Annoying things people do to you because you have aspergers.

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Al725
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29 Nov 2013, 4:38 pm

seaturtleisland wrote:
The only one I can think of just happened once. It involved someone telling me to stop staring in a particular direction while I was in Tim Horton's. I wasn't even staring at a person blankly I was staring at the entrance which could have appeared even creepier than staring at a person. I was wondering where my friends were that I was supposed to be meeting so even though I wasn't trying to look at the entrance I did it when I wasn't paying attention. I think I was just wondering where they were. This one person kept hassling me for it. He'd tell me in a very hostile voice to stop looking over there so I'd look away but then I'd look in that direction again by mistake and he'd tell me to stop. That happened several times and he kept attacking me for it. Then as he was leaving I accidently looked at the entrance again and he banged on the glass behind me.


If it had been me he had said that to he would have found himself in the ICU with a broken jaw,some missing teeth and maybe more depending on what mood I was in at the time.



Al725
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29 Nov 2013, 5:06 pm

Joe90 wrote:
It's annoying when people assume that I am intelligent, and have these amazing maths and science abilities. Maths and science were the subjects I needed help with the most all through school. English I was just average at.

It's also annoying when I'm with somebody who knows I've got AS and they treat me extremely gingerly, as though I am some delicate person who is going to start laying on the floor having a meltdown at any moment. Like say if we go into a room and they go, ''oh is it too bright for you?'' And I'm like, ''no, lights don't bother me at all'', or if I'm somewhere where there's a lot of people chattering and they say, ''oh will you be OK here with the noise?'' and I'm like, ''what noise? I do OK in these sorts of environments, and if there was an irritating noise like a kids screaming, I will feel agitated inside but I won't show it to the world.''

I suppose I can't complain too much, because they are only trying to understand. I don't like it when

.


people don't understand, so I shouldn't complain when they're trying to understand. :)
l

Much better than people thinking you're stupid like they do me. I actually have a degree in microbiology with a minor in chemistry. LOL



Al725
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29 Nov 2013, 5:12 pm

Another thing that annoys me is when I'm with a group and people act like I don't exist. Stuff I say gets ignored alot,maybe becuase I'm late to reply or I go on about a subject after the group has already gone on to another one. Needless to say,I hate groups.



Al725
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29 Nov 2013, 5:18 pm

Yayoi wrote:
In my first year of high school, we had to get into full uniform on photo day. Since it was cold, I had a long-sleeved shirt under my short-sleeved school shirt, with my sweater on top. I remember a teacher coming into the bathroom with me, asking if I needed help with it. That only served to upset me, since I've been able to dress myself since the age most "normal" kids are. Difficulty socialising, and sometimes learning, =/= problems with simple everyday tasks.

I've also gotten upset in class before, and substitute teachers have occasionally talked in a really patronising tone to me. I hate it, especially when teachers use pet-names like "sweetie" and "darling".


Ew.This is why I never tell anyone about my mental issues.Its unbelievable when people think they are being helpful when they are actually insulting and disrespecting you as if you are a small child,or mentally retarted.



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29 Nov 2013, 5:38 pm

qawer wrote:
Codyrules37 wrote:
If you are nice and friendly to other people, they are more likely to look past your flaws.


Not true, some people treat you worse the more friendly you are towards them, because all they respect is social power.


Well said. A large percentage of people are bullies by nature. If they think your harmless, they'll be complete a$$&%#@# to you. But if they see that you might smash their faces in if they cross the line, they will actually give you a little respect.



matt spastic
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29 Jan 2015, 7:06 am

actually its them, they are the stupid ones and you arnt. ive come to realize that after so many years.

i have my own hobbies and interests i keep to myself and for some reason my family feels the need to be nosy about it such as what games im into and such. and when they try they always bug me to assist them on a game i dont even play or care about asking me to help them on a stuck part and that im a genius at it. when they say that i just leave cause it so stupid and annoying at how they say that and really irritates me since im in the middle of something im doing. :?

basically i just see half the people around me are the stupid ones and they just don realize it.



