Quote:
Imagine a tiny pill, half the size of a tic-tac. This pill contains all of the symptoms of full-blown autism. Then crush that pill up and dissolve it into an Olympic swimming pool.
That is Asperger's syndrome.
Basically, some whiny teenage emo outcasts figured out that they kind of were autistic, but only just a teeny bit. Then they started making this BS movement for other whiny ~unique~ teenagers to join them. So that they could all meet together on the Internet and have a giant f***ing circlejerk about how ''UNIQUE'' and ''MISUNDERSTOOD'' they are. And got a few dipshit doctors to vouch for them.
Hey, it's cool that you're an emo freak of nature and you can't make eye contact, or stand tags on clothing. Lots of people have weird little quirks like that. In fact, everyone on Earth does. But when you claim it's a disorder and associate it with a REAL disorder like autism, and then have the nerve to prance around like your sh** don't stink, then you can just go f**k yourself. And then go back to your hug-box, ass pie.
I've read this before. I think he does have a point. I've met the 'dipshit' doctors and they've proudly announced in their lectures how if not for their medical certs, certain students conveniently dx'd with AS/ADHD/whatever right before their exams (and granted extra marks) would not have gotten into the competitive courses they did. Other students, each with their own difficulties but who'd put in the work and got better grades missed out as a result.
I'm also starting to seriously resent the medicalisation of what basically is, as this person writes, a set of personality quirks for a large amount of people. Whilst I am in complete favour of teaching social/coping skills to
all children, I'm personally of the opinion that I don't think most children should know of their 'AS' label until adulthood. It's far too easy to opt out once you have an excuse; I was diagnosed as a semi-adult (22) and whilst it brought great relief for a time, it also made me give up trying because 'it's who I am'. Nobody is set in stone, certainly not for the first 30 years of their life.
I've recently gone back to trying and pick up where I left. I've decided that whilst I have a 'syndrome' of symptoms, and thus aspergers syndrome, I do not have aspergers disease; I can explain a lot of my social ineptness by my childhood experiences and the combination of my parent's personalities (not AS), and thus with hard work I can get over it to a reasonable extent. Obviously, it's harder for some than others and it does depend on many factors. I haven't ruled out the idea that there may be a 'gene' for AS or a cause in the future, just I don't think everyone displaying the collection of (really quite vague) symptoms should all be treated as the one condition and certainly not compared to autism. That just seems sloppy.
Note, I'm mainly talking about the 'mild AS' people, not folks who are classicly AS/borderline autistic. I still think labels are a bad idea though. They are like masks; you can hide behind them and they can protect you, but it's difficult to learn anything whilst hiding.
Last edited by Lene on 22 Apr 2011, 4:31 pm, edited 1 time in total.