Showing posts with label Traits. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Traits. Show all posts

...learning the 'rules'...

"Girls are generally recognized as superior mimics. Those with [Asperger's Syndrome] hold back and observe until they learn the 'rules', then imitate their way through social situations."
~Tony Attwood



What do you think?



SystemAndromeda.com (under construction!) - Facebook - Twitter

© Content property of Andromeda Ross, all rights reserved.

...different, not defective...

"From my clinical experience, I consider that children and adults with Asperger's Syndrome have a different, not defective, way of thinking."
~Tony Attwood




What do you think?



SystemAndromeda.com (under construction!) - Facebook - Twitter

© Content property of Andromeda Ross, all rights reserved.

...an important and valuable characteristic...

"Asperger's syndrome has probably been an important and valuable characteristic of our species throughout evolution."
~Tony Attwood



What do you think?



SystemAndromeda.com (under construction!) - Facebook - Twitter

© Content property of Andromeda Ross, all rights reserved.

...the reason I'm successful...

“My autism is the reason I’m in college and successful. It’s the reason I’m good in math and science. It’s the reason I care."

~ Jacob Barnett, sixteen-year old math and physics prodigy


...a true authority on the subject...

“Counselors, psychologists, doctors, and educators are trying their level best to get their collective heads around Asperger's, and offer valuable therapies and tools we can use. They have a bit more catching up to do where female AS is concerned. If you are an Aspergirl, you are a true authority on the subject.” 

~ Rudy Simone, Aspergirls


Autism Acceptance Month: 'Smile' - Autism & Feminism



I've been an autistic feminist since birth. Sounds a bit hyperbolic, doesn't it? After all, one can't make decisions about their philosophical ideologies as an infant, and you'd be right to be skeptical of anything said by anyone who really believed they had. No, what I mean is that I was part of a feminist household. My mother is a feminist, and she raised me with the ethics and philosophies of feminism. Long before I knew what philosophy was, or that feminism had a political presence, I believed that everyone is, and should be perceived as, equal, despite any differences, real or imagined. Today, I proudly state myself to be a feminist.

Likewise, while I didn't know growing up that I am autistic, I was already expressing myself as an autistic person. I tended to be tomboyish, not in a sports way, but in a climbing trees and collecting rocks kind of way. I generally disliked wearing skirts and dresses, preferring comfortable pants and overalls which had pockets to put random weird shit into that I found on the ground. I was fascinated by science, especially astronomy. I had numerous special interests. I had food sensitivities that sometimes resulted in dramatic scenes (I recall an incident with a macaroni and bean salad). I had a lisp, which I viciously corrected on my own. I became so stressed in middle school, that I got ulcers, and generally suffered from other stomach issues. I was rather solitary. I didn't have a lot of friends. And I had the distinct sense that I was different. The list goes on. But I had no idea that some of the things I experienced could turn out to be a link between autism and feminism.

...a subculture within a subculture...

“Women on the spectrum are a subculture within a subculture. We have many of the same quirks, challenges, habits, traits and outlooks as men, but with our own twist. It is not so much that Asperger syndrome (AS) presents differently in girls and women, but that it is perceived differently, and therefore is often not recognized.”

~ Rudy Simone, Aspergirls


...we aren't boys...

“When doctors, parents, teachers, therapists, even television describe typical spectrum kids, without meaning to, they’re describing typically male spectrum traits — patterns first noticed by observing boys. Only boys. And we aren’t boys. So they miss and mislabel us.” 

~Jennifer O’Toole, Asperkids