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29 Jan 2015, 4:16 pm

People who know I have AS but haven't gotten to know me yet, expecting me to be monotone-voiced, hand-wringing, nerdy and completely honest in everything I say, and follow rules religiously, and have a narrow obsession with something like trains. I'm actually NOTHING like that at all. I don't speak in monotone at all, I have tone of voice and facial expressions, I don't wring my hands, I am not nerdy one little bit, I am not completely honest all the time, I am not a perfectionist, and I am not obsessed with trains.

But when people find out that I get obsessed with a certain bus company, they then assume that I can memorize all the routes and schedules of the buses in the company, and can monologue about them all day long, in every little detail. Um, no, that is not how my obsession works either. It's the actual drivers I'm obsessed with, and I have a hard time remembering the times of the buses even though I catch the same bus almost EVERY DAY, I've still got to check the timetable! I don't hardly know a thing about all the details. I am not very detail-orientated.

Also I am not good at maths at all. In actual fact, I have better social skills than maths skills, and that's saying something. I can recognise body language and other non-verbal social cues just fine, but if you was to ask me what something like 18x26 is, it would take me ages to give you the answer, and my mind would just shut off.

There, I am not one bit stereotypical for an Aspie.


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29 Jan 2015, 4:38 pm

Joe90 wrote:
People who know I have AS but haven't gotten to know me yet, expecting me to be monotone-voiced, hand-wringing, nerdy and completely honest in everything I say, and follow rules religiously, and have a narrow obsession with something like trains. I'm actually NOTHING like that at all. I don't speak in monotone at all, I have tone of voice and facial expressions, I don't wring my hands, I am not nerdy one little bit, I am not completely honest all the time, I am not a perfectionist, and I am not obsessed with trains.

But when people find out that I get obsessed with a certain bus company, they then assume that I can memorize all the routes and schedules of the buses in the company, and can monologue about them all day long, in every little detail. Um, no, that is not how my obsession works either. It's the actual drivers I'm obsessed with, and I have a hard time remembering the times of the buses even though I catch the same bus almost EVERY DAY, I've still got to check the timetable! I don't hardly know a thing about all the details. I am not very detail-orientated.

Also I am not good at maths at all. In actual fact, I have better social skills than maths skills, and that's saying something. I can recognise body language and other non-verbal social cues just fine, but if you was to ask me what something like 18x26 is, it would take me ages to give you the answer, and my mind would just shut off.

There, I am not one bit stereotypical for an Aspie.


That's how I feel most of the time. I feel as if when people think "female Aspie" they picture some gawky girl who is obsessed with math and science and looks like Velma from Scooby Doo.

That's not the case with me. I don't wear glasses, I suck at math and science, I wear more makeup than I should at times (sometimes I can go a day without makeup, but I feel naked when I don't wear it), I love skirts, dresses, nail polish, wearing women's clothes and looking cute. With makeup I wear a lot of primer, mascara, eyeshadow, lipstick, lip gloss and cream eyeliner.

I don't even have sensory issue with clothing and perfumes. All three of my signature perfumes have entirely different notes. The only sensory problem I tend to have is noise related.

Based on my interest in physical appearance and how I constantly think about how I want to dress next time I go to the grocery store I think my interest in fashion, beauty, aesthetics and appearances I would think that when I talk to people they would automatically assume that I'm neurotypical based on how I talk about all of that.

Unless I tell people that I have Aspergers and talk about my other interest they probably don't even question that I possibly have Aspergers.


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29 Jan 2015, 6:13 pm

The one over-riding thing is the automatic assumption of their superiority and worth because they are not on the spectrum. It is particularly galling when it comes from people who themselves have achieved very little in their own lives, despite the advantages of being neurotypical, yet they feel automatically entitled to look down on spectrum people who have achieved much more (despite the significant disadvantages that come with being different from the normocentric herd and having to live in their environments).



