starkid wrote:
I'm slightly surprised that most voters selected the second option. I expected that other people on this forum would have had a similar experience; that going into social situations with strangers who don't know about you resulted in a lot of rejection (mutual or otherwise) and/or wasted time. People generally expect others to meet some basic "average person" requirements, and when they experience someone outside of those guidelines, things tend to get awkward.
During social interaction it is not wise to say you have autism. If you do, other people try to project their beliefs about autism on you which is not alwas true. That some autistics have certain problems in a high degree does not mean I have those problem in the same high degree. I am a typical spectrum autistic which can have NT traits. I like social talk and chit-chat. If I say I am autistic (most NTs have not sufficient knowledge) you can make life difficult.
I most often keep it quiet and let the people find out how I am. Being silent about it can result into pretty good interpersonal relations or - often in my case - work relations.