peterd wrote:
To cut a long story short, there have been a number of posts show up recently where adults afflicted by aspergers have shown up, newly diagnosed - or nearly diagnosed - and looking for ways to survive better, We don't do well at helping them.
For the most part, it's "I've had that" and "You think you've had it bad, look at what happened to me", and then they go away. Perhaps they find help somewhere else, but we don't care.
Well, some of us do care, but they've all - or almost all - learned not to care too much about what happens on Wrong Planet.
Hell, I've just been accepted as a "real" aspie by my local autism support organisation. DO they know what its like being an adult aspie? No. Do they have anything to offer? Well, probably not. But that's the best that our local societies have to offer us. Is that enough? Hell, no.
What we need, desperately, are ways to feel real in our communities. But, alas, we're aspies. Bugger.
we have plenty of older Aspies at WP that have learned later in life. One of our longest running threads in the "Getting to Know You" Discussion group is the "Dino Aspie Ex-Cafe" over a thousand pages strong that was phoenixed from the original Dino Aspie Cafe that was nearly as long. A group of the older people even got together and wrote a book of our various adventures of living in a world out of focus.
Merle
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State Motto of Oregon