Guest guest Posted April 19, 2009 Report Share Posted April 19, 2009 " As you can see, GP, despite the fact that I disagree with many of your views, I do agree with others, and your opinions in many cases have been of value to me and the members here. You have struggled against my contradictions to your posts, but look at the benefits to all of us. " This is such a nice thing to say. I have often considered leaving the group because I did not fit in. The reason that I did not was that I thought it was important to learn about people whose experiences result in such different opinions to mine. " That's just enabling. If they want to prove to the world that they are NOT " constant failures " then they need to work harder and do it. " Some lessons I have learned from my own experiences of being stuck: Criticism does not help. It just reinforces feelings of uselessness and spirals deeper into depression and apathy. If support is available, it should focus on breaking problems down into small parts and then start working on the smallest, most achievable aspect of the problem. This is the opposite to neurotypical therapies which focus on prioritizing and working on the most important things first. Success breeds success and this is the way out of apathy, not criticism. If the person has no support, inappropriate support or is in such a depth of despair, it may take a critical incident to motivate change. This is no different fro m the addict who needs to hit rock bottom before finding motivation to move on. Sometimes the best support is to just be there for when the person is ready. Some people do respond to being forced into anger. I am one. But I am very oppositional when upset. When this happens, I do not move in the direction the person is trying to promote. I find another way to achieve far more than expected however it does have emotional costs and the people around me pay dearly for associating with a person in the throes of perseveration. I don't think that people caught in apathy are usually trying to prove anything to the world. I think they are usually struggling to convince themselves that they are able to succeed. In that state, telling them that they can is useless because their experiences demonstrate that they cannot. Sometimes people cite themselves or others as examples of what can be achieved. This just alienates the person we are trying to support and reinforces that everyone, even other autistics see them as failures. Telling people they are making a choice to fail - some people have more capacity to make choices than others. We cannot know how a person's autistic characteristics and prior experiences can limit them. We have choices too - either provide positive support or join the ranks of people who choose to demonstrate their superiority by criticizing others. Actually I do not believe t hat statement. I believe that when people make negative personal criticism, they are usually doing what was done to them. I could say that if they are successful in aspects of life, they often see that as appropriate. I do not think it is a choice but it can become a choice when they have more information about what is happening to others. " The easier choice is to blame everyone else and stop trying. That is weak. " I don't think it is weak. I have been in that place and I am not weak. A personal story. 18 months ago I was morbidly obese. I had been for years and was never able to motivate myself to lose weight. I hated myself and often blamed others e.g. I would lose weight if my thin husband did not want me to cook high fat meals for him. I would lose weight if I could exercise without toddlers in tow all the time. I could lose weight if I could afford more nutritious food. When people nagged me I became even more depressed and ended up never eating in public but comfort eating in private. Because I could not allow anyone to see me with food, that tended to be high fat carbohydrate loaded snack food. The change happened when my grandson suddenly stopped wanting to spend time with me. He finally told his dad that he was afraid that I would die and he would not know what to do. I went to a bariatric specialist whose first question wh en he realized I had not been a fat child was, " what was the trauma that happened just before you started to gain weight? " Wow. There was one - something huge and overwhelming. My husband had picked me up and smashed my head against the phone box, fracturing my skull. I did not press charges because I had no recollection of what had happened. I thought I must have fallen. Years later someone told me he had seen it. The guy was apologising for not telling the authorities but he was a child and his parents had told him to keep out of this as it was a domestic dispute. For some time I had been absolutely terrified whenever my husband was nearby. I had no idea why and people thought I was being silly and giving him a hard time. They were all very sorry for him for having such a nasty, withdrawn wife. Now all the time I was overweight, people told me I was weak and had no will power. However