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30 Jan 2015, 10:17 am

That's how I feel most of the time. I feel as if when people think "female Aspie" they picture some gawky girl who is obsessed with math and science and looks like Velma from Scooby Doo.

Quote:
That's not the case with me. I don't wear glasses,

My eyesight is not that good, but I don't want to wear glasses because I don't want to feel like a stereotypical Aspie (it won't matter so much when I'm over 45). Yes I know plenty of NTs wear glasses, but when you're an Aspie with glasses you feel like the majority of Aspies. A lot of people with other disabilities like Down's seem to wear glasses too. It's like 8 out of 10 people with disabilities wear glasses, 4 out of 10 NTs wear glasses (older people past 40 or 50 don't count, as it is more common in older people to wear glasses, but I'm talking about younger people here). I don't like eye contacts either. I prefer laser eye surgery, but I've heard off-putting stories about that. Maybe I should have a word with my optician anyway.

Quote:
I suck at math and science,

Yer, me too. Maths was the subject I struggled with the most all through school. Science I found interesting, like when it was about the universe or the human body (most kids found that interesting anyway), but I still wasn't a scientific genius. A lot of people seem to assume I can't spell for whatever reason, but spelling I've always been pretty good at. English was the subject I done well in at school. Well, I didn't get A's, but I got at least a C. Art I failed for being ''too creative'' (yes, I still can't get over that to this day).

Quote:
I wear more makeup than I should at times (sometimes I can go a day without makeup, but I feel naked when I don't wear it), I love skirts, dresses, nail polish, wearing women's clothes and looking cute. With makeup I wear a lot of primer, mascara, eyeshadow, lipstick, lip gloss and cream eyeliner.


I wear lipstick and sometimes some eyeliner, but I'm not that bothered about make-up. But I do like to wear perfume, and I like to look stylish when it comes to clothes, and I always keep my hair well-groomed.

Quote:
I don't even have sensory issue with clothing and perfumes. All three of my signature perfumes have entirely different notes. The only sensory problem I tend to have is noise related.


I don't have sensory issues with touch, smell, taste or light. In fact I can't stand a DIM ROOM! I love a bright light.
I have sensory problems with noise, like you. I jump at sudden noises like dogs barking, and I get agitated when there are toddlers screaming and shouting near me. Well toddlers agitate me full stop, unless they are either well-behaved or asleep. But when these noises occur what upset me, I still know how to keep my cool. I don't go into a meltdown or go around with my fingers in my ears or great big headphones over my head or whatever. OK if I'm really not in the mood I may show I'm a little agitated in my body language, but that's not enough to draw any attention or make me stand out.

Quote:
Based on my interest in physical appearance and how I constantly think about how I want to dress next time I go to the grocery store I think my interest in fashion, beauty, aesthetics and appearances I would think that when I talk to people they would automatically assume that I'm neurotypical based on how I talk about all of that.

Unless I tell people that I have Aspergers and talk about my other interest they probably don't even question that I possibly have Aspergers.


Nobody has ever said that I seem Autistic or anything like that. People do notice my shyness and anxiety, but they just assume I have social anxiety, which I do anyway. Often I feel like a person with ADHD and social anxiety, rather than Asperger's. I seem to have, like, 9 out of 10 symptoms of ADHD and 9 out of 10 symptoms of social anxiety, but only, like, 4 symptoms of Asperger's.


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19 Oct 2017, 10:00 am

Utilize me, rather than relating to me. Worst in workplaces, but can be a problem with neighbors/acquaintances outside work too.

Kind of a two edged sword - some people find my particular collection of mad skillz very intimidating. Of the group who do not, most focus on the utility thereof, not the humanity of the bearer.

I have concluded that much NT interaction is primarily transactional and much mental energy is spent avoiding this realization.


