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Wrong Kinds of Division

  • Posted on September 8, 2008

In my post, NTs Can Be Socially Incorrect Too, I gave an example of one kind of wrong division. Unbeknown to me, that experience would teach me something else important. It was last night, when going for another walk with my dog, that another neighbor unknowingly let me know there is another kind of wrong division that must be brought to light.

There should be no division made between neurotypicals and aspies when it comes to socially incorrect behavior, because both types of people do and say things at times that offend the other. This other type of division I’m about to mention (at least as far as I’m aware of) is not talked about or written anywhere! This one has to do with political attitudes and aspergers.

On Saturday night, just after it got dark out and the rain started pouring, the neighbor mentioned in yesterday’s post came to my house to speak with me. She has lived next door for decades and passes by my house almost every day. My front door faces the road and my driveway goes to the back side of the house. In the front yard paralleling the road, runs a fence just under 3 feet high. This is why she walked past the house, around the turn, and entered onto the property via the other road to come to the house by following the driveway. After getting to the house-end of the driveway, she banged on the window with her umbrella to ask my husband if I was home. He told her I was home and to come to the door. While I heard her ask where the door is, I got up and got my umbrella from the closet because I knew she would not want to come inside the house (even though I’ve invited her over several times). I didn’t know yet why she came over. You can read all about that reason in the post written yesterday.

While I was walking with Saturday’s neighbor back to her house (under the assumption she wanted me to come visit her at her house), Sunday’s neighbor drove past us on the road 3 different times. The distance of our walk was approximately 500 feet, but the time we took doing it was a little over 2 hours.

As I walked past Sunday’s neighbor at dusk, she was wheeling her garbage out to the curbside. Since it was creating a noise which was scaring my little dog, I picked her up to hold her in my arms. As I did, I could see my neighbor giving me a look that seemed to be saying, “Come closer so we can say hello.” I began by mentioning her beautiful tan, then we moved onto discussing our dogs. That’s when she brought up her concern over how things were going with me, because of seeing me with this other neighbor Saturday night out in the dark¹ and heavy rain for so long.

She said she didn’t think anything of it the first time she drove by. On her second pass by us, she began to wonder. It was the third time of going by that made her have to ask what might be wrong. I appreciate concern, but if and/or when it crosses the line by having me feel like others think I don’t know what’s best for myself, then I don’t appreciate it. I do love my neighbors and hope they too are patient as we become acquainted.

I didn’t know how to explain my ‘odd’ behavior any other way than usual. I automatically told the truth. The truth was, I was busy explaining my ‘odd’ behavior from another day walking along the road. That led me to end up explaining why I was explaining, which led me to ask her if she had ever heard of Asperger’s Syndrome.² Since she said she has, I was curious if she too thought of it as being a disease like Saturday’s neighbor insists on believing. I didn’t ask her this in a question format. Instead, I used an illustration to see what reaction I’d get. I told her, “Imagine if you told a black person that his skin color was a disease and pitied him because there was no ‘cure’. What do you think his reaction would be?” She seemed surprised by my words and asked me if I thought of that analogy on my own. Anyhow, that led to her eventually telling me it’s a good thing I live in an area that’s populated mostly by liberals (I think she suspects that Saturday’s neighbor isn’t liberally minded, but rather is a ‘dumb’ redneck).

Needless to say, she was stunned when I told her that I hate the area where I live because of how unfriendly almost everyone is towards me. She didn’t know what to say to that, especially when I added my next piece of information. I told her that (generally speaking) I noticed throughout my life, the less populated an area is, the nicer people would be towards me, and that as an area’s population increases, so does the rudeness. I wasn’t going to push it by adding that people who are usually the cruelest of all towards me are those in the so-called cultured community moving in from New York City and taking over the area. I did say I believed I would be the happiest if I lived in some remote area of Alaska where there were some people, but very few.

When I told that same statement about where I’d love to live to a liberal aspie friend of mine, he actually believed I didn’t know best where I’d love to live. This young aspie guy mentioned some place in the state of Maryland is where I belong because of how ‘tolerant’ the people are there and that many transvestites living there prove that it is so. Then, he displayed a negative reaction over my wanting to live in Alaska because that’s where Sarah Palin is from.³

I personally am now sick of division gone wild! What’s wrong with people who love to divide? Is it a control thing and desire to ‘conquer’? Divisions exists because people are different, but they become a wildfire when these differences become assumptions people make and end up spreading in popularity so fast that those people who do it either don’t care or don’t realize how ignorant they appear.

¹Our roads don’t have street lights (I do not like street lights) and neither of us thought about flashlights. In that weather and at that time, it’s rare for a car to pass. When one does, there is room to move over. I say that because I know there are some people who would think such behavior, as our being on the roadside that Saturday night during the storm, is irresponsible—as if we’re children who need supervision.

²After asking her this, I explained to her why I was happy when I discovered that the ‘mysterious ingredient’ of my life is that I’m an aspie (without verbalizing my further thought→ thereby enabling me to finally get the ‘complete’ picture to see society the way it really is).

