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Thread: Asperger Syndrome doesn't exist!

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  1. #1
    Creepy-EddieMorra

    Default Asperger Syndrome doesn't exist!

    What a bunch of baloney! A disorder where someone can't communicate well with others and you're intelligent AKA a nerd? What's next, a disorder where people are just stupid? Oh they call that intellectually challenged! My bad!

    People who can't communicate well with others become that way due to forced isolation from either others or themselves and this usually happens when they are children. The mind is pretty malleable in general, but as a child it is extremely malleable.

    For instance, you get a kid who plays the violin a lot when other kids were busy playing with toys, that kid could grow up to be a virtuoso. Maybe a boy spent their entire childhood digging sand, hell he'll be a great landscaper when he grows up!



    You can even look at the opposite, say a child never skates his entire life and then decides to skate as an adult. Well he's gonna be a pretty crappy skater and it's probably going to take an extreme amount of practice to even be passably decent.



    So if you take that idea and look at a child that never socializes while they're young for whatever reason. Well when they grow up they're gonna end up being socially retarded, it doesn't take a rocket scientist to figure that out.



    Of course, genetics play a role and you could genetically be more likely to become a nerd, psycho, whore, whatever. However, in the end it's the environment that will ensure whether that genetic switch ends up being turned on or not.

    While psychology is good for understanding why someone behaves a certain way. It's still not an excuse to continue acting a certain way. The human mind is malleable even as an adult though not as much as a child or teen. If you're deficient in an area, work at it until you're passably normal.

    Though of course there are some rare people that are beyond hope.

  2. #2
    Ti centric krieger's Avatar
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    A disorder where someone can't communicate well with others and you're intelligent AKA a nerd?
    i love how people use this deductively as in "i can't communicate well... so i MUST be damned intelligent!!"

  3. #3
    Creepy-EddieMorra

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    Quote Originally Posted by labcoat View Post
    A disorder where someone can't communicate well with others and you're intelligent AKA a nerd?
    i love how people use this deductively as in "i can't communicate well... so i MUST be damned intelligent!!"
    I'm talking about asperger syndrome specifically, obviously there are intelligent people that communicate well with others and unintelligent people that don't communicate well with others.

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    Humanist Beautiful sky's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by EddieMorra View Post
    Quote Originally Posted by labcoat View Post

    i love how people use this deductively as in "i can't communicate well... so i MUST be damned intelligent!!"
    I'm talking about asperger syndrome specifically, obviously there are intelligent people that communicate well with others and unintelligent people that don't communicate well with others.
    Semantics.
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    Dual type (as per tcaudilllg)
    Enneagram 2w1sw(1w9) helps others to live up to their own standards of what a good person is and is very behind the scenes in the process.
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    I'm constantly looking to align the real with the ideal.I've been more oriented toward being overly idealistic by expecting the real to match the ideal. My thinking side is dominent. The result is that sometimes I can be overly impersonal or self-centered in my approach, not being understanding of others in the process and simply thinking "you should do this" or "everyone should follor this rule"..."regardless of how they feel or where they're coming from"which just isn't a good attitude to have. It is a way, though, to give oneself an artificial sense of self-justification. LSE

    Best description of functions:
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    <something> Wynch's Avatar
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    Silly troll, tricks are for kids.

    This opinion is so laughably uninformed about what makes an aspy that it's not even worth correcting. Quit trying to stir the pot, you goon.
    ILE
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    Very busy with work. Only kind of around.

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    Ti centric krieger's Avatar
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    TROLLAGE ACHEIVED

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    Ti centric krieger's Avatar
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    Asperger Syndrome doesn't exist!
    I'm talking about asperger syndrome specifically
    I'm not saying asperger syndrome doesn't exist specifically.

  8. #8
    Creepy-EddieMorra

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    Quote Originally Posted by labcoat View Post
    Asperger Syndrome doesn't exist!


    I'm not saying asperger syndrome doesn't exist specifically.
    LOL at robots taking everything I say literally.

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    Crispy's Avatar
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    lol @ your inconsistency.
    ILI (FINAL ANSWER)

  10. #10
    Creepy-EddieMorra

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    Quote Originally Posted by Crispy View Post
    lol @ your inconsistency.
    lol @ your consistent inability to comprehend my threads

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    you can go to where your heart is Galen's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by EddieMorra View Post
    Quote Originally Posted by Crispy View Post
    lol @ your inconsistency.
    lol @ your consistent inability to comprehend my threads
    lol @ your ability to not be informative or interesting or funny

  12. #12
    Creepy-Snaps

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    Quote Originally Posted by Crispy View Post
    lol @ your inconsistency.
    EddieMorra has Asperger's.

  13. #13
    Creepy-EddieMorra

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    Quote Originally Posted by Mountain Dew View Post
    Quote Originally Posted by Crispy View Post
    lol @ your inconsistency.
    EddieMorra has Asperger's.
    Haha, too bad Asperger's doesn't exist!

  14. #14
    Creepy-Snaps

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    Quote Originally Posted by labcoat View Post
    Asperger Syndrome doesn't exist!


