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Shahunshah
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04 Sep 2019, 11:34 am

As of late I feel I am moving more and more closer to where I want to be. And I am sort of surprised to be honest. I started volunteering more at Autism New Zealand. And now I have been offered potentially the chance to be a paid mentor. I just haven't made my final call. I just I hope I am ready for what may come next. I am not 100% confident in my ability to relate to others, even for people who may have been through similar things to me.

I am now at Uni. And am getting politically active. Currently I am a member of Young Labour in NZ. And although I may not 100% agree with that party's agenda. I still see it as important I be a part of the party because I see Labour as most equipped to face the problems New Zealand will deal with in the future.

I hope things have been going well here as well. I still remember a large number of you: Androbot, ASPartofMe, Kraftiekortie, Firebird, Sly, auntblabby, B19, Kiprobalhato, Campin_Cat, Face of Boo, Outrider and Wrongcitizen. I want you all to know you have impacted how I see the world today. And I thank you for that even if you didn't know. So how are things going for you lot and the rest of you on Wrongplanet?



jimmy m
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04 Sep 2019, 12:02 pm

Good to hear you are making progress.


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AnonymousAnonymous
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04 Sep 2019, 3:05 pm

This is great news! :D


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B19
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04 Sep 2019, 5:47 pm

Shahunshah wrote:
As of late I feel I am moving more and more closer to where I want to be. And I am sort of surprised to be honest. I started volunteering more at Autism New Zealand. And now I have been offered potentially the chance to be a paid mentor. I just haven't made my final call. I just I hope I am ready for what may come next. I am not 100% confident in my ability to relate to others, even for people who may have been through similar things to me.

I am now at Uni. And am getting politically active. Currently I am a member of Young Labour in NZ. And although I may not 100% agree with that party's agenda. I still see it as important I be a part of the party because I see Labour as most equipped to face the problems New Zealand will deal with in the future.

I hope things have been going well here as well. I still remember a large number of you: Androbot, ASPartofMe, Kraftiekortie, Firebird, Sly, auntblabby, B19, Kiprobalhato, Campin_Cat, Face of Boo, Outrider and Wrongcitizen. I want you all to know you have impacted how I see the world today. And I thank you for that even if you didn't know. So how are things going for you lot and the rest of you on Wrongplanet?


Thanks for the feedback, I am sure we all got a warm fuzzy from that. Very best wishes with your studies - I found the academic life there suited me very well, and hope the same for you. I think you will do very well.



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04 Sep 2019, 6:14 pm

I am so glad you are doing well. Thank you for posting.


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IstominFan
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04 Sep 2019, 6:48 pm

Good news, Shahunshah!



ASPartOfMe
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04 Sep 2019, 7:41 pm

I am glad to hear you are doing well.

I am happy for whatever help I was able to give you. Sometimes I get so wrapped up in the issues of the day I can forget that this a support site.


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Shahunshah
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04 Sep 2019, 8:25 pm

Again it feels slightly odd because I wonder how many of you are able to remember me after so long.

Some reflections I would like to make here. I am thinking back to the conversations more and more I had with people like Androbot (Who has since long left this forum.) She would describe how she spent years working to get her degree under an intense environment of stress. And how her planned job being a transcriptionist was likely to face automation in the future. With that she told me that the only way she could see society going forward was through a system of universal basic income.

Androbot did gain her degree through all her work. But when she did she would tell me, she lost the will to work. Since then she fell silent.

This is sensitive stuff. And such that I do not have the best grasp on. But it makes me feel despondent about what will be faced in the future. It is estimated that in New Zealand alone, 40% of jobs will leave in the next twenty years due to automation. You have this enormous rapid change taking place across society. And the potentially traumatic rate of transition makes me worried. I acknowledge alongside this that autistic individuals have as much capability as anyone else. But the fact is we are I believe in a more disenfranchised position and that makes things very very difficult.

