CollegeGirlAnon wrote:
I would be curious to find out how many aspie males prefer a aspie female. As a aspie female I am curious. And yes, I know no two aspies are alike. But hearing perspectives is also interesting.
My thoughts are currently based on several years back having my 60 to 70-something parents meet my psychologist.
After the meeting Bonnie said that Mom is totally Aspie. She had suspected it would be Dad, but no, totally Mom.
And then my brain put that together with how I just wasn't satisfied with what I only know to call 'the culture' of teen, 20-something, 30-something, 40-something, girls and women.
My observations at the time were that they were far, far, more, exponentially more, gossipy and soap-opera than Mom was: she was intelligent, she was interesting and did and talked about interesting things, and got done what needed to be done without any fanfare or drama. Mom could fly planes and she had been a scholarship winning cook. She could sew quilts and rebuild clothes dryers. I got sick a lot as a child and she cared for me without being overbearing or overly 'helicopter'. Mom made, & I'm going to say she did so without consciously trying, our home a place which our friends from troubled homes would come hang out for a while for peace and understanding.
(and she could do funny things like tell my brother, "You need to slow down on the Halloween candy, you are eating too many sweets, sugar.) The girls and women I encountered in my life out in the world on the other hand seemed so shallow and superficial, commercialized, even. I didn't have the data in those decades but my undiagnosed autistic self was comparing what I didn't know were NT girls and women to my undiagnosed aspie Mom and I was baffled as to why the NTs were unappealingly different.
Later in my adult life I did get married and it ended badly. Among other things it turned out that just simply living with another person generated very high levels of stress in me all day every day.
As much as I like the idea of being married it turns out that it may be quite smart to not do that again.
Oh well, such is life.
_________________
"There are a thousand things that can happen when you go light a rocket engine, and only one of them is good."
Tom Mueller of SpaceX, in Air and Space, Jan. 2011