I have lost 68 kilos in 18 months. I am not weak. I have had a lot of trouble with the gastric band. Despite what people think it is not easy. There are many restrictive rules before you lose weight. What happened to me was that due to extreme trauma, and when the time was right, I was able to summon the willpower to overcome multi auto immune syndrome, which can develop as a part of trauma. Obesity is a part of that. I am still the same pers on as the one who was considered weak but now people are very complimentary about the weight I have lost. Actually the struggle to avoid suicide when I was stuck in apathy was harder than the enormous weight loss, so while I appeared to be lazy and weak, survival was all that I had the energy for. I was slovenly, depressed and apathetic but never weak. We just do not know the battles people fight unseen. Re: Intimacy and Asperger Syndrome – Can They Coexist? -- In FAMSecretSociety , gprobertson@... wrote: " I disagree that autistics are selfish. Some are selfish. Some are remain in the state of egotism for much longer than average. That is not selfish. It is a developmental stage which must be understood. " I think developmental stagnation is certainly an explanation in some cases. But selfishness comes into play when you have adult Aspies who see the world around them, and see what they need to do to get involved in it, and stubbornly refuse to do what's necessary even though it behooves them to do so. No standard psychological tact can remove them from this lethargy. If they are stuck there, it is by their own wills. " Regarding apathy, many people now recognize learned helplessn ess as a byproduct of the way autistics are treated as constant failures. " Sure. But are we to say " Yeah. Well, let's let 'em stay there to compensate them for the imposition society makes upon them? " That's just enabling. If they want to prove to the world that they are NOT " constant failures " then they need to work harder and do it. " Most people who live with constant criticism believe that they cannot succeed so they stop trying. " I believe this is true. " After a while, they become unable to try. " I believe this is also true. But I think this is in most cases a choice, and not always the result of post-traumatic stress disorder. I have seen many people quit their jobs because it was " too hard " . But in reality, if they had taken time to LEARN and MAKE THE EFFORT, they could have done their jobs easily. And when these people quit, their comment was that the job was TOO HARD FOR EVERYONE, which is most certainly not true, because those who replaced them did well. Thus what's true is that it was hard for them, and rather than admit that they were either incapable of doing the job or making the effort to learn to do their job, it was much easier for them to blame everyone else and then quit. Are we all to sit here and let the nearly 1 in 166 people in the world who have autism just layabout and loaf because life is " too hard for them. "  Some can w ork harder. Some can advocate on their own behalf. Some can make accommodations for themselves. Yet how many make that choice? The easier choice is to blame everyone else and stop trying. That is weak. " Another factor can be the experience of only being able to attend to a limited number of experiences at a time. Someone who is struggling to live independently might not have the capacity for public advocacy. " Agreed. However, part of making one's living is making one's life easier. When a person buys a house, one of the things they can do in addition to paying off the mortgage is put in a little " sweat equity " to make their house worth more when they sell it. So it is with trying to eek out an existence. Yes, it is tough to advocate, but the payoff may be an easier life down the road. Given the choice between a life of constant struggle verses a life of hard advocacy followed by a life of moderate struggle, which choice would be to the person's best advantage. Why, a little advocacy followed by moderate struggle. Yet the Aspie CHOOSES a life of constant struggle in the majority of cases. Case in point: This forum. Even if we don't all agree on what's being talked about here, those who participate contribute to the discussion and improve the knowledge and perspective of those who read the posts. But people who just lurk and never contribute do absolutely nothing to im prove the lives of all the Aspies who hold membership here. They are leeches, in other words. I deally, everyone should participate. As you can see, GP, despite the fact that I disagree with many of your views, I do agree with others, and your opinions in many cases have been of value to me and the members here. You have struggled against my contradictions to your posts, but look at the benefits to all of us. Yet if you were weak, you'd quit. And how would that serve you or the members here? " Someone locked into set routines may not be able to break out to take on other aspects of living, no matter how much they desire this. " I agree with you here, and offer no contrary viewpoint. I