NorthWind wrote:
Joe90 wrote:
And then they say that it is an Aspie trait to have difficulties putting themselves in other people's shoes. To me it sounds like a human trait. I don't choose to jump, it just happens, like a cough or a sneeze.
This. NTs are merely more often right if they assume other people think and feel like themselves. They're not good at understanding how the minds of other people work if it's too different to their own either.
Therefore they don't tend to understand autistic people any better than autistic people understand NTs and they don't tend to understand reactions and thought processes of NTs in situations they're completely unfamiliar with.
But it still seems to be autistics that get the blame for the lacking of understanding of other people's state of mind. Even some autistics themselves seem to forget how misunderstanding NTs can be when it comes to our issues. But no matter how much we discuss it here, the whole world is still going to see "inability to oneself in other people's shoes" as a typical autism trait.
My boyfriend is usually a rather understanding and empathetic man in most ways but even he fails to understand some things. Probably because he isn't so easily startled. So even the nicest of NTs or NTs with very high empathy score can still be ignorant to some things others feel, and that applies to me too (I have high empathy score).
My mum's an NT and is easily startled, so she doesn't criticise if I jump.
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