That's my point! I'm as extroverted as they get....in smaller situations. Put me in a large group and I feel lost. I can speak at a podium to hundreds of people, and not be nervous, because I control the communication. I can be quite entertaining as a "solo act" but feel like a fish out of water otherwise.24. But a lot of those questions I relate to as an introvert. Library vs party? No brainer, I'd rather read a book than talk with people any day. Is introvertedness a sign of heading towards ASD?
I took it again, trying to be as honest as possible. In all honesty, some questions related to childhood, and that's been a while back, so hard to remember.I took it answering being honest with myself and got a 26.
I don’t think people understand Asperger’s too well. What I find particularly annoying is that these questions are tailored to identify people who aren’t superficial. What do I mean by that? Well, essentially you’re looking for non-conformist behavior where people don’t blindly trust society and its frameworks. They question it. “What is this? How does it work?” That doesn’t make someone have an autism disorder. It makes them smart. They are perceptive, they have a strong intuition. They can decompose things. For example, often people are having conversations with ulterior motives. Like for example, let’s take a date. If we are particular attracted to the other person we want them to have a favorable perception of us, so we say and do things to encourage this. We are trying to get the other person to have a particular cognition of us which may or may not be accurate. A person who can see this is not necessarily autistic.
It would say the litmus test for Autism and Asperger’s is where the person is unaware of their behavior but has all the symptoms. Either unaware of partially unaware. If you’re aware of your own cognition and can change however you want, you probably don’t have a disorder. In fact, you are probably very intelligent.
One thing to keep in mind is that all human constructs including society, religion and everything else were us attributing purpose to things where there really is no purpose. Now you might say that these things have meaning because of tradition and the value of the evolution of societies, but just because a person’s thought patterns don’t conform to the collective, doesn’t mean anything is wrong with them. In fact, you would not have great authors, artists, filmmakers and probably scientists thinking outside of the box if you disallowed this entirely.
Food for thought. Cheers!
But in the opposite direction for we men, doesn't that border on sociopathy? Being "too cool and comfortable" is a politician thing, and most of them are borderline sociopaths, and obvious narcissists.
Sweet. Nicely put.If logic is a machine, empathy is a garden.
You just helped me see something. We did street ministry in Houston from '96 to '98, and at one point had 12 homeless people living in our house. Most of what we were doing back then was a gleeful, almost irresponsible (okay, totally irresponsible by worldly standards) reliance on the leading of the spirit of God, and I was in so far over my head that only the spirit of God was going to get us through that in one piece.You feel it the first time you give money to a homeless man when you know he's gonna buy booze with it. Logic demands you quantify him and buy him a sandwich instead. Empathy doesn't care and wants you to help the wretched man the way he wants to be helped.
I go with logic and buy the sandwich every time. Asberger's, lack of empathy, or lack of Holy Spirit?Yesssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssss.
And one might see the appeal of poly to a man who has an expanded sense of what he's entitled to while not really understanding or caring how he harms others.
If logic is a machine, empathy is a garden. If anything is to grow, some gears are going to have to be permanently removed from their spot. You feel it the first time you give money to a homeless man when you know he's gonna buy booze with it. Logic demands you quantify him and buy him a sandwich instead. Empathy doesn't care and wants you to help the wretched man the way he wants to be helped.
Id like to take credit for it but it was all my wife. She did most of the talking and the next time I went into the VA regional office she talked to a counciler about him and got things set up for him. I did learn a valuable lesson though and it's changed how I interact with people.That's what I'm talking about. You listen, you learn, you act. Well done!
Can I get an amen???21 for me. However, since they didn't indicate if the social situations involved meeting with e.g. the local LBGT lobby group or a group of likeminded Christian people, my answers may be a little skewed.
Sometimes you just need to by some one a beer.
I go with logic and buy the sandwich every time. Asberger's, lack of empathy, or lack of Holy Spirit?
I'll play. Dead average (for men) at 17. I expected higher; I think as I've gotten older I've finally figured out some things about people that I just didn't get when I was younger. Being with three women and twelve children I think it counts as a survival skill....