This is a subject I've been thinking about a lot here, lately. I wasn't sure if it was just me or not, because my situation is an odd one.
I didn't have close friends as a kid, because I lived in a fairly isolated environment, only seeing them at school or once a week at Girl Scouts. It improved slightly in middle and high school, and while I wasn't popular per se, I had several groups that accepted me, and I wandered among them. One or two actual friends, even. When I got into college, all my friends were gay men. I mean all of them. lol I met my ex husband, because my gay bff had a thing for his roommate. When I left to live in another state, I was too caught up in being a mom, working, and finishing my degrees to develop friendships. I associated with my (then) boyfriend's old friends, but when he cheated/I finished my graduate work. I moved back to my hometown in 2011, where I reunited with a couple of the middle-high school people, and we are "friends" again. They introduced me to their significant others, and I made "friends" in the local music community, but I don't actually have anything in common with any of them. I tried finding people more into books, museums, etc, like I am, but they tend to be the under 30 crowd, and I get the impression they aren't really into those things either, beyond the most basic level (we have tragic hipsters here).
So, in answer to your questions...I'm not dealing with it anymore. I'm pulling back, and spending time with just my daughter. She's fourteen, also Aspie, and we share a lot of the same interests. I find her conversations more in depth than those of my peers, because she's received a better education than most of them, and I am tired from the rest of it.