I feel angry with other people imposing their one-size-fit-for-all ideas of the spectrum on me.
As an autistic person with a high IQ and the ability to talk fine under certain circumstances, I cannot possibly have impairments such as... I cannot possibly experience difficulties such as... I cannot possibly be unable to do... Just like that, it's that being an autistic person with a high IQ, I totally must be able to... I must experience difficulties such as... no matter how many times I point out and prove what I can and can't do.
Some people are wrong about this a lot, denying parts of me based on what they think someone like me should be like, denying some of my impairments but also denying some of my strengths. (If anything, that' a way to victimise someone. Pretending they're what they're not and denying that they are who they are. Not exclusive to autism though, it happens a lot to people everyday.)
Anyway, that upsets me. Not being different - because everyone is different.
I don't know what I'd be like if I wasn't me and I can't wish for something that I can't picture. The words "being normal" are too abstract to mean something to me (because all normal people I've met in my life were all quite different, funky, odd and experienced numerous difficulties and happy moments every day just like me, theirs were just not as huge usually).
I guess I could wish for having less significant everyday problems (in order to be "normal") but I'm not sure what I'd have to be like in order for me to have less... of me. (What is "I" anyway?) Good thing my head can't crack into two from being confronted with something that I can't picture.
I can instantly create a mental scene of a bread-baking green-feathered Mr. duck with a white chef's hat on his head and a plate full of chocolate cookies in his wing-ish hands who greets me with a welcoming Quack to offer me cookies. If I try to imagine what it would be like or what I'd have to change into, I get nothingness.
It's not as if I don't get angry and frustrated about my limitations when those interfere with what I absolutely want to do (I want to find a way, always) but I don't angry about being autistic because of some wishful dream of what I want to be like and what kind of life I want to live.
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Autism + ADHD
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The trouble with having an open mind, of course, is that people will insist on coming along and trying to put things in it. Terry Pratchett