do know many Aspies who cannot tolerate a degree of change, and to movethem out of their comfort zone will cause more damage and disstress than it would save them. " Autism is so complex that I find it hard to label people as I have been and continue to be labelled. " Agreed. But if you want to break any of these prefabricated molds, then you have to surprise the people who make the molds by proving them wrong. Now I know you DO advocacy in various forms, but not everyone here does. If everyone did, AS would be seen as very diverse as would autism and all the other ASDs. Yet at present, few people stand up for themselves and for others. This only enables the people who=2 0would further classify us. Administrator  Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 19, 2009 Report Share Posted April 19, 2009 I agree that there is truth in what is said, just as there are selfish, violent nt spouses but we do not label all non autistic spouses as being incapable of forming positive relationships. Also, those spouses are generally people who have lived without understanding Autism. My son now understands far more about relationships than I did at the same age. He still has difficulties but has the capacity to listen and compromise so his relationship is different, but positive for both parties and he is a brilliant parent. Re: Intimacy and Asperger Syndrome – Can They Coexist? " i worry that when we slam each other, we are repeating social patterns of discriminating against anyone who does not fit certain perceptions of how people " should " behave or think. " Theyn why don't we show the public that their perceptions are wrong? Otherwise, why don't we admit that perhaps the general public may be right? Further: There is truth in what the public says, and we ought to own up to it. Administrator ------------------------------------ Fellowship of the Aspergian Miracle is the last series of message boards founded by an original Aspergia m ember to carry the Aspergia name with the www.aspergia.com website owner's permission. To contact the FAM forum administrator, use this e-mail address: FAMSecretSociety-owner Check the Links section for more FAM forums. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 19, 2009 Report Share Posted April 19, 2009 The advice to walk away or to tell an adult is only part of the solution. We also need to remember that many adults went to school where they were told that bullying was a part of life and that they needed to deal with it. There are many studies which show the harm done by this philosophy. Also, many autistics, myself included, have difficulty understanding motives. I have taken a significant amount of bullying either thinking that the person is making a mistake in what they are doing/saying or thinking that I have misunderstood. That, combined with the lack of peer group for support means that the person's capacity to cope is significantly reduced. Unremitting trauma, as I noted in a previous email, may often result in brain changes and a developmental delay. The adult may have the same capacity as a very young child in dealing with social trauma. In my situation, I am not always able to speak or act when I am in stressful situations. I freeze. Believe me, this is not a choice. I can act later, but that is far less effective than an instant response. We would not tell a person with the same capacity to walk as a baby that they are responsible for their mobility restrictions. I don't think we should do that to people with social disabilities and I dont think we should add to abuse by calling each other weak. Re: Intimacy and Asperger Syndrome – Can They Coexist? Raven wrote: " No one can abuse you unless you give them permission to do so, and one's silence is the same as granting permission. " gprobertson responded: " ... <snip> ... I think that the statement above gives bullies permission to do whatever they like because their victims are to blame .... <snip> ... " It's unfortunate that you think that because the statement I made is accurate and correct. Children are taught from an early age how to deal with situations that are unpleasant to them. They are taught to 'get away' from the situation. As early as 3 years of age, in daycare and pre-school and kindergarten settings, the message that is repeated is that when someone is doing something that upsets you, WALK AWAY. If that person follows you, TELL A GROWN UP. If that person does nothing, KEEP TELLING GROWN UPS UNTIL SOMEONE LISTENS. The discussion in this thread, however, was about adults who are even more able than children to WALK AWAY from abusive individuals ... in real life, online and anywhere else the individual may feel victimized or abused. No one need remain in an abusive situation unless they choose to remain in said abusive situation. If an adult finds hi mself or herself in a bad situation, AS or not, they have choices. If the individual CHOOSES to remain in the bad situation, that individual is giving silent permission for the abuse to continue. In other words, gprobertson, no one can abuse you unless you give them permission to do so, and one's silence is the same as granting permission. Raven ------------------------------------ Fellowship of the Aspergian Miracle is the last series of message boards founded by an original Aspergia member to carry the Aspergia name with the www.aspergia.com website owner's permission. To contact the FAM forum administrator, use this e-mail address: FAMSecretSociety-owner Check the Links section for more FAM forums. