theboogieman wrote:
babybird wrote:
I always find myself in a protective role with people on the spectrum when it comes to this.
Same thing here. I went to school with a very kind but naive girl who is absolutely autistic (though she's never told me this). She was incapable of telling when she was being patronized, and that was incredibly frequently. People loved to put her in situations where she thought she was finally being included or praised when it was all mocking.
I definitely told people to back off a few times despite not being an assertive person. It broke my heart because these same people who mocked her for her differences were always virtue signaling by being friendly to the higher support needs autistics and down syndrome people in the special needs program.
Not autistic enough to be pitied, too autistic to be accepted. I hope she's being treated better these days.
I fall under the category of "not autistic enough to be pitied; too autistic to be accepted."
If you're on the spectrum, being NT-passing probably comes with more pros than cons. One con, however, is the phenomenon you described (how we're not quite autistic enough to be pitied). I am NT-passing. Most of the population probably thinks I'm NT but strange.
I have some school stories similar to the classmate you mentioned. There were instances where I would
think I was being accepted, yet looking back, I realize I was getting mocked.
Then on a related note, there were cases where I would
think I was part of the group (in social settings), yet "the group" ended up showing clues that they viewed me as someone who just so happened to be there.
As for the OP's question, I think the outside world can tell there's something off about us (even if they don't officially know what). That's why we're seen as easy targets.