I have a new job, and for some time (1 year) I didn't have to be constantly around people that i dont know. Now I have 3 weeks in my new job, and it has been somewhat hard. Now that im once again around all new people, I want to share some insights about having aspergers.
What doesnt work right in my brain? In my way home I was thinking in a kind of analogy to answer an NT this question: --Theres this part of my brain that doesnt work just right. Each time that I meet a new person, its like having to read a new thick book. The interactions with other people in the past, didnt really taught me much on how to interact with new people. You NT, and me Aspie, we started the same, we began reading long thick books, but with time, you have managed to generalize what these books say, so when you see a new book you already know most of the book and you can start swiftly jumping through pages or just consult the new book as a quick reference. I can't, I have to read each page, I have to painfuly go through each page slowly, starting from 1 to 500, and my books sometimes dont even have an index! This is what happens to me with new people, this is how I feel in a certain way. And of course, if you introduce me 5 new "books" all at once, well, you can imagine the chaos in my mind. For me, all those books are also on a more or less different language than my native language.
Sometimes, I am so absort trying to "read a book" that I forget about myself. I don't notice what I feel, and I usually forget what I want. My intellect does his best in trying to make sense of the world; meanwhile my emotions are pushed and pulled inside of me for some time, and then they come out in an outburst, and I can barely control myself.
And I find ironic that these emotions that I forget constantly, are the key to communicate with someone else. As I am thinking on how to understand someone else, I get apart from my emotions, but its this emotions the key to really empathize with others. It's when I show these forgotten emotions that people feel close to me, because it's then that they see themselves in me, and thus can empathize.
I have always known i can't act 'normal' while i have aspergers, there is always some degree of weirdness and excentricity (at least from others point of view). But I think having it also gives you more understanding. Sometimes I find myself defending gay people. They, as it happens with us, couldn't choose. You at some point find youself in a world that doesnt quite accept you, but it does expect a lot of things from you; and some of those things, you just can't give.
anyway, these are some thoughts i was having while on my way home. I just wanted to share them here.