This may not sit well, and get me in a lot of hot water, but this is something that has bothered me for a while.
What is it with people who introduce themselves with the add-on that they have Asperger's/autism, bipolar, ADD/ADHD, OCD, or any number of "trendy" syndromes or labels that seem to be rampant these days?
At CS, it seems like there are bandwagons and everyone wants to be a special snowflake.
Someone will post a link to some quiz that tells whether people are high risk for certain things, especially Asperger's, as that seems to be the latest "cool" syndrome, and suddenly, all these people are posting their scores and self-diagnosing.
When I introduce myself, I don't say, "Hi. I'm Ree. I'm a sexual abuse survivor who suffers from sciatic nerve damage, eczema, high blood pressure, acid reflux and gynecological issues."
That would be stupid. First of all, because nobody really cares about those things, and secondly, they do not define who I am.
What is it about Asperger's that makes people think they're special?
I should think by now, with the rate of diagnosis, and so many more people being labelled every day, that it's just a normal fact of life now, and people with this syndrome really aren't all that unique or special at all, now.
It's like saying, "Hi. My name is .... and I have dandruff..."
What is it with people who introduce themselves with the add-on that they have Asperger's/autism, bipolar, ADD/ADHD, OCD, or any number of "trendy" syndromes or labels that seem to be rampant these days?
At CS, it seems like there are bandwagons and everyone wants to be a special snowflake.
Someone will post a link to some quiz that tells whether people are high risk for certain things, especially Asperger's, as that seems to be the latest "cool" syndrome, and suddenly, all these people are posting their scores and self-diagnosing.
When I introduce myself, I don't say, "Hi. I'm Ree. I'm a sexual abuse survivor who suffers from sciatic nerve damage, eczema, high blood pressure, acid reflux and gynecological issues."
That would be stupid. First of all, because nobody really cares about those things, and secondly, they do not define who I am.
What is it about Asperger's that makes people think they're special?
I should think by now, with the rate of diagnosis, and so many more people being labelled every day, that it's just a normal fact of life now, and people with this syndrome really aren't all that unique or special at all, now.
It's like saying, "Hi. My name is .... and I have dandruff..."
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