Guest guest Posted June 18, 2004 Report Share Posted June 18, 2004 I am not even sure that being top-social is so highly favored. How do used car salesmen, insurance policy sellers and the like rate compared to a highly efficient expert in his field? Being hyper NT is not necessarily the best. We have to keep in mind that the best qualified person is always the best for the job - whether he can sell himself well or not. Society is grateful for efficient people. It's just always a bit of a laugh at recognition for good placement of a person with a specific expertise is... transfer to an area that uses other qualifications, management being one of the obvious ones. I am an excellent teacher, but doubt I could function as totally well i removed form the clear context of four walls and a set group of people. Nobody new enters my classes unannounced with a totally different agenda than the one I set. I make a lot of parents happy as a teacher, I make a lot of children intelligent. I would die as a principal. Hilsen, christine@... Æblevangen 17 2765 Smørum 44 66 02 17 24 24 12 17 Re: RE: Responses to my post on another list.... I've been lurking here, but this dialogue got me thinking about events from my past too, so I decided to say something. Talking about NT perceptions of ability/disability, I have often noticed how NTs use social skills to mask their own inabilities. This means that very able autistic spectrum people can be excluded in favour of people who are actually less skilled, but more able to manipulate others into believing in them. A classic example is the music profession, which I had (disastrous) dealings with as a teenager. I knew several people who would have qualified as being on the spectrum who were very competent musicians but who were basically hounded out by less-able individuals who fundamentally had bigger mouths and better self-publicity skills. The autistic spectrum individuals who did not succeed were not able to flatter or wheedle their way to the top of the profession - but I wouldn't characterise them as 'disabled' for that - I'd characterise them as honest. Some of the NTs who succeeded were fundamentally charlatans. The social skills they used were the same as are used by confidence tricksters and fraudsters - they were the kind of 'skills' which, used to an extreme, land certain types of individual in prison. The problem is that society values these superficial abilities above real ability. In a way, indeed, it is society's disability, and society's loss, that it cannot see through 'social skills', which are so often so ruthlessly deceptive and destructive. I noticed that this is relevant to the idea that the increase in autism is costing a lot of money. I wonder how many autistic spectrum people there are out there who would actually be capable of doing certain jobs more successfully and economically than NTs, but who are kept out of those jobs because incompetent but manipulative self- publicists push their way in? After all, the real skills involved in doing a job are often the ones which interviews fail completely to assess. Surely the highest costs to society are incurred when the best person for the job is overlooked in favour of a hyper-social but unproductive mediocrity! Sorry to butt into somebody else's debate! Best, . Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 18, 2004 Report Share Posted June 18, 2004 A. writes: What makes it a disability is that it crosses all job boundaries and limits my advancement. It is something that 99.9% of humans do not need training in. Why do we strive for " advancement " . Development is not necessarily linear. It can happen bredth-wise. I can develop from student to student teacher to teacher to vice principal to principal (y-axis). Or I can develop from student to student teacher to teacher (y-axis) to teacher in special ed or IT or geography (x-axis), to teacher in another school (another x-axis move), to department head (y-axis) to finding out that the thing of interest for you in being department head is checking books and ensuring curricular development but that it drains you to have personal and political problems on your desktop, and choosing to sticking to being a teacher that spreads and spreads along the x-axis, become thcok and juicy in what matters for you: knowledge and subject competence. I like being competent in my branch. I'm the best. One of the big plusses to being autistic: we know we are extremely good at something. We are definitely not octopi. Hilsen, christine@... Æblevangen 17 2765 Smørum 44 66 02 17 24 24 12 17 Re: RE: Responses to my post on another list.... Klein wrote: > acsnag@... wrote: > In the mind of a white racist, being white > is a necessary thing to perform in society. But as you said, it's in the mind. In the case I described it's in the ability. > The NT society in which we live is set up around the NT neurology; > In both cases, the " disability " is in the minds > of the people that will not accomodate difference. This is totally untrue. If a manager changed his mind and decided that because of my skills I could be a supervisor I would still not have the ability to perform the job. This idea that it's only the attitude of those around us that causes problems for us is counterproductive and serves no purpose other than justifying our defeat. It says, " It's not my fault, I can't help it everyone around me should change then I would not have a problem " . Don't you see the fallacy in that? It is not about accommodating difference, It's about what works. If you decided that cars needed square wheels and you build a car with square wheels, based on your arguments here, all it would take to make the square wheeled car work successfully would be for all other cars to also have square wheels. Then