I sometimes feel different than most people with autism/aspergers as well. I'm more sporty, more extroverted, more impulsive. I also have ADHD pretty bad so my ability to pay attention and self-regulate is pretty delayed. And iv'e come to realize that it's not that I don't have autism, it just affects me differently than some people. Because i'm often impulsive, because I do and say stupid things because I think it's funny, because I had problems controlling my emotions particularly anger and sadness, and because I was a bit of a rebel and didn't like to necessarily follow rules, I had a lot of behavior problems in school and I often never realized how my behavior was making others feel about me. I was blind to others peoples feelings of me and I still am to a certain extent.
In school and at work, I was seen as the funny crazy guy and I was okay with this initially because this was my way of being liked and feeling that I belonged. But the problem was that nobody took me seriously, my bosses never took me seriously, women never took me seriously. I remember having an intellectual conversation with somebody and them remarking "geez you're smarter that you make yourself out to be." It eventually got to the point where I just got tired of bosses always treating me as less than equal, and teachers disliking me, and women ignoring me that I wanted to do something about it!
I used to be in denial about having autism, I liked to pretend I didn't have it because deep down, I hated the fact that I was autistic. It's why I never told anyone, it was like my biggest secret. To me, autism was synonymous with undateable, unlikeable, an outcast, and that's what I didn't want to be. I wanted to have friends, I wanted to have a girlfriend, I wanted to be liked.
I remember reading an article about a girl in the UK who committed suicide at the age of 16 because she hated being autistic and that story strongly resonated with me because when I was 14 to 16, I HATED being autistic as well and all I wanted was to fit in. http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article ... utism.html