Stoek wrote:
Greb wrote:
nessa238 wrote:
Stoek wrote:
nessa238 wrote:
All I can say is he's remarkably 'together' for an aspie
There's no sign of neurological slowness at all so I'm not surprised people think he's normal
he seems pretty adept vocally as well
he's at the near-NT end of the spectrum and certainly doesn't represent my form of Aspergers
If you spend any time playing with camera's it's very easy to get to his level of fluidness. You basically get all the feed back you lack naturally, via the machine.
I couldn't and don't see why I should even have to
I find it disturbing that people are even attempting to become something they're not
What's so wrong about being yourself?
What's so wrong about trying to be better?
Agreed there's a huge difference in trying to be better understood, and trying to be an nt.
It's very frustrating that some people in the AS community, tend to discredit anyone that makes progress, I've fought tooth and nail for what I got, and it's not because I'm magically more nt.
One of the worst and best experiences of my life was working at call centers. I learned how to talk, yet it was horridly stressful and I would of never of done it if I had realized I had aspergers.
Indeed, when somebody who has not a natural and instinctive fluidity gets it, in my opinion it says much more about this person: it doesn't only say that he can communicate in a fluid way. It says that he has courage and persistence to achieve it. And more merit, of course.
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1 part of Asperger | 1 part of OCD | 2 parts of ADHD / APD / GT-LD / 2e
And finally, another part of secret spices :^)