On Thursday and Friday nights this past week, I volunteered at an emergency shelter. Tucson declared a state of emergency due to the cold and the fact that 14k people were without heat. Unfortunately, the shelter didn't get a lot of usage but, still, awesome idea
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I got a diagnosis in my mid-twenties. Because of increased recognition of high-functioning ASD and learning disorders, kids today get recognised in day care or primary school. However, people of my generation or older don't get a DX unless we recognise it in ourselves and seek it. Asperger's research didn't get translated into English until after the fall of the Berlin wall. By that time, I was in late primary school, headed for high school. By the time Asperger Syndrome and high-functioning autism were widely recognised in the English speaking world, I was almost an adult. There are millions of people out there who only find out about their own ASD when they have a child and that child gets diagnosed - like Liane Holliday Willey, and Valerie ParadižEye contact is a big thing that people have trouble with, though some autists go the other way - making eye contact that is far too intense. I have had patches of this myself in the past. Like you said, though, eye contact might be a cultural thing - I ( ... )
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I'm proud of you for volunteering Wook, you are awesome.
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(Also - when I was quite stressed out lately about my first-world job problem, I met a friend who has gone through two cancer treatments in her life already, can't work anymore, doesn't know what to do right now - she's married and her husband is awesomely supportive but it's put a big strain on them, of course. Stories like this one really shifts your world view, IMO.)
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