I am a very curious person. These are some of the questions I was going to ask:
1. How did you find out about your autism? How old were you?
302. Before you were told, did you think you were any different from anyone else?
Yes3. How did knowing about it change your behavior? Did you ever use your diagnosis as an excuse instead of trying to conform?
No it doesn't make it any easier for you and conforming is what everyone has to do in society. It makes you accept yourself and not hate yourself for being what you are and an understanding of why you are what you are.4. What do you think about the vaccine theory? (I know it isn't true in my son's case)
It is a lie spread for people wanting to buy in to a fix and a blame5. When you meet people, how soon do you tell them about it? (I know that most diabetics keep their disease secret)
Generally never. Some close friends do know and that is it. No one else's business and itis not that I want to be acknowledged as different or see a need to have people treat me differently, much less inferior, because of it6. If no one had told you about your autism, do you think you would have figured it out by now due to the publicity the syndrome has gotten in recent times?
Probably not.7. Does it bother you when they have autistic characters in TV and movies because of the stereotyping? Does that kid on Alphas bother you?
No i guess I have not really seen any and have no idea what Alphas is.8. Has having autism affected your ability to get a job?
Yes and no. Now I don't list it as an existing condition that may affect my job, no worries 9. What would you say to an autistic person who didn't realize that he was offending people by the way he was speaking to them?
Simple. Logicall and not emotionally explain the situation.10. What do you think about those people who claim to have cured people of autism?
Arseholes...in a word11. Now that you are grown, do you have any insights that would help other parents in how to teach correct behaviors to their autistic children?
Yes I have an autistic son and much of what you woul seek to pass on as a parent does not change. Have pride in your kids , teach them right from wrong, teach them responsibilitya nd praise them for what they do right, expect to be patient and wise and a source of fallback for them, Most of all do not expect them to "be" NT they aren't12. What is WP? Is it a site I would be interested in?
Probably. It is a shitty site run in a shitty way with shitty mods and a shiity admin. There are plenty of shitty members whining incessenatly over shitty things. The only really good thing is that there are plenty of people on the spectrum there and therefore you may be able to pick out gems of people and advice there so long as you are not frustrated by the shiitiness an dtry to address this. 13. On another forum they were discussing a study about atheism that postulated that autistic people were more likely to be atheist than the general population. Is this true? If so, why?
I think that many Autistic people have a deeprooted hold on logic and rationality and taking a leap of faith is at best difficult. That said i think that Autistics will follow mostly what they have been taught to hold as truth and rational irrespectively and deep seeded beliefs are hard to foist off, regardless.