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8 votes
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Autistic people care too much, research says
25 votes -
Hannah Gadsby on her autism diagnosis: ‘I’ve always been plagued by a sense that I was a little out of whack’
7 votes -
The problem with mind-reading
I have been wanting to write about this for some time. This happens, in some shape or form, whenever someone reads others on the internet. Especially on sensitive subjects. Many readers are...
I have been wanting to write about this for some time. This happens, in some shape or form, whenever someone reads others on the internet. Especially on sensitive subjects. Many readers are linguistic sleuths. Every fraction of language will be forcefully interpreted and analyzed in order to reveal some hidden truth (which is always assumed to be negative), the user's actual position, his or her sinister agenda. On the one hand, that is a consequence of the very real fact that many individuals do have sinister agendas, and many organizations do employ backhanded tactics to manipulate public opinion. I get that. At the same time, this makes it very hard to communicate sometimes.
This affects the neurodiverse disproportionally and is a common complaint in places like /r/aspergers and /r/autism, among others. Some of us are not highly efficient machines of context evaluation and reproduction of linguistic patterns. Some of us actually do mean precisely what we say. No subtext, no irony, no desire to influence through excuse means.
There are also people for whom English is not the first language, as well as those of varying age, cultures, and circumstances. While it is understandable that English-speaking communities naturally center on the US, the assumption that everyone lives within that context produces all kinds of misunderstandings. This makes me less likely to truly engage with some communities because every once in a while I'm hit in the crossfire. Sometimes I inadvertently use words, expressions, or phrasing patterns which North Americans associate with a certain position they disapprove of, and their "mind-reading" is led askew.
This is not specific to any linguistic community. It happens everywhere. We're all kinda messed up. But it would be nice to be able to comment on complicated issues without feeling like Edward Norton in his first day at the Fight Club.
I don't mean to imply that everyone should just abstain from hermeneutics in regular discourse. But maybe be a little more charitable, give it another chance when someone strikes you the wrong way.
Sometimes people mean exactly what they write.
(A lot of the above is directly transferable to offline interactions)
11 votes -
‘You don’t look autistic’: The reality of high-functioning autism
10 votes -
How mental health became a social media minefield
13 votes -
Neurotype-matching, but not being autistic, influences self and observer ratings of interpersonal rapport
12 votes -
Autism and the social mind
2 votes -
The truth about my son
8 votes -
To those who are on the autism spectrum, what's something you wish more people knew/understood?
Similar to other discussions we've had in the past, I think this topic will be most beneficial if we elevate and consider the voices of people on the spectrum who choose to answer. Please consider...
Similar to other discussions we've had in the past, I think this topic will be most beneficial if we elevate and consider the voices of people on the spectrum who choose to answer. Please consider how a thread full of neurotypical voices on this topic can drown out or be unwelcoming to the people this question is aimed at.
23 votes -
Autism, ableism, and philosophy
3 votes -
On being a philosopher with autism
3 votes -
Williams syndrome: The opposite of autism
17 votes -
New data from Sweden challenges the idea that parents of autistic children refrain from having more children, a practice known as reproductive stoppage
4 votes -
Greta Thunberg has spoken about her Asperger's syndrome diagnosis after she was criticised over the condition
11 votes -
Kids and adults with autism flying easier in Pittsburgh, with airport's help
8 votes -
Why Greta Thunberg's leadership of the environmental movement is so important
5 votes -
How Touhou inspired me to live my best life
7 votes -
The misbehaviour of behaviourists
6 votes -
Thirty essential ideas you should know about ADHD
7 votes -
Getting diagnosed with ADHD at 25 changed everything
12 votes -
Is Applied Behavioural Analysis really “dog training for children”? A professional dog trainer weighs in.
5 votes -
Long-term measles vaccine study shows no link with autism — again
19 votes -
Specially-trained autism assistance dogs helping change the lives of children
8 votes -
Ban entire pesticide class (organophosphates) to protect children's health, experts say
5 votes -
MDMA-assisted psychotherapy shows promise for reducing social anxiety in autistic adults
11 votes -
Early alterations of social brain networks in young children with autism
5 votes -
'A Nazi in all but name': Author argues Asperger's syndrome should be renamed
18 votes -
Cop attempts to shoot autistic man playing with toy truck in road, shoots Black man instead
8 votes