Janissy wrote:
It's common for teenage daughters and their moms to fight. The substance of the fight is very common too. This isn't a AS/NT thing. It's a mother/teenage daughter thing. Annoying as it will surely be to have an adult say " ooh yes, my mom and I used to fight just like that", well, we did. And we're both NT. Some of the same words flew out of our mouths too. This will pass but probably not until you are in your early 20's. That's cold comfort. But it doesn't have anything to do with your differing neurologies. It has to do with your differing life stages and the fact that you are mother and daughter. And it will pass.
I totally agree and, weirdly, Janissy, you have used some of the exact language I was planning to write...I think you were reading my mind (just kidding, you get credit for having your own thoughts

). Anyway, I would like to add that I believe we are taught how to handle anger at a very early age from our parents...humans learn these things by observing and imitating our examples which happens to be parents or/and other authority figures. If you tried to tell me this when I was 17, I would have called BS, and the real day of reckoning came when I was about 25 and realized I was so much like my parents that it was at first depressing, but then uplifting as I got over it. For me, anger manifests itself as a boost of adrenaline and other internal energy sources, which if I don't control it, causes a raising of voice, anxiety, tenseness of facial and other muscles, sarcasm, pacing, and probably a myriad of other reactions I am not even fully aware of. Hardest thing for me to control when I am angry is my mouth, and this has gotten me into trouble more times than I can count. As I have gotten older and learned how to be a better parent, I have gotten better at controlling my mouth.