Well, howdy, howdy, howdy!
I'll have a grande skinny mocha no whip, please! And a scone...
I'm Rjaye, 46, and have been a bit "odd" all of my life. I grew up in an alcoholic, blue-collar family who didn't believe there was such a thing as neurological difference of any kind, and kept telling me to snap out of it. I had no social skills, and had odd behaviors, and while the school system kept trying to get my parents to get me some kind of help, see previous sentence.
I was reading before I started school, and while teachers constantly were telling my parents I would rather draw than pay attention, I was an advanced student. They tried to skip me a few grades in order to provide me some kind of challenge, but my mother refused. She wanted me with my own age group.
Socially, I was adrift, not knowing how the hell people got together, made friends, got dates and all of that nonsense, and at the same time, thinking all of the games NTs played were ridiculous, and without reason.
Despite this, I buried myself in academia, and got my degree in Visual Communications, and ended up staying close to home to help my father take care of my mother, who had a terminal illness. I had no career, but I worked, and ended up putting quite a bit of time in at a hospital. When my mother died (when I was 31), I crashed from the stress of work and her illness. By the time I was ready to go back to college, my father had a stroke which left him severely disabled. My own health was mysteriously worsening, but I stayed local and helped to take care of him with his second wife.
I ended up on disability with a combination of severe depression, a Borderline Pers. Disorder dx, and some physical problems.
In the five years since being on SSI, I was re-dx as AS, a severe spinal deformity in my neck that prevents me from doing most jobs (arm becomes paralyzed), my father died, and I am now going back for a doctorate in English, and hope to teach at university and do research.
I was so relieved when I got the AS dx. It explained everything. I am now working on my self-esteem, and am lucky to have a therapist who gets it, and is helping me learn to cope with the abilities I have, instead of pretending. The whole self-acceptance thing--priceless.
So, I live on my own in an apartment (not willing to buy--who knows where I'll end up teaching), no pets, though I really like dogs, read, draw, write, hike, enjoy my friends who accept me for who I am (and who are Aspie-ish as well), and looking for a relationship. I love my four-wheel drive, as it gets me to lovely mountain areas and beaches otherwise unaccessible, and am getting into Patrick O'Brian's books. I am a Buddhist (for 34 years), and collect frogs, only because my friends and family think I do (frogs are cool, being an "indicator" species).
Life is getting good. Yeah.
Much metta, Rjaye