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19 Oct 2017, 11:55 am

Zombie369 wrote:
People overlooking me and talking down to me: This happens a lot in my family. I think because I have aspergers and my little brother has cerebal palsy that we're kind of viewed as the weakest links in the famly. I'm always given orders to do stuff that I'm never allowed to disagree with and nobody ever wants to listen to my opinion on anything. Whenever I try to talk they always talk over me or just ignore me. It's the same with my brother too.


This happens to me alot to the point where my whole family doesn't even take me seriously. I have siblings that are old enough to be second parents but we're all adults and we should be able to communicate but don't because they don't reciprocate and I don't like chasing people.



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20 Oct 2017, 12:28 am

Most people don't know I have Asperger's. Most people don't know me at all. Most of the people I *do* know have moved at least halfway across the country, and my parents are the only ones who contact me on a regular basis anymore. Which will make it all the more devastating if and when anything happens to them.



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20 Oct 2017, 1:28 am

In junior high school, people seemed to play "confuse the Aspie" with me, doing things like saying "hi" and then laughing when I said "hi" back. I still don't know what that was about.

People will often interrupt me or talk over me because I'm quiet and unobtrusive, and can't speak loudly enough to be heard over them.

If it's more than just me and one other person, people seem to forget I'm even there, and if I try to join in the conversation, they just wait patiently until I'm done (if they don't interrupt/talk over me) and then carry on as if I'd never said anything.

People will often think I'm either far more oblivious or far more intelligent than I actually am, and if they think the former, will often try to take advantage of it.

I take horseback riding lessons at a therapeutic riding center. When I'm just waiting for other people or something, I will often bend down and hug my horse. One of the instructors comments about how sweet it is, but the other will joke that I'm sleeping because I get very defensive when she does that - I've been accused of being lazy when I'm really trying my hardest so much that I'm very sensitive to any hints that I'm lazy, not trying, or don't care, and this instructor finds my reaction amusing.

Usually if I make so much as the slightest mention to my current main obsession, my mom will sigh and roll her eyes, and if I confront her about it, she'll deny having done it. She will also talk to me for extended periods of time about things she knows I don't care about, so even if it's because she thinks I'm going to go on and on, well... she does the same thing to me, too. Oftentimes she'll do this every time I start to speak at all. And then my parents complain that I don't speak enough :roll: At least I'm getting better at determining my mom's moods now so I know when I shouldn't even bother trying to talk to her.

I have to say the worst, though, is that people are always overestimating my abilities, and then they accuse me of not caring/trying enough when I don't meet their expectations, when in actuality I'm trying my hardest. I think the problem is that my functioning level can vary, and so people will see me at my best and assume I'm always capable of that, and also because as an Aspie, I'm supposed to be high-functioning (in their eyes). It really hurts to constantly be told my best isn't good enough, and to never have people believe just how hard things are for me (for example, no one I've met in person has ever believed me when I've tried to explain that sometimes I can't speak no matter how hard I try - my dad even interrupted me mid-sentence when I was trying to explain to say "No, I think you just don't want to").


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20 Oct 2017, 1:03 pm

When I was in school, girls would act flirty toward me because they knew it made me feel very uncomfortable, sometimes asking me out, laughing when I would get my hopes up. People would often tell me what to other people were obvious lies, but I would take them at face value as true statements, and would not question them. This often led to rumours being spread about me, and I developed a reputation for being both a pushover and for being naive.
I was also a target for people using me for things growing up because of my eagerness to befriend people, and because I was quite knowledgeable on a variety of topics.
Since those days, I have become much more worldly in how I take things, and so this doesn't happen quite so often any more. My experience has given me heuristics from which I can discern people's motives quite a lot of the time, and as a general rule I avoid requests from people that do not talk to me until they need something. On the negative side, these experiences, and my negative mental reinforcement in response to them ensured that I developed quite a significant number of trust issues that most people don't even consider.



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20 Oct 2017, 6:32 pm

Stare at me and treat me like a baby.

So I may not be too high-functioning socially, but I'm VERY high-functioning in the intelligence department. Don't judge a book by its cover.


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