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 19, 2009 Report Share Posted April 19, 2009 gprobertson wrote: " The advice to walk away or to tell an adult is only part of the solution. We also need to remember that many adults went to school where they were told that bullying was a part of life and that they needed to deal with it ... <snip> ... " Those adults aren't children anymore. It's time for those adults to shoulder the responsibility of how they are going to deal with abusive behaviours. Living in a 'victim' mindset is a choice on the part of the individual who chooses to live in a 'victim' mindset. gprobertson wrote: " ... <snip> ... Also, many autistics, myself included, have difficulty understanding motives ... <snip> ... " One does not need to understand the motive or motives of the individual who is being abusive. If one is being treated in a way that is not to their liking, the individual need only walk away from the individual who is mistreating them. If walking away does not work, then more effective methods must be accessed by the individual being mistreated. Understanding motive is not important. gprobertson wrote: " ... <snip> ... I have taken a significant amount of bullying either thinking that the person is making a mistake in what they are doing/saying or thinking that I have misunderstood ... <snip> ... " That you have taken any amount of bullying because you have tried to understand motive is immaterial. You chose to subject yourself to more than the initial amount of bullying. gprobertson wrote: " ... <snip> ... That, combined with the lack of peer group for support means that the person's capacity to cope is significantly reduced .... <snip> ... " All the more reason for a person with a 'reduced capacity to cope' to walk way from an abusive situation rather than stick around trying to figure out 'motive.' gprobertson wrote: " ... <snip> ... Unremitting trauma, as I noted in a previous email, may often result in brain changes and a developmental delay. The adult may have the same capacity as a very young child in dealing with social trauma .... <snip> ... " Then it is highly recommended that persons who feel this descriptor applies to them should strongly consider counseling in order to be able to walk away from abusive situations rather than stick around trying to figure out 'motive.' gprobertson wrote: " ... <snip> ... In my situation, I am not always able to speak or act when I am in stressful situations. I freeze. Believe me, this is not a choice. I can act later, but that is far less effective than an instant response ... <snip> ... " It is nature to defaul to the 'fight or flight' response. If you are unable to 'speak or act' then you ought to be unable to spin your wheels trying to figure out 'motive.' To be able to focus on attempting to figure out 'motive' you have made it clear that you are in control of at least some of your intellectual faculties. Since you are in control of quite a bit (what with trying to figure out motive as per your description earlier in your post), you are able to walk away. You choose to stay which has nothing whatsoever to do with 'freezing' as you have stated you are quite capable of trying to figure out motive while the situation is happening. gprobertson wrote: " ... <snip> ... We would not tell a person with the same capacity to walk as a baby that they are responsible for their mobility restrictions ... <snip> ... " And we would not tell someone who can walk as a baby that they ought to stay put all the time, never bother to move an inch on their own steam and bemoan the fact that they cannot run like the wind. Furthermore, if the person only had the capacity to walk as a baby, we would not watch them endanger themselves and say, " Oh well, you know, it's because they can only walk as a baby that I don't make them feel badly about it by pointing out that they are sitting on a railway track and that a train is barreling down on them. " How much more 'sensitive' it is to their predicament to let them feel good about themselves all the while knowing that their death is imminent. But at least they went feeling very good about their impairment. That being said, playing the role of victim is a choice and not a physical impairment with which one must live. There are treatment options for the most severely affected and those treatments are very successful if the individual chooses to make the most of said treatments. gprobertson wrote: " ... <snip> ... I don't think we should do that to people with social disabilities and I dont think we should add to abuse by calling each other weak ... <snip> ... " Those