About_A_Girl wrote:
Hi, I am new here and this is my first post.
I come from a country (not English-speaking so pls ignore my grammar) where Asperger's is still a very very new concept limited to a few movie lovers and the professionals of psychology...(To be honest, I myself have come to know Asperger first time because of Mary and Max/Adam) But learning about it has cleared many clouds of my 21 years of life.
My question is that as an aspie, can I make a good interpreter or translator? I know that the idea that an aspie->interpreter sounds almost paradoxical, but I really love the dynamics of this job. One thing I love it is because of the language aspect of course, which is my love of life. I just wish someone can tell me whether it's ever possible for an aspie to achieve a career that intense and demanding in interpersonal communication. Or should I just change gear and go into something that is more of an alone job like linguistics and law?
It depends, About A Girl.
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You may very well become an excellent interpreter if you are comfortable with proximity to other people that find themselves in a difficult and sometimes traumatic situation (be it prisoners in a prison cell, people in hospital, etc.), if you don't mind eye contact, and if you're not too bad at reading body language correctly. Body language is actually very important even if you are to interpret meaning expressed through words. If you also think you can master the art of speaking at the same time as you're listening and translating the words inside your head (simultaneous interpretation), and you have an excellent memory (consecutive interpretation) then you're absolutely good to go.
Many colleagues of mine prefer to work with translating written material, so as to avoid the stress that may arise from interpretation jobs. I work as an interpreter, and work mainly for the courts and the police, but also for the health and social services. Good luck with finding out what to go for!