IsabellaLinton wrote:
My flatmate in Uni told me at the end of our first year that she thought I was very weird. She pointed out a few stims and made me feel very ashamed because I didn't know she had seen any of it, or that it bothered her. She also said her first impression of me was that I was a haughty snob, because I didn't make eye contact when we were introduced. I still ruminate about it now, 34 years later.
I went to the right college. I was not much weirder than the average guy I roomed with. One derided me for "sleeping in a fetal position". Although, not like me, I think people found him weirder than me. Another one derided my bad eye contact "what's this" and imitating bad eye contact. I'd describe him as squirrelly, so that probably made him more accepting of weird. It was about the best I could expect in those days before the spectrum was known/accepted. When I discovered Asperger's syndrome, in a psychology book in the library, it fit like a glove. I didn't disclose my discovery to anyone and don't remember seeing any reason to.
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ND: 123/200, NT: 93/200, Aspie/NT results, AQ: 34
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