who choose to be weak should be told they are weak if they refuse to shoulder the responsibility of getting stronger. Coddling does no one any good, most especially the coddled individual who chooses to remain in victimhood. Raven Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 19, 2009 Report Share Posted April 19, 2009 "Criticism does not help. It just reinforces feelings of uselessness and spirals deeper into depression and apathy." I agree that blatant criticism has this effect on people. Me included. Constructive criticsm is a good thing in my opinion. The problem is, many people cannot tell one type of criticsm from the other. "If support is available, it should focus on breaking problems down into small parts and then start working on the smallest, most achievable aspect of the problem. This is the opposite to neurotypical therapies which focus on prioritizing and working on the most important thingsfirst. Success breeds success and this is the way out of apathy, not criticism." The problem is, life will not fall into the structure we would like. Sometimes a person must deal with the whole whether they want to or not. A death in the family, getting fired from a job, etc., are two examples of this. Falling to pieces when things like this happen is a useless waste of time and emotion. "If the person has no support, inappropriate support or is in such a depth of despair, it may take a critical incident to motivate change. This is no different from the addict who needs to hit rock bottom before finding motivation to move on." Yes. But what if support is unavailable? When push comes to shove, a person has no choice in ANY circumstance but to rely upon himself or herself. "Sometimes the best support is to just be there for when the person is ready." Agreed. "Some people do respond to being forced into anger. I am one. But I am very oppositional when upset. When this happens, I do not move in the direction the person is trying to promote. I find another way to achieve far more than expected however it does have emotional costs and the people around me pay dearly for associating with a person in thethroes of perseveration." In other words, when forced to deal with someone else's reality, you create your own and try to force others to deal with it. Is this in any way fair? Especially in light of the fact that the other person's reality may be entirely correct and yours wrong? "I don't think that people caught in apathy are usually trying to prove anything to the world. I think they are usually struggling to convince themselves that they are able to succeed. In that state, telling them that they can is useless because their experiences demonstrate thatthey cannot." I disagree. If others can do it, so can they. The difference is, the effort involved may be overwhelming to them. "Sometimes people cite themselves or others as examples of what can be achieved. This just alienates the person we are trying to support and reinforces that everyone, even other autistics see them as failures." Well, they are failures then. If another person can do something and succeed, then they are a success story. Why deny them the right to declare themselves a success. If another person fails to achieve that succes, then they are a failure. Why deny them that label? "Telling people they are making a choice to fail - some people have more capacity to make choices than others." True. But when they don't even bother to try to make the effort, I think that's pathetic. How do they KNOW they will fail every single time if they do not try once. "We cannot know how a person's autistic characteristics and prior experiences can limit them. We have choices too - either provide positive support or join the ranks of people who choose to demonstrate their superiority by criticizing others." My problem is that I tend to get tired of people riding on my coat-tails all the time. I am tired of putting in effort to win victories to make the lives of lazy people easier. It makes me wonder what I am working for sometimes. "18 months ago I was morbidly obese. I had been for years and was never able to motivate myself to lose weight. I hated myself and often blamed others e.g. I would lose weight if my thin husband did not want me to cook high fat meals for him. I would lose weight if I could exercise without toddlers in tow all the time. I could lose weight if I could afford more nutritious food. When people nagged me I became even more depressed and ended up never eating in public but comfort eating in private. Because I could not allow anyone to see me with food, that tended to be high fat carbohydrate loaded snack food. The change happened when my grandson suddenly stopped wanting to spend time with me. He finally told his dad that he was afraid that I would die and he would not know what to do. I went to a bariatric specialist whose first question when he realized I had not been a fat child was," what was the trauma that happened just before you started to gain weight?" Wow. There was one - something huge and overwhelming. My husband had picked me up and