Evilmonkey wrote:
If theres one thing I've picked up on though it's a good idea to avoid telling people who've haven't known you for very long and that way they will find traits they attribute to you and match them with aspergers, not the other way around.
That's a good point.
I actually don't think I have full-blown AS, but I relate to most of the AS traits and always come out borderline on Aspie quizzes, etc. I imagine I'm somewhere between the NT and Aspie world, but I score more on the Aspie side and relate to all of you a lot.
So of course I would never tell anyone I have AS, but the other day my friend and I were discussing psychology and I mentioned Asperger's and how I have a lot of those tendencies, and she was very interested. She had never heard of AS before, so I am glad I was able to introduce her to it by using some of my own personality traits as an example. I imagine in the future, if she ever meets a diagnosed (self- or professional-diagnosed) Aspie, she will look at them as people with personalities, rather than people with problems.
I'm not sure if this is right or not, but I like to think of Asperger's as a personality type, with many variations of this personality. After all, like you said OP, it is not a "disability," or say, some disease that sort of covers up who you really are or could be if you were cured; rather it is a collection of traits that needs no cure, and it IS who you are.
So dosh - I am glad you were able to tell your professor and he took it well.