Fnord wrote:
◉ I do not know.
There is no way to tell just by looking at someone if they are LGBTQ, Neurodiverse, or both, unless they display an inverted pink triangle, a puzzle-piece, or both somewhere on their clothing or person.
I display my inverted pink triangle and puzzle piece as a sweet neck tattoo. I joke.
Despite the lack of tattoo, or any obvious advertising, a lot of people do see these things in me. It might not be something everyone can do any time, or things that people get correct 100% of the time, but I disagree that there is no way to tell just by looking at a person. Some people can do that, with frequent success, see these things in others. It's like they can spot it in us, in each other. I don't have that skill set, but that doesn't mean no one does.
For me in regards to autism, if someone knows anything about autism, they're likely to wonder if I have it. My eye contact is all wrong, I can get stimmy, my speech patterns aren't odd...the list goes on. If someone knows nothing about autism, they're still likely to wonder what I have going on with me, it's pretty obvious something is. I don't present as your average neurotypical person.
As for the lgbtq side of me... I dunno. I'm non binary, not that I make an effort to rock the androgyny or anything, but I was born A bio female, and don't much present as a typical one in any way, shape or form, even if I'm wearing some stereotype girly outfit. It's not really my appearance, which is odd for women in general, but i think it's moreso in my mannerisms, attitudes, approaches, societal norms that I don't mesh with... People often assume I'm a lesbian or some kind of trans.
HighVamp mentioned "gaydar", that's a thing for a reason. You or I might miss out on those things, but a lot of people don't. Im not so quick to discount that stuff. There seems to be something to it.