Divest wrote:
Working retail for the last few years has helped me immensely. However I still have my days of being utterly socially inept.
I wholeheartedly agree. The combination of low expectations (at most retail stores) + constant customer contact means you can sort of "practice" contact with others. The good thing about working in a big chain store is that when you can sense the right time, enforcing the store policy is the right thing to do (as opposed to always, or never, enforcing it). It takes a kind of judgement that most Aspies have to master with practice (I'm always working on it)
In terms of social skills, the other way I learned it was from my mother. She realized by the time I was 12 or so that I was not able to "fit in" socially with my peers at school, and she started "training" me on how to talk to them. This included role play ("Hello, how are you today?" "Fine thank you, and how are you?") to literal phone instructions ("Say 'Hello, this is Alex_M. May I please speak to....?' and so on"). Due to nonverbal learning disability, it took me ages to absorb all this stuff. At 25, it comes naturally now, but that was with a good 20+ years of painful social sacrifice!