swbluto wrote:
If it is common for aspies, the only reason why that I can guess is that foreigners tend to be less idiomatic and more literal in their speech of the english language and so the "speech style" of foreigners and aspies would be more similar than between aspies and natives, and so aspies would tend to get along better with foreigners than natives. I'm just guessing, though.
Never thought of it like this, but I think you are probably guessing right.
Karuna wrote:
It's not so much foreigners, it's outsiders. I tend to get on with people that know how it feels to not belong. Whether thats foreigners, different races, people with disabilities, gays, doesn't matter, for me it's because they can't properly tell that i'm different from the norm because they're different from the norm too.
I think in the same way i tend to get on with people that are older/younger and quite often females. It's only when u stick me with someone that's my age and sex that it becomes really obvious how different to normal i am.
A very astute post.
All of this definitely applies to me (except the females part) and sounds like a common Aspie situation. To say it's not just foreigners but outsiders is an astute observation.
To age and sex, in many cases you can add location (i.e. the location you actually originate from, as witness the posts here). Which reminds me of the "asl" question asked on the internet and how even online, it seems I'm only able to get on with people if they're outsiders (almost always because of physical or mental health, remote location or often diversity of sexuality). Even online a clear separation between me, and socially mainstream/herd people, is absolutely guaranteed.
Joe90 wrote:
Even if I was in a crowd of Aspies, I probably wouldn't be the life and soul or popular. Well, I don't know that yet because I haven't met another Aspie before.
You never know. If you could attend Aspie meetups (do they still have them in London?) you would know. I have found I hold up very well in regular Aspie meetups where I live - even if it is usually only with a) the more neurodiverse types of Aspie, b) much older or younger, and c) not of local origin.