Would you rather be neurotypical or hav Asperger's Syndrome?

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Would you rather be neurotypical or have Asperger'syndrom.
I would rather be neurotypical. 27%  27%  [ 33 ]
I would rther have Asperger's syndrome. 73%  73%  [ 89 ]
Total votes : 122

fernando
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26 Nov 2007, 10:02 pm

I fear that being an NT would have no challenge at all, being normal is boring. I just wanna be an aspie + social skills.



hyper_alien
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27 Nov 2007, 4:47 am

I have often wondered what it would be like to be Nt but then why would I wanna change me. My AS is part of me and I aint gonna change it for nowt.


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Cyanide
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27 Nov 2007, 5:24 am

Would I like to be neurotypical? I don't know, it depends on how much of myself I'd lose. Where's the "Unsure" option?



Myrkabah
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27 Nov 2007, 5:27 am

I like being me. My only regret is that I didn't find anyone who liked me being me for a very, very long time.



lastcrazyhorn
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27 Nov 2007, 7:46 am

I think as an aspie, I experience a lot more real sensations than NTs do. I know what it is to have real friends that aren't concerned with my outside. I know what it is like to think on an everyday basis. I know how to think for myself.

Besides, my goal in life is now to work with kids on the spectrum as a music therapist (I'm in grad school currently), and if I didn't have the experiences that I have now from the previous years, then I don't think I would get as far.


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27 Nov 2007, 8:32 am

I'd like to stay the waxy I am. Which means autistic. I mean really, I like myself, so whoever I am, whatever I am, I can stay like that, health and disorders aside. I am content with my personality and it was of course affected greatly by autism.

The only thing I'd have liked is to now about my ASD from childhood on, definitely. That is less because I always felt different, which of course I did, but more because of the general expectations and hopes people have and had about me and how my own skills and talents don't agree with them, but are there to be discovered by other means. I learned so much by just knowing I'm autistic.
Non-autistic children can look at other people for how to do things, for what works best, what might apply for them, but this doesn't apply when you're autistic.



feelgoodlost
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27 Nov 2007, 9:54 am

I don't think I would be any less intelligent without AS, although I think I'd lose some of my sense of humor.

I used to think that A.S. made me who I was, but thinking of all my diagnoses (OCD, ADD, Avoidant Personality, Major Depressive Disorder) and how they're directly caused by having Asperger's, and how miserable my life has always been, I would give up A.S. in a heartbeat if it meant I could have a chance at being happy.



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27 Nov 2007, 9:57 am

I do not want to join the ranks of either the autonomous collective or the greedy manipulative bastards, both of which seem to populate 99% of all NT-dom. I'll stay aspie any day, thank you very much...

The only thing I would want to change about myself is my childhood (being the subject of much bullying). I go to an engineering school now, and people here are much easier to get along with...



J-High
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27 Nov 2007, 5:10 pm

It's hard to say...some days I would give anything to be NT. For the most part though, I'll stay an Aspie. I woulnd't give up my musical talent for anything in the world. The only reason I would want to be an NT is so I could have more social skills/personality and a girlfriend.



RedRose
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27 Nov 2007, 9:48 pm

Having only discovered Asperger's Syndrome in the last few months and only had the possibility of a official diagnosis in the last couple of weeks this is something that has been on my mind quite a bit recently.

I was trying to imagine what my life might have been like to this point if I didn't have AS and I just can't, so much of my life has been shaped by it that I really don't have any idea how it would have differed if I didn't have it.

The conclusion I came to actually shocked me - I have been extremely depressed recently, I tend to get it at the start of each academic year (living with new people, new rules, new workloads and expectations etc) and I thought that I hated my life so when I realised that given the choice I would rather stay as I am because if I were NT I probably wouldn't be where I am now I realised that maybe my life wasn't so bad.

Saying that although I'd keep the Aspergers I wish I had been diagnosed much earlier, maybe it would have saved me a great deal of misery in my adolesence



nominalist
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27 Nov 2007, 10:15 pm

RedRose wrote:
Saying that although I'd keep the Aspergers I wish I had been diagnosed much earlier, maybe it would have saved me a great deal of misery in my adolesence


I feel the same way - except I would extend it a bit. I wasn't diagnosed until I was 51 years old (April of this year). ;-)


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