smashed my head against the phone box, fracturing my skull. I did not press charges because I had no recollection of what had happened. I thought I must have fallen. Years later someone told me he had seen it. The guy was apologising for not telling the authorities but he was a child and his parents had told him to keep out of this as it was a domestic dispute. For some time I had been absolutely terrified whenever my husband was nearby. I had no idea why and people thought I was being silly and giving him a hard time. They were all very sorry for him for having such a nasty, withdrawn wife. Now all the time I was overweight, people told me I was weak and had no will power. However I have lost 68 kilos in 18 months. I am not weak. I have had a lot of trouble with the gastric band. Despite what people think it is not easy. There are many restrictive rules before you lose weight. What happened to me was that due to extreme trauma, and when the time was right, I was able to summon the willpower to overcome multi auto immune syndrome, which can develop as a part of trauma. Obesity is a part of that. I am still the same pers on as the one who was considered weak but now people are very complimentary about the weight I have lost. Actually the struggle to avoid suicide when I was stuck in apathy was harder than the enormous weight loss, so while I appeared to be lazyand weak, survival was all that I had the energy for. I was slovenly, depressed and apathetic but never weak. We just do not know the battles people fight unseen." Weight is not a good example though. Sometimes psychological issues get inextricably linked with physical ones. Stress can cause weight gain or weight loss, and sometimes a person can do nothing to eliminate stress. This is different than making a choice about whether or not to do something in one's life, like advocating for oneself or others. I am talking more along the lines of simple things. If we are going to complain that we are put upon by society, people are going to get tired of hearing about it unless they see us making some attempts to improve ourselves. That is my point. Admnistrator Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 23, 2009 Report Share Posted April 23, 2009 I stand corrected. In Australia she has not been talking about her personal life publicly to my knowledge. Re: Intimacy and Asperger Syndrome – Can They Coexist? " Donna and are in good, long term relationships however they do not talk about those in depth publicly. " Anyone wanting to know about Lawson's sexual relationships in glaring detail can peruse the following: http://www.cra-rhone-alpes.org/cid/opac_css/index.php?lvl=author_see & id=415 Sex,Sexuality and the Autism Spectrum Type de document : texte imprimé Auteurs : LAWSON, Auteur Editeur : Kingsley Publishers (Londres) Année de publication : 2005 Importance : 175 p. Présentation : ill. Format : 15,5cm x 23cm x 1cm ISBN/ISSN/EAN : 1-84310-284-6 Note générale : Bibliogr. Index Langues : Anglais (eng)   : Written by an 'insider', an openly gay autistic adult, Lawson writes frankly and honestly about autism, sex and sexuality. In her new book, she draws upon her own experience to examine the implications of being autistic on relationships, sex and sexuality. Having discussed subjects such as basic sex education and autism, the author goes further to explore the wider issues of interpersonal relationships, same sex attraction, bisexuality and transgender issues. She also examines the unspoken rules that exist between people in relationships and explains why these rules can be difficult and confusing for people with autism. This book will give courage and information to adults with autism or Asperger Syndrome and provide essential insights to those living and working with them. Anyone wanting to know in depth details about Donna 's relationships can read the following, in addition to the extensive descriptions of her romantic relationships in her various books : http://www.americanchronicle.com/articles/view/95160 BELINDA Are you currently in a relationship? DONNA Hi Belinda, yes, I am. But to give you some history, family breakdown lead me to live with men from my mid teens to survive homelessness. After 10 years of what was essentially 'domestic prostitution' I had learned how to 'do' some semblance of relationships. After that I fell in love in my 20s with someone who had elements of being on the spectrum but because of acute Exposure Anxiety and attachment disorder, I couldn't manage. In my 30s I married someone also on the spectrum who probably fitted Schizoid Personality Disorder and ended up leaving me the day after the 2nd wedding anniversary and demanding half of everything I'd ever earned. I then entered a lesbian relationship for 3 years with a recovered alcoholic. Finally I met my husband, in my mid 30s. We've been married 8 years and together 9 years. He's high up in I.T and identifies with ADD, Dyspraxia and Asperger's, and may be Hyperlexic. BELINDA What initally attracted you to your partner or potential partners? DONNA Initially, it was that he