just-lou wrote:
Why are there so many of these kinds of topics on here recently? It seems to me to be trying to create elitism - you're either a "real" aspie and belong to (even an online) community like Wrong Planet, or you're an imposter who should just go away, deal with your issues and leave the communities to "real" aspies. There's an ugliness to it.
I agree, it is ugly. It also reinforces the stereotypical image (in my mind, anyway) that the typical "aspie" is a young person with too much time and privilege to have anything better to worry about (or to understand how the big, bad world of grown-up life works).
I probably shouldn't even suggest it, but given how rabid some people are about the issue, I wouldn't put it past some of them to create sock puppets to "prove their case." Hope I'm wrong, though.
Quote:
Many people are undiagnosed for many reasons. I know for me, I've had so many people tell me my whole life that I'm unsuitable for anything from social clubs to jobs because I'm different. They tell me I can't do anything, that I must be sick or damaged. Getting an official diagnosis would be just one more excuse for people to tell me I'm too different for that job/group/whatever. It creates discrimination, and I already have enough of that from all the other ways I'm different.
Also - getting diagnosed is expensive. I don't know about others, but money is not something I have a lot of as I can't keep jobs long. Plus a diagnosis involves speaking to the adult aspie's parents, and I don't even speak to my mother.
Topics like this just make people do exactly what I'm doing, in my view - getting all defensive and justifying myself. Sad.
Yeah. I've told my story enough times already to be too tired and annoyed to tell it again. And why bother when this zombie topic never dies.