another_1 wrote:
I'm going to go against the flow here.
Whether you should go to parties depends a bit on how severely you are impacted by your AS traits. If you anticipate living a mostly "normal" life - having (something approaching) a career, having your own home, etc. - you NEED to go to parties, and learn how to mingle, and how to do cocktail conversation, and all that crap. Even if it's the least fun activity you can think of.
You should go because it is training you how to be an adult.
I fail to see how you need to go to parties to achieve those things.
another_1 wrote:
At 17, most people go to parties because they are fun. Since they aren't fun for you, you don't go, which seems to make perfect sense. After all, why do something you don't like?
At some point, though, parties stop being about "fun" - even though most people do still enjoy them - and begin being about "networking" and maintaining an image. They are work, and they are important.
The same is true about hanging out with "friends," especially if they either are in the same field you are, or if they use the service/product your field provides. It's all about self-promotion.
As I said, your future prospects can affect how important this self-promotion is to you. If your skills put you in the top 0.1% in your field, you don't need to worry about it much. If your aspie/other symptoms make it unlikely that you will ever advance beyond entry level work, you don't need to worry about it, either. Unless you fall into one of those extremes, however, it is critical.
So it is basically all about social status?
How is maintaining an image important exactly?
Last edited by Freak-Z on 06 Apr 2011, 1:20 pm, edited 1 time in total.