was very shy and socially inept and I had Exposure Anxiety with context blindness, face blindness and a degree of social emotional agnosia so neither of us could read the signals, we just had to be totally straight forward and that was sweet and comical. He's very sensory but also solitary and that matters to me as I'm very kinesthetic and very solitary too and we both had a really strong bent for social justice and generosity of spirit...we're both 'helpers'. He's a very nurturing character and our strengths and weaknesses complimented each other hugely. I asked him to marry me because he was the warmest, simplest, most real human and we were very sensual together. I wrote of our relationship in a book called Everyday Heaven. BELINDA If you are in a relationship, are any of the aspects of your partner unattractive to you? If so what are they? DONNA Well whatever bugs me I wouldn't change. But he's very Aspie and I'm very autie which means he is totally details oriented and a theorist who reads everything before doing anything. I have some meaning deafness (verbal agnosia) and the same with print (visual verbal agnosia) so reading and listening are not my strengths. So I'm very kinesthetic and activist and contrary to the stereotypes of Asperger's, I'm a global thinker... I feel my world because in terms of details thinking I'm so compartmentalised that if I go that way everything but the piece I'm on disappears so its futile. I don't faff around theorising, I DO and I intuit my world because I can't internally mentalise like he can. So he finds I rush in and make mistakes along the way, I feel he frustrates me with a style of instruction I can't use. But he is also a great facilitator and he's learned, contrary to his nature, to teach me kinesthetically through patterning. That's just awesome for someone as cerebral as he is. " I think a lot of people see Donna's husband providing support during her talks and assume that she is dependent on him whereas the fact is that they provide mutual support in somewhat different ways from most relationships. Most people who go to 's talks know that she was divorced but do not know the circumstances of her present relationship. " Most UNINFORMED people20perhaps, but just about everyone who is anyone in the autism world knows about the private lives of these two individuals. " Tony inferred that autistics are not interested in sexual relationships. For some of us, the reverse is true and the need for sex can be a problem if we do not have a partner with a similar level of need. " There have been studies which suggest that autistics are more likely than non-autistics to be asexual. That was what he said specifically. Not that we all were asexual. " He made a number of jokes about the types of relationships autistics have between each other, inferring that we sit around sharing information about special interests and not much else. " He may have. I was not there. But I know he has published some information which is not in any way " dissing " people with AS, and what he has published would seem to contrast somewhat with these jokes he was telling. " Some relationships are like that and if both parties are happy, well to me that is fine. Others are nothing like that. He seems to think the people he sees in his practice represent everyone. However people who are happy in their relationships do not go for counselling, so his perspective is distorted. " A valid point. " He very much based the talk on how unhappy non autitistic wives are when married to an autistic partner. He forgets that the autistic partner often feels misunders tood and alienated too. " Yes, but one needs to remember who his audience was. And even if this IS his perception, let's remember that even Donna herself spreads misinformation. To date, there is no study accepted by any government body or medical organization which says that GFCF diets work. Yet Donna promotes that nonsense. Then let us not forget Temple Grandin, the autistic who " cured " herself. Sometimes I believe the biggest asses in the advocacy world are autistics themselves, and not those who work on their behalf. " He talked about how autistic partners think everything is fine when their spouse is miserable. I think that does happen, but it is not as universal as Tony tells people. I have also seen non autistic relationships where one partner thinks that things are ok but the other partner is miserable. It tends to be the male who is more content but not always. " Very true. " Tony also rarely talks about autistic females in relationships. They can really suffer from husbands who married them seeing a quiet woman who will be subservient and obedient. Autistic women often suffer horrendous abuse in relationships with neurotypical men, however I also know of some really good mixed relationships. " Please see this book to become informed of Tony Attwood's views on Female Sexuality: Asperger's Syndrome and Sexuality  By Isabelle Henault, Tony Attwood Admin istrator Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 23, 2009 Report Share Posted April 23, 2009 "I stand corrected. In Australia she has not been talking about her personal life publicly to my knowledge." No problem. Having communicated with many of them (Donna. Tony, etc.), I guess I just have a better idea than you do of what they are up to. Administrator Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 24, 2009 Report Share Posted April 24, 2009 > > A personal story. 