(no title)
pseudocomposer | 2 months ago
It also leaves room to start distinguishing/separating out more subtle variants of what we currently umbrella as “autism,” perhaps making it better defined in the future. And I kind of suspect doing this with “less profound” neurodivergencies could help folks with “more profound” (and rarer) cases.
To look at a historical case: Gay Rights didn’t make a lot of headway. But adding lesbians, trans folks, etc. ultimately did a lot of good for that community in the US.
reedf1|2 months ago
cardanome|2 months ago
Your colleague is full of shit. Generally, neurodivergence is for everyone who regularly experiences that the way their brain works causes them trouble.
Self diagnosis is surprisingly accurate but people also tend to under estimate the severity of their symptoms.
kayodelycaon|2 months ago
Symptoms of mental disorders can be normal human traits taken to the point it affects person so severely it's an impairment.
This means anything normal can be pointed to as evidence of a disorder.
ACCount37|2 months ago
Even the "no empathy" sociopaths can spend decades thinking that they're perfectly normal, everyone is like them, and people just pretend to be sad and grieving at the funerals because that's some kind of established convention and breaking it would be very rude.
What I'm saying is: maybe you just think you don't show any signs of autism - because you think your experience is "normal", and you think that everyone has the same struggles as you do, even when it isn't true.
Or maybe you genuinely aren't autistic at all! It's just very, very hard to say at a glance.