When you try to get in touch with someone and they do not respond, they are not interested in talking with you, so do not contact them back, otherwise they will think of you as clingy and desperate...and that's not someone they want to keep in touch with. Also look at the quality of their responses too. If a person really cares about you, they will respond in a friendly way with things such as "nice to hear from you again" and will ask about you and your interests.
There are some things you need to work on when you are first meeting people. When you first get to know someone, you usually keep a low profile, which means you talk to them only a little bit to see if they like you or not. If it is really clear that they do, you can begin to have experiences with them such as chats to form the basis on your friendship. Some people on the spectrum tend to rush with this through, in that they decide they really like someone, but jump right into the friendship without giving it time to grow on its own.
I've met a few people on the spectrum who, when they really appreciate or like someone, they tend to show it a little too much, so they will message them all the time, "like" all their things on facebook, etc. The two girls I mentor who do this say they love me and talk all the time about how great I am, but that's not something you do when you aren't really a close friend. You also tend to be a little excessive with your "likes", comments and things like that on Victoria and I's facebook pages.
I know that you really like us, and while we don't mind it because we understand who you are, if you do this to other people, they might see that as clingy. So my advice to you is to take things slow when you meet new people or try to keep in touch. When a person hasn't responded, don't message them back. They may get to it in their own time, and if they don't get to you, they aren't someone you should be talking to.
Maybe if you would like to meet new people online on message boards, another thing you may want to work on is your spelling. I know that not everyone is the best speller in the world, but it will make people respect you a little more and they will find you easier to understand as well. I wish that not everyone was judged on this, but unfortunately most people are and people on the internet can be very judgmental sometimes. The easiest way to check your spelling is to type what you write into a Word document and run the spell check.
Also, as for finding forums and the like, practice using Google! I use it constantly for searching new things that I'm interested in. All you have to know is the main points of what I want to search. So if you want to search for a hockey forum, search for "message boards nhl" or "hockey forum"...I have no doubt that you will find some.
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Given a “tentative” diagnosis as a child as I needed services at school for what was later correctly discovered to be a major anxiety disorder.
This misdiagnosis caused me significant stress, which lessened upon finding out the truth about myself from my current and past long-term therapists - that I am an anxious and highly sensitive person but do not have an autism spectrum disorder.
My diagnoses - social anxiety disorder and obsessive-compulsive disorder.
I’m no longer involved with the ASD world.