ThinkingMonkey wrote:
Sorry for the long post.
Scenario:
I do not know should I be angry at her. I do not know whether she was trying to make fun me.
I don't know either. However, I do know this: when you present a little differently than a "normal person" people will sometimes first assume it is your sexual orientation that is responsible for the difference, not knowing any other reason.
It could simply be this: you seem a little different than people she generally knows, and she does not understand why so is imposing the only explanation that makes sense to her. I imagine it is fairly common for someone with ASD to make a friend and at first have their motives be a little confusing to someone else since the way we offer ourselves up for friendship would (like everything else we do) be different than the way an NT would.
Just a guess.
People sometimes think I am gay, but I'm not. I don't relate much to gender, though, and that's common for someone on the autistic spectrum as well as misunderstanding social expectations, so it is not far fetched to think another person would misinterpret all that when trying to make sense of us. If we seem to be acting a little odd, and not fitting our gender too well or fitting socially too well, people might think gay before thinking "autism"
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