Spokane_Girl wrote:
Has anyone here ever met anyone online or in real life who you suspect might be aspie but they were in denial because they said they didn't have it and listing their excuses why such as they are too busy to have friends or they aren't interested?
Yes.
Me and large cross-sections of my family for over 10 years.
Sometimes I really was to busy and "snowed under" with work.
I thought that was a pretty good excuse: didn't help me to socialise though.
To do a good job, I had to put in the extra time, the obligatory commute to one of my colleges took so much time out of the day. Also, I didn't live where most of the other folks lived, so it was basically inconvenient, which was a pretty good excuse. Had I lived more locally, perhaps I would have gotten to know more people, who knows. The socialising issues were still there, but the length of the journey and the intense work schedule just exacerbated them. I remember lots of people being told not to take summer jobs because we'd worked that hard: yes, it really was that bad.
I've never "have" had anything.
I am an AS person.
People saying that I have AS mistakenly assumes that the condition can be cured or got rid of like an illness.
That's why I can say that I for instance "have" the flu or "have" a stomach ache because they are infections.
Saying that I "have" AS is nonsense in the same way that someone saying that they "have Christianess", "have colourblindess" or "have gayness". People are Christian, are colourblind or are gay, they don't by definition "have" anything at all: they are themselves.
I am myself.
I accept that my way of perceiving things may be different from the norm.
I just feel that something that's all pervasive/genetic and affects one's every waking experience/beliefs/perceptions such as AS can't be "had" by definition if it's one's personality.
This is my take on the whole thing.
I'm not in denial about my mental processing operating system.
I am, however, in denial about being labeled as "disordered" because I'm a conscientious and helpful person. I hope this makes sense.