don't get me started on funding for kids with disabilities...unless they have absolutely terrible behaviour it is really hard to get any support these days.
I know the feeling--I moved to a new place when I was fifteen. There were some consolations--my best (and only) friend was heading off to college that same year anyway, and I really did (and do) hate where we lived before--but it was a rough move nonetheless. I was really depressed until I got involved in the homeschool group and a new church about six months later. Ironically, these days I'm only more than Facebook friends with one person from my homeschool group and we didn't become friends until college (the one I asked out), and my closest friend is still my best friend from before. If I weren't Aspergers, I'd probably be depressed by the fact that I pretty much have two friends plus a few acquaintances, but since I am Aspergers it's enough.I think if we hadn't moved to Opua and had still been at his childhood home with all his friends around and the big homeschool group still a part of our lives, he would not have wanted for anything in the system. Moving here at 14 was, for him, a bad move though we didn't know at the time of course and we were both excited to be living on a boat. The best thing for me was the worst thing for him and it still makes me sad.
I have a very sarcastic sense of humor; I would have a hard time getting along with someone who had no sense of humor or no sarcasm detector. My father has no sarcasm detector; that's one of many reasons I get along a lot better with my mom...Shannon and I get on like two houses on fire which I LOVE. He's a geek like me, we have the same stupid sense of humour, we like the same movies and books, we both love science and natural history and history and NZ, we both HATE our government, we like a lot of the same music. Now his sister, well, that's a whole different story! Yep, awkward phone calls and taking what I say way too seriously. I'm a joker, not a fighter
I would, at that! I like that about Germans, too. So many Americans are so hypersensitive.Oh Zaarin, you would so fit in in NZ! We are a nation of pisstakers, sarcastic, ironic, smartarses who confound the masses who arrive here expecting I do not know what, but not what they get
I think it's officially called a syndrome anyway. There are, generally speaking, two ways of viewing it: that Aspergers and other forms of autism are simply a different way of being (i.e., neurodiversity--I imagine this is the stance of most people on the spectrum and probably their families as well; I certainly belong to this camp), or the medical view that it's a "disorder." I understand why the latter view exists, but I doubt many people on the spectrum would view it that way.(Is it in fact correct to call it the syndrome?)