C2V wrote:
I was rather struck by the fact that I don't find most of what is listed there as inherently creepy/scary to be so at all - teddy bears with teeth, snakes, heights, failing tests, injuries/deaths of other people (and yes I know that sounds awful) the future, being alone, gangs, failing tests, making mistakes, masks, singing androids, smiling wolves, even stuff like terrorist attacks or wars - if it's going to happen, it's going to happen, I don't stress out about being afraid of it. And the weird potential of what you may or may not do is just interesting. Everything you own being replaced with an exact copy? If it was exact how would you know to be scared in the first place? I'd just consider that a bit weird and try to figure out what happened.
The same for me, i am barely affected by the "uncanny valley", and many "scary" things just aren't.
C2V wrote:
If I'm not the only one not scared by traditionally scary things, things you're supposed to be scared by, then maybe autistic people are creepy because we're "other." Different, not part of what people accept, except, or understand. Outside. Maybe it's that simple.
Nail on the head: NTs instictively notice that we are different, due to the way we act or respond to outside stimulus, which is what scares them, if we respond atypically to this stimulus, there is no telling how we'd respond to something else (or so their intuition tells them)