davis wrote:
I'm relatively new to the diagnosis of Asperger's. Over the years, I've noticed that some people will eventually lose patience with me socially which of course stands to reason. What I've begun to notice is my own impatience with others when it comes to intellectual function. I do not mean or want to be an intellectual "snob". I do not want to exclude others on the basis of intellect any more than I want folks to exclude on the basis of my social ineptitude. Do you all know what I mean?
I know what you mean all too well. I spent all my pre-kid years being an intellectual snob. Like so many other intellectual snobs, I saw it as very close to being a virtue rather than a vice. And it's hard to get rid of something you deep down believe is a virtue. You are a lot farther along towards getting rid of that snobbery than I ever was pre-kid. So good!
What changed me was having a daughter who scored very low on an IQ test. She may or may not be ret*d. It's very hard for me to tell. Through great internal struggle I have come to a point where I no longer
try to tell if she is or not and see that entire concept as a damaged way to look at people. But it wasn't until she was part of my life that I was able to abandon the intellectual snobbery because suddenly it would be applied to her and that really hurt.
Seeing it as vice rather than virtue is halfway to jettisoning it. Good for you if you can jettison it without the rather dramatic wake up call of a child who may have an intellectual disability.
By the way, the posts of Callista are required reading if you really want to put intellectual snobbery in perspective. She has written many that touch on the subject and I've hungrily read them all.