Let_It_Go wrote:
I don't understand it, and it hurts to be thought of like this. I'm crying as I write this post. Is it typical of autism? I just don't understand things, and why people think this stuff. All I wanted was answers, and I was snapped at every time.
It is absolutely typical of autism. In fact, it is so typical of autism that it is one of the diagnostic criteria:
Quote:
A. Persistent deficits in social communication and social interaction across multiple contexts, as manifested by...
1. Deficits in social-emotional reciprocity, ranging, for example, from abnormal social approach and failure of normal back-and-forth conversation...
2. Deficits in nonverbal communicative behaviors used for social interaction...
3. Deficits in developing, maintaining, and understand relationships, ranging, for example, from difficulties adjusting behavior to suit various social contexts...
What it all means is both failing to understand other people and failing to make yourself understood.
Despite all the gung-ho, social-model-of-disability talk about how there is really no deficit or impairment in people with ASD, this defining feature of ASD is quite real and a true deficit.
It's not the "hive mind" being obtuse and failing to understand autistic people, it's that autistic people have true deficits in their perception and error correction mechanisms for social communication.
What it means: being misunderstood, misconstrued, and serial failures of communication.
In my experience, the closer that you stay to exchanges of factual information, the less room there is for misunderstanding, the more social, emotional and political the content of the communication is, the higher the rate of misunderstanding and the more likely you are to be ineffective in your communications.
The lifelong challenge is trying to work around this deficit.