I think my problem has to do with poor social communication, especially over the Internet. People usually get a bad impression of me, like I don't do my homework, I'm ignorant, I'm foolish, etc., and their impression surprises me, because I do make sure to do my homework, I study the topic well, I hash these issues out in great detail with my therapist, etc. Yet they always come in with the assumption I haven't been doing any of that, so when I complain, they think I'm just living in "fantasy land" or something, all discombobulated and floating around everywhere. It makes me wonder, if outside autistic forums like this, if it is ever worth it to ask for advice, because it's like I can't fully express the context I'm working in and people make all sorts of assumptions like my being poorly prepared and then they get all patronizing and stuff and I find their advice is basically worthless.
I've been having this frustration on the Internet ever since at least 2003. I remember on the Star Wars Galaxies forum posting a proof of 0.999... = 1 (0.999... is the repeating decimal where the nines go on forever), which I thought was really cool to show. I thought other people would think it was neat too, and I had checked it--I knew I had a good understanding of it. I also gave reliable sources like Dr. Math which had links to even more proofs. Yet that convinced no one, and it turned into a nasty argument, where I was insulted, demeaned, and belittled. I kept trying to redo the proofs, I kept trying to explain more clearly each step, and so on and so forth, to no avail.
Then, suddenly, a new poster appeared with a different proof, and all the other posters immediately acccepted it. Then they rounded on me and called me stupid, ret*d, saying that I suck at explaining and totally dehumanizing. I wanted to reach though my DSL line and strangle those people.
I find I have this struggle a lot, especially more so when I ask for advice. I am immediately faced with patronizing, dehumanizing people who apparently do not have a full understanding of the context in which I'm working (probably because I am still weak in pragmatics) and they round on me when I protest that their advice isn't going to work, calling me close-minded, stupid, ret*d, a piece of s**t, something that deserves to be thrown down a well (though not in so many words; it's clear that is their internal view of the situation, however).
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"You have a responsibility to consider all sides of a problem and a responsibility to make a judgment and a responsibility to care for all involved." --Ian Danskin