I am wondering more and more whether people many autistic, potentially myself, my community and friends will get overwhelmed by the sheer disorientation of this transition. It makes me worried. I can see this going badly. Job training in the United States and much of the world has been a failed project when retraining manufacturing workers and for that reason I wonder what will come in the future. Maybe a Universal Basic Income would be necessary. I do not know.



Shahunshah
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04 Sep 2019, 11:06 pm

This question here has given me a sense of urgency. I will not lie.



kraftiekortie
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05 Sep 2019, 6:54 am

Of course I remember Sha-na-na :D



jimmy m
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05 Sep 2019, 9:51 am

Shahunshah wrote:
This is sensitive stuff. And such that I do not have the best grasp on. But it makes me feel despondent about what will be faced in the future. It is estimated that in New Zealand alone, 40% of jobs will leave in the next twenty years due to automation. You have this enormous rapid change taking place across society. And the potentially traumatic rate of transition makes me worried. I acknowledge alongside this that autistic individuals have as much capability as anyone else. But the fact is we are I believe in a more disenfranchised position and that makes things very very difficult.


This is a problem not only faced by Aspies (or those on the AS) but society as a whole. Life is not constant but ever changing and ever growing. When I look into the future, I see a contraction in population in most of the developed world. Populations are growing older and people in developed countries tend to have fewer and fewer children. There will be many more jobs related to taking care of the elderly.

[For example according to 2014 estimates, 33.0% of the Japanese population is above the age of 60, 25.9% are aged 65 or above, and 12.5% are aged 75 or above. People aged 65 and older in Japan make up a quarter of its total population, estimated to reach a third by 2050. The birth rate in Japan as of 2016 was 1.44 per woman. But the growing population of older people is expected to place unprecedented strain on health and welfare services in the decades to come.]

As a result Japan is one of the leaders in automation. So automation is not trying to necessarily replace the workforce but rather streamline society to continue workload with a shrinking population.

There are many skills needed in society. Many of these skills do not require a college degree. Some can provide fairly good pay. So from an Aspie perspective, do not exclude blue collar work - the trades from your list of options. Stay flexible.

Many Aspies go through years of college, sometime earning several degrees but then are unable to make the transition into a career. They either lack the social skills required or the stress drives them from the work environment. In a sense all that training has gone to waste. There is an important element missing in college. And that element is work. Why are part-time/summer jobs important? (even volunteer jobs) It is because when you work, you integrate into the real work world. You:
* developed a rock solid work ethic and a positive attitude.
* learned what is acceptable in the workplace and what will get you fired. (normally a career ender)
* learned to be a productive employee. (The first few months of employment in a career field sets the tone for the rest of your career – therefore keying into this trait prior to establishing a career is a key attribute.)
* It opens up new skills and allows one to sharpen their skills. Work is another form of learning experience. It is essentially a different type of school.
* Managing money.
* Navigational skills in getting to work and finding my way home.
* Skills in marketing oneself.
* Mature your work style.
* The ability to exercise flexibility, adaptability and resourcefulness.
* Sharpens out-of-box thinking and problem solving.
* Overcoming shyness and practicing extrovert qualities.
* Work incorporates both educational skills but also real life skills.
* Evolve time management skills, executive function, theory of mind, organizational skills and common sense logic.
* These jobs can also helped pay your way through college.


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CockneyRebel
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05 Sep 2019, 11:35 am

Right on! 8)


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Sweetleaf
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08 Apr 2020, 1:48 am

Ohh Good for you...that is what we were worried about was you. NOt the you know normal people who run the site but they were all concerned about you the CEO and all you have to tell them is 'oh well we will make sure to keep exploiting workers" until by the time the find out there will be nothing they can do about it.


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Sweetleaf
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08 Apr 2020, 1:49 am

But have they really been going well...or are you just saying that for morale purposes.How do we know politicians aren't working with humanoid rats underground to screw over all of humanity. Even if its not true that is a cool idea isn't it...


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