kraftiekortie wrote:
I'm amazed that you are so liberated that you could tell strangers that you have Asperger's! And that the stranger just understood!
Maybe NT's are "getting it," to some extent, after all.
I wouldn't be able to do that.
Our friend's dad is not a stranger, we have known him for a little while. But I do tell strangers all the time and I have never had a bad response. I have had some stupid responses but never mean ones except from people who are related to me but not from people not related to me. People have heard of Austism and Asperger's and most people know at least one person who has it so they are not unfamiliar. They may not understand it but they have heard of it. So I find it very easy to tell anyone. And I know that it is different for everyone but for me being Aspie is like having brown eyes or brown skin. It's just who I am and I am not ashamed of it or embarrassed about it or uncomfortable about it at all. And I like people to know because I can do and say very weird things because of it so if they know then they will understand why I might be a weirdo sometimes and they won't be mean to me. If they are they are just bullies but most people I meet are not. I get embarrassed or ashamed about some things I might do or say because of my Asperger's but I am never embarrassed or ashamed about having Asperger's and I don't have any problems letting people know. And most of the time people thank me because I spend time helping them understand that we are real "normal" every day people that they don't have to be uncomfortable around.
Yesterday I was wearing the Autism Walk/Expo tshirt I bought at the Autism Expo and the cashier at one of the stores I had gone to asked me if I had done the walk as well. She had done it. I told her that I had missed the walk but bought the shirt but that I really appreciated her and anyone else who walked to raise money because I am an Aspie. She was so glad to meet me because her son is also but he is more severely affected than I am. She started telling me all about him because she felt a comradeship with me about that. It was really nice.
I had to go the the bank last week too and the teller, who had kind of known me from seeing me all the time told me that she was really out of it from taking Benadryl. I told her that I almost died taking that once because it made my heart race. She said she had a friend who had that same reaction and she was wondering why some people react like that. I asked if her friend was Autistic and if it had to do with neurological reactions to the medicine. I told her I had Asperger's and she told me that she was surprised because I looked so normal. Then she told me that her daughter is a teacher at a place for Autistic children and I should be really proud of myself because I can make eye contact and carry on a normal conversation. So I wrote her a four page letter telling her that many Autistic people can walk and talk and carry on a conversation just fine and if they don't make eye contact it's because they choose not to or have difficulty because of sensory overload and that the only reason we make eye contact is to accommodate the needs of NT's. I wrote the letter to help educate her since she deals with the public and to help her daughter understand her students better. She was really grateful and it really helped her and she is going to have her and her daughter check out WP so that they can learn more.
So I find that a lot of times when I tell people, even strangers, it turns into a fantastic opportunity to help people learn about the Spectrum. And I think it is very important to do that because the more people become educated the better it is for everyone.
_________________
"I'm bad and that's good. I'll never be good and that's not bad. There's no one I'd rather be than me."
Wreck It Ralph
Last edited by skibum on 06 May 2014, 9:32 am, edited 2 times in total.