yours would fit in. > Only because the NTs are so rigid in their insistence that the NT > way of doing things is the only way. That's the point. There is no point there. It's not about being rigid. It's about what works. The idea that the 99.9% should change their way of being so that the .5% would fit in is absurd. I'm reminded of the song about the man who was out and would not tell his wife where he was. He tells her he fell asleep in the hammock in the yard. She reminds him that she put the hammock into the attic several weeks ago. There is no hammock in the yard. He goes on to say " That's my story and I'm sticking to it. " There is a movie with Walter Matthou (sp) " How to cheat on your wife. " The fellow teaching him the finer points of this states that if you get caught, deny, deny, deny. He claims that if you continue to deny long enough eventually you will convince the other person that they are wrong. I think you have been denying so long that you have gotten to believe your denial. AS and autism are handicaps. No amount of denial changes that. We can learn to work around those handicaps in the sam way a blind person learns ways around their blindness. Your argument suggests that if all of us wore blindfolds all the time then the blind person would not have a handicap. Being blind IS a disability and no amount of acting blind by the all the rest of humanity will change that. > > I would call that " not being suited to the job. " It need not be a > disability. What makes it a disability is that it crosses all job boundaries and limits my advancement. It is something that 99.9% of humans do not need training in. > The thing about autistics is that their areas of weakness, relative > to the whole population (which is 99.5% NT), tend to be in an area > to which NTs attach undue significance. The trouble with this argument is that social interaction is mandatory if we are to live successfully among other people. It is NOT that others attach undue significance to it. It is very significant. > With enough coaching, I might be able to overcome not being able to > weld. That is true. I would certainly never suggest that not being able to weld was a disability. A. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 18, 2004 Report Share Posted June 18, 2004 Bajard wrote: > Why do we strive for " advancement " . Development is not necessarily > linear. It can happen bredth-wise. Advancement usually translates into increased income. Moving sideways often translates to reduced income or at least halts increases. Not moving translates into boredom. I am the best at what I do, now what? > I like being competent in my branch. I'm the best. One of the big > plusses to being autistic: we know we are extremely good at something. Knowing and believing can be very different things. Some of my greatest struggles are in trying to prove to myself that I am good at what I do when I am already at the top and there is nowhere else to go. Moving into supervisory or management would remove that ceiling. A. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 18, 2004 Report Share Posted June 18, 2004 > Advancement usually translates into increased income. Moving sideways > often translates to reduced income or at least halts increases. Not > moving translates into boredom. I am the best at what I do, now what? There are options other then supervisor roles when you want to do something new and better paying. I am making more now then I did when I was a supervisor, by about 25%. I found a path that was in demand and which I had aptitude for. Will I ever make as much as Bill Gates or other high level executives? No. But neither will most people. That's hardly the fault of my autism, no more then my autism is at fault for me being unable to become an Olympic swimmer (even though one of the features of my autism is very poor coordination). Do I make a good supervisor? Not really. Is my autism part of the reason? Absolutely. But of course after working for a few people in my life (probably 20 or 30 supervisors - never counted them), I've learned that few NTs have the skills to effectively manage. I also have seen people promoted to management when they have the skills they need to manage, even when the " butt kissing skills " weren't there - just because many (most?) companies don't promote based on competency doesn't mean that no company promotes based on competency. And I think an AC could be a decent person to work for, could have management skills, and could be promoted in some companies. That said, one thing I've learned in my career is that there is a point where I have enough money and am doing something I love. At 26, I've got to the place where I'm able to perseverate 8 hours a day and get paid for it! If you find yourself in that place, you should stay there and ignore the myth that says " you will be happier with more money " . I make several times what I made in college (I'm not in danger of being evicted!), but I don't think I'm much happier (both now and college were fairly good times in my life). I've also met the " want a challenge " need that I have by not necessarily doing vertical transitions, but by broadening my skills. When I learn enough in an area to consider myself fairly good at it, I find another related area. If you have a good boss, and you can find an area that is relevant to the place you work for, making those types of changes fairly frequently isn't going to be a problem - keeping a good employee happy is one thing good managers work hard to do. But if you tie up happiness with money, then yes things might not be great for you - money is a fairly easy thing to lose, no matter how much of it you have. -- Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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