The elaboration on the criterion says this:
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The disturbance must cause clinically significant impairment in social adaptation, which in turn may have a significant impact on self-sufficiency or on occupational or other important areas of functioning (Criterion C).
If you can't even get through an interview, you can't get a job.
If you can't stand others talking to you or even not their presence, you will have problems being outside doing normal things like shopping, going out, just being outside (you could be spoken to because a stranger asks for a cigarette for example).
If you can't call anyone because of the social implications, not only will you have trouble keeping in contact with people, but also won't be able to do many medical and bureaucratic appointments.
If you do not answer to the requests of others, you won't be able to do most normal things.
If you hardly display body language, you won't get a job, people will think it impossible to interact with you.
If you do not take an interest in other people, you will have a hard time getting friends and avoid being hated by everybody.
The DSM also says for that criterion C of AS that:
Quote:
The social deficits and restricted patterns of interests, activities, and behavior are the source of considerable disability.
So anything simple and silly like small misunderstandings and people thinking you're a little weird don't count unless they impair you and perhaps even disable you.
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Autism + ADHD
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The trouble with having an open mind, of course, is that people will insist on coming along and trying to put things in it. Terry Pratchett