³Didn’t you think I already knew that Mrs. Palin is from Alaska? If you’ve reading this my dear friend, I hope you know my ‘grumble’ here doesn’t mean I don’t like you. You’ve displayed too many wonderful characteristics of friendship thus far for petty remarks like yours to do any significant damage to our friendship.

NTs Can Be Socially Incorrect Too

  • Posted on September 7, 2008

I realize the statement “neurotypical people can be socially incorrect too” will probably anger a lot of people. I’m not saying it to provoke that response. It needs to be said because if it is left unsaid, NTs will remain ignorant that they too can behave socially incorrect, if and/or when they try to befriend an aspie. I shall share a recent experience of mine to explain how this is so.

In my neighborhood, live a variety of people. One woman in particular is showing more effort to befriend me than most others. I sincerely appreciate her long awaited attempts, but now that headway is finally being shown, it’s also revealing how impossible it might for us to truly be friends.

She means to be thoughtful, but she can’t realize how rude and insulting her actions actually are. ‘Normally’ neighbors befriend others by inviting them over for coffee, bake them a cake, or something similar. What my neighbors are unaware of is that I typically end up receiving something that they would never tolerate. In my experience, women are the ones who usually do this.

What exactly is this thing I’m talking about? It’s when others have you feeling like you are a project that needs to be ‘fixed’. The part that makes it so awful is knowing that if you don’t conform to their ‘weird’ advice, it will be taken as an insult. On top of that, it doesn’t take long to notice that if the relationship was to continue, it would continue as “do as I say, not as I do.”

Since this situation in my recent example doesn’t have much hope of progressing beyond where it is at, I’m hoping that writing about it can maybe help others learn something which they might otherwise remain ignorant of.

I know NTs might have a difficult time understanding and/or believing how advice like what I got is weird. I tend to think that NT parents who love their aspie child(ren?) are far more willing to think about this than other NTs.

All throughout my life, whenever I’m taking a walk and my thoughts gravitate towards a deeper level, I tend to focus downward just ahead of where my feet are stepping. One day (not too long ago), as I was walking my dog along a back road, my neighbor passed by in a car and saw me apparently while I was engrossed in some deep thought. I’m stunned to learn how much it bothered her to see me walking with my face towards the ground (but yet years back she thought it was interesting to watch me walking my dog while reading a book). In fact, my recent body ‘language’ bothered her so much that she insists I cease and desist from walking in that manner any longer. Her reasoning behind this demand is that she is watching out for my own good because of what other people will think about me. However, she personally excuses herself from this same concern because she has too much physical pain from bad health to care anymore what others think about her.

I tried to tell her that I believe what other people think of me is none of my business, but as hard as I tried to explain to her that both her and I share the same frustrations when it comes to other people misjudging us, she was not going to ‘make the connection’. Since I could see this dilemma between us, I surrendered my position by giving her the impression I would try my best to walk without looking at the ground. She said that’s not good enough and that I simply must ’stop doing it’. I told her I doubt I can always remember to refrain from this action. I added to that by saying if I knew that it was something which God did not approve of, then I could have faith in successfully breaking the habit. That last comment triggered more ‘advice’. I was then told not to mention God when I speak. Little does she realize how much selfishness is embedded inside her thoughtfulness. I guess that’s to be expected from those who do not know what it is like to be loved by God. If they did, then they [the listeners] would realize it isn’t unlike telling someone to not to bring up their [the speaker's] father in a conversation.

Why can’t people realize that what’s really socially correct is simply accepting others just the way they are, especially when what they do or say isn’t hurting anybody else?!

P.S. — If you don’t agree with me, that’s your choice. However, please realize bigoted comments will be rejected. I do not submit those kinds of comments on someone else’s blog and that’s why I don’t permit them on mine.

On the Positive Side

  • Posted on June 5, 2008

It’s time to focus on some of the positive things about being autistic. Before I mention them, I’d like to say I’m not making this information up. Neurotypical professionals have observed:

Autistics are innovative. That’s because we have our own way of living and observing things. We are generally very honest and make sane, realistic observations of what we experience. Some of us are exceptionally quick to notice what the long-term pattern of something will be when a particular course of action is followed. Autistics are well-known for having high levels of logic. It’s what makes us able to be great mathematicians, engineers, and scientists (especially in the field of physics).

It is highly difficult to hide anything from us. We do detect emotions of other people. We easily discern discrepancies, especially hypocrisy. We can see right through people, provided that others haven’t received an opportunity to take advantage of a weakness (such as a low self-esteem).

There actually are as many positive things about being on the autism spectrum as there are not being on it. It’s impossible and ridiculous to always be comparing the two against one another, but it is possible and a good thing to occasionally bring to attention those things that are wonderful about neuro-A-typical thinkers. It’s only logical that neurotypicals will at times fail to realize that, to them, autistics may seem illogical. That’s to be expected given that people cannot borrow some things which others have (and an alternative way of cognitively processing information is one of those things).

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