Guest guest Posted January 19, 2004 Report Share Posted January 19, 2004 Camille wrote: >Your brother sounds like a force to be dealt with. What is he doing >now, generally speaking? Vocationally, he's a tech writer (a skill that may have grown out of his being able to write fluent elvish when he was a teen ager). He went through a long period of getting good work evaluations and then being fired for his autistic traits (which he does not recognize at all). Recently, he's had a " real " job (i.e., not contract work), but a week or so ago he found out that his job is being " contracted out " as of April. So he may be unemployed again for a while. Otherwise...he has been married for many years (about 25, I think) to a woman he met in England. She had below-zero self- esteem at the bginning. My brother, when he loves, is 100% loyal, no question. He can't imagine living without her. At the same time, he drove her crazy for at least a deade -- without ever meaning to. It just took her that long to learn how his mind works and to learn how to get him to compromise where it was most important to her. They live out in the country (40 miles NE of Seattle) in the house they built with the money they got when their previous house burned down (faulty wiring). Their four sons range in age from 11 to 18 now. My sister-in-law trained as a beautician in England and got re-certified over here, but she hasn't worked in that field for about a decade. Mostly, she is a mother and very active home-maker, figuring out creative ways to keep them fed and clothed even when my brother can't find a job for a long stretch. My brother goes through various perseverations. For a while it was old pocket watches. Lately it's been an old wind-up phonograph he got somewhere. He loves to read really old encyclopedias and other old reference books, the older the better. I know very, very little about the kids, because they don't talk to me and my brother doesn't ever have anything to say about them. With my brother, he truly doesn't have anything to say unless it is something that comes from inside himself. If you ask him about something else, it's like his mind goes blank and finding an answer takes him a while. Yet he's clearly extremely " intelligent " by all the usual measures. He's working towards an MA now, hoping to become more employable, and blowing his class-mates' minds on a regular basis with how much he knows. Jane Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 19, 2004 Report Share Posted January 19, 2004 I wrote this for my Livejournal. Since we've been discussing dealing with others, (be they friends, acquantences, strangers, or clients with or without hair), and the autistic relationship to " the rest of the world, " I thought I'd post and fish for feedback. Thanks. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Maybe I'm not autistic. Maybe I'm schizotypal or schizoid. The counterindications are that my personality has been fairly consistant from childhood onwards. I've always been wierd, withdrawn, not good at dealing with others, etc. I'm wondering this, because I transgressed against a norm. Now, I do that all the damned time. The truly strange thing is that I had only the vaguest idea it existed, have no idea why it exists, and have have offended another autist through my transgression. Whether autistic, schizotypal, or schizoid, my basic statement towards my individuality is best summed up by an epiphany I had in September of 1999, " I just realized, I really don't care about other people, and I'm OK with that. " I know of at least one other person like me in that respect, a mildly retarded autistic woman (or teenager) named Caitlyn. (No relation, honest). She knows enough to say, " Oh, that's sad, " when she's expected to, but she really doesn't care. I, of course, have some basic levels of caring for others. I'm going to vote for whomever has the best chance of ousting W. Bush, for instance. I also oppose Libertarianism as a half-witted political philosophy of selfish assholes. I may be an insensitive brute, but I'm not an asshole. But, even my stance of being a Satanic Red is fairly selfish... what's good for the nation is good for me, even if it helps lots of other people. I dunno. I care about my not caring. I'm OK with it, but I'm not sure what it means. I know it's not normal, not really, but in some ways it is. I mean, my uncle who wants to turn Iraq into a parking lot... just bomb it all and kill everyone. Meanwhile, I see the Iraqi's as real humans with real human rights, such as the right not to be bombed to death because of my Uncle's lack of penis size. (Yeah, his dick may be only 3 " long, but we've got the bomb, so fuck all!) However, I see them as real human beings whom I'd rather not have to deal with. Maybe, in a way, I care less then my uncle, because I actually supported business-as-usual minus sanctions. Sadam, as " bad as he was " to use the cliche, was a positive, anti-terrorist, progressive force that held Shi'ite fanaticism at bay. I'm confused. But, at least it means I get along famously with infintysquared. He's depersonalized, so while I see others as essentially non-existant, he sees himself that way. As long as we're sober, it's a perfect balance. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 19, 2004 Report Share Posted January 19, 2004 Kaiden wrote: >However, I see them as real human beings whom I'd rather not have to deal >with. Me, too. I used to be told I was " masculine " or " like a man " because I supposedly " loved humanity but hated humans. " I don't hate humans. I just prefer to limit my contact with them. If it were entirely up to me, everyone would be healthy and happy and well-fed. I'm not mean. But I don't want to spend time with them or have to cater to them by spending my time in ways that would engage me with them in some/any way. Come to think of it, I don't " love humanity, " either. There are other species I find more appealing and much less annoying (not to mention less devastating). Jane Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 19, 2004 Report Share Posted January 19, 2004 Good to know that I'm not abnormal, or at least not abnormal in an abnormal way. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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