18 months ago I was morbidly obese. I had been for years and was never able to motivate myself to lose weight. I hated myself and often blamed others e.g. I would lose weight if my thin husband did not want me to cook high fat meals for him. I would lose weight if I could exercise without toddlers in tow all the time. I could lose weight if I could afford more nutritious food. When people nagged me I became even more depressed and ended up never eating in public but comfort eating in private. Because I could not allow anyone to see me with food, that tended to be high fat carbohydrate loaded snack food. The change happened when my grandson suddenly stopped wanting to spend time with me. He finally told his dad that he was afraid that I would die and he would not know what to do. I went to a bariatric specialist whose first question wh > en he realized I had not been a fat child was, " what was the trauma that happened just before you started to gain weight? " Wow. There was one - something huge and overwhelming. This made me suddenly start crying-- as your experience was similar to mine (that was 10 years ago for me, and the trauma was rape) but I think Aspies are more prone to this method of problem solving or rather the willingness to sacrifice themselves for peace, to just get to the next day for the people that they are protecting. Sacrifice isn't asked for and if we were to remove ourselves completely the people we are trying to protect are vunerable. (that was what I was told You are not alloed to die!) you have to live wether you like it or not because who will take care of ( ) when you are gone. That seemed harsh but It worked. My moment came when my daughter complained she couldn't get her arms around me to hug me. It hurt but I thought it wasn't fair that my daughter couldn''t hug me because I had a fat wall between us. anyway just wanted to say you weren't alone Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 24, 2009 Report Share Posted April 24, 2009 " Living in a 'victim' mindset is a choice on the part of the individual who chooses to live in a 'victim' mindset. " I'll admit that in the past I have been a victim, but I do question the choice part, because although looking back at the situation I can see now that I was most likely playing the role of a victim at the time I didn't think/feel such. The particular time I am recalling is an abusive relationship I found myself in, in my teens (I have mentioned such here before). I didn't instantly realise that such was an abusive relationship, it didn't seem apparent at first. I know prior to being in such a relationship I could not understand why women stayed with abusive partners and then I found myself in such a relationship. Said relationship was two years, which may seem nothing to some, but felt like a lot to me; such was very intense. By the time I realised the guy was abusive (I hope I have learnt from such experience, well I know the warning signs now), I felt I was stuck in the relationship. He ended up playing mind games with me, I started to feel it was all my fault. He was often apologetic telling me he loved me and was sorry and he'd change and of course I did and wanted to believe him. I did eventually get out of said relationship (obviously) and what triggered such was my thinking side - not emotions. Said guy wanted to get married and have children with me; I was sensible enough to know that bringing children into such a relationship was not a good idea and got out as quick as I could. It wasn't easy, the guy threatened to kill me and did lock me in his flat and I actually lied to him to get out of the situation I was in (i.e. locked in his flat) and I still feel guilty about lying, but I had to get out. " ... <snip> ... I don't think we should do that to people with social disabilities and I dont think we should add to abuse by calling each other weak ... <snip> ... " > > Those who choose to be weak should be told they are weak if they refuse to shoulder the responsibility of getting stronger. > > Coddling does no one any good, most especially the coddled individual who chooses to remain in victimhood. > > Raven > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 25, 2009 Report Share Posted April 25, 2009 > > " It wasn't easy, the guy threatened to kill me and did lock me in his flat and I actually lied to him to get out of the situation I was in (i.e. locked in his flat) and I still feel guilty about lying, but I had to get out. " > > We're glad you got out. > > > > > Administrator > I too would condome lying to flee to safety (when lying is good) Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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