Brundisium wrote:
I think the most offensive response I ever got was "don't paint yourself with another persons brush", as though Aspergers was just some sort of label that I didn't have to attach myself to. I would have told him what a spectacular moron he was right there and then if he wasn't my boss.
I think maybe an answer to "don't paint yourself with another persons brush" or any of the various "snap out of it" comments is, "would you say that about walking to someone in a wheelchair?" In other words, try to get them to realize that what they have done is the equivalent of telling a person in a wheelchair that a building is accessible because there are "only three steps" to get in.
I think the more that people realize that bullying us is like kicking the crutches out from under someone and telling us to "get over it" is like telling a person in a wheelchair to climb a flight of stairs then maybe, just maybe, the more they will come to be ashamed of the way they treat us.
But first they have to realize what it is that they are doing.
_________________
"In the end, we decide if we're remembered for what happened to us or for what we did with it."
-- Randy K. Milholland
Avatar=WWI propaganda poster promoting victory gardens.