Wolfgangus Faldestolius
Little notes from an armchair
I always had my identity and that didn't change when I found out about my SpLDs.... pigeon-holeable identity, finally feeling part of a group.
I put in an effort at things and most others show they feel threatened by that.
For me, pigeon holes are different from identity and I am at ease in a group where others don't try to pigeon hole themselves.
I find having something in common isn't an identity, it's having something in common.
Hence camaraderie doesn't come from having the "same identity". Cameraderie comes from being unique and at home with it, and able to have rapport with others.
I have never thought I was more special than anyone, I noticed that most others thought they weren't special (but overcompensated wrongly).
I don't consider any of you have the "same identity" as me. Why would it stop us having things in common? Is the confusion over this a generation thing?
The camaraderie here isn't the issue in my OP.
My main point was how the people who don't seem to have ASC seem to hide in their sameyness. Obviously if they "tick" in a similar way fair enough in its own terms but that doesn't mean they shouldn't see themselves (the non-ASC) as unique.