deathbyguitar wrote:
It seems to me that nowadays the more the public is becoming aware about the existence of Asperger's Syndrome, the worse it's becoming for some of us to deal with the stigmas attached. For many people, "Aspergers" has become a catch-all for describing any kind of excessively-odd behavior. Its pretty similar to how the general public automatically looks down on someone when they hear they're bi-polar, automatically assuming they'll flip a sh** on a moment's notice.
It seems that arguing for it is sometimes an uphill battle when the rest of the world is so ignorant. Because of this, I've told almost none of my close friends that I have it. I'm very much afraid that they'll stop taking me seriously and start relating everything I do to Aspergers. Is anyone else afraid of this?
It doesn't really matter how u r labeled,
ppl wouldn't understand or treat u better or worse if they knew your "oddness" have a name because the code that run relationships is based on much deeper and much more substantial elements ,
the way u talk and move,your expectations , the way u perceives time and space,the way u look, the small things are what really counts and this things doesn't change just because some idiot gave it a professional sound name or label/