the hospital suggested I had AS, and kindly gave my mum a book about it (most likely by that Aussie dude who keeps releasing books on this subject). Mum said that she was in tears during the ride home because of how perfectly I fitted into this category. Instead of going 'no, it's not possible, it's all a lie', she took it on board and accepted it. She also did not think it was something to be cured, a fact of which I am VERY thankful for.
But yeah, that's my life story, and it goes to show that I am lucky, and than not all NT's are cruel. I actually seems as if more than half of them live in NZ!