    I'm not saying asperger syndrome doesn't exist specifically.
    Weak/Unvalued Ti. And since EddieMorra fits the Serious dichotomy, he's most definitely got to be either Gamma or Delta. Personally I'm leaning towards Gamma for him.

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    Okay, say it doesn't exist, do you think it's good that we have it considered a disorder? Given the nature of workplaces and of schools, it may be difficult for "those with Asperger" to integrate well and comfortably into the society. If we had the capacity to acknowledge their different thought processes, they might be able to get along swimmingly in the community their in. But such communities do not have such capacities - they must follow some curriculum or churn out enough goods at a certain rate. Seeing that, is it good for the people who are somehow socially impeded to have assistance - psychologically - dealing with their exception disability?

    Then of course, comes the question of how they should be treated: I'd imagine a fair amount of "those with Aspergers" would be treated with drugs, rather than helping how to adapt.
    Warm Regards,



    Clowns & Entropy

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    Quote Originally Posted by EddieMorra View Post
    What a bunch of baloney! A disorder where someone can't communicate well with others and you're intelligent AKA a nerd? What's next, a disorder where people are just stupid? Oh they call that intellectually challenged! My bad!

    People who can't communicate well with others become that way due to forced isolation from either others or themselves and this usually happens when they are children. The mind is pretty malleable in general, but as a child it is extremely malleable.

    For instance, you get a kid who plays the violin a lot when other kids were busy playing with toys, that kid could grow up to be a virtuoso. Maybe a boy spent their entire childhood digging sand, hell he'll be a great landscaper when he grows up!



    You can even look at the opposite, say a child never skates his entire life and then decides to skate as an adult. Well he's gonna be a pretty crappy skater and it's probably going to take an extreme amount of practice to even be passably decent.



    So if you take that idea and look at a child that never socializes while they're young for whatever reason. Well when they grow up they're gonna end up being socially retarded, it doesn't take a rocket scientist to figure that out.



    Of course, genetics play a role and you could genetically be more likely to become a nerd, psycho, whore, whatever. However, in the end it's the environment that will ensure whether that genetic switch ends up being turned on or not.

    While psychology is good for understanding why someone behaves a certain way. It's still not an excuse to continue acting a certain way. The human mind is malleable even as an adult though not as much as a child or teen. If you're deficient in an area, work at it until you're passably normal.

    Though of course there are some rare people that are beyond hope.
    You might not be around anymore but you never know.

    Why do I think you were recently diagnosed before posting this

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    Two years later, this troll thread still gets bites lol. Anyways, I think Asperger syndrome is real, but overdiagnosed among other psychological disorders imo. I haven't been diagnosed with anything due to never visiting a psychiatrist btw. Ignorance is bliss.
    “We cannot change the cards we are dealt, just how we play the hand.” Randy Pausch

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  18. #18
    Killer of DJA's Fun fen's Avatar
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    :/
    Last edited by fen; 06-28-2013 at 01:28 PM.
    And I would hide my face in you and you would hide your face in me, and nobody would ever see us any more.


  19. #19
    escaping anndelise's Avatar
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    My daughter was diagnosed with autism and has changed from "moderate to severe" to "mild to moderate". In her case, the category of autism is what more closely lumps her issues for assistance rather than having the same cause for those issues. In my daughter's case, I was on a variety of psychological mediactions during a time frame which covers months before conception, conception, and up to 5 months after conception. As soon as I found out I was pregnant, I immediately stopped taking all meds. One medication in particular has had a few studies done on it and its effects on fetal brain development. It's believed that it basically blocks the brain from processing a certain protein/? which is needed for creating connections. It's not that connections and learning don't occur...just that it is now a much more difficult process. The difficulties are most noticeable during the early learning years, but as learning does happen, and the closer new learnings are to what was already learned, over time the effects are hardly noticeable (other than when trying to teach her something new, or she is faced with completely new experiences.)

    This difficulty led to autistic-like behavioral symptoms. But since she was extroverted and sought out social interactions, this was all dismissed when she was younger, despite people sensing something wrong with her and avoiding her or bullying her for being different. So, not only was she having difficulties because of her brain, but then social problems were added on top of that. When i homeschooled her, we were able to cover a bunch of that, including lots of successful and positive social interactions. But it was completely exhausting, and so she went back to public school.

    She did better in school this time, but the kids still sensed that something was off about her, and the bullying and avoidance resumed. Finally, however, she had a school counselor who paid attention to the teacher complaints and questions and helped get the ball rolling to get my daughter the help she needed. Once she had the diagnosis of 'autism', then not only did my daughter feel better about herself, but some of the kids finally understood what was going on with her and backed off. Not all, but enough that she was able to finally make some friends who would stick around (or still come back) when certain behaviors would appear. AND, finally she was able to get help and support by people who were trained in dealing with the issues she was dealing with.

    Now, her only main issues are difficulty processing auditory information, and difficulties when there is a change. She's been learning about and understanding her needs in work/school/social environments, and how to communicate those needs. And she finally has a support team who have been guiding her towards being capable of living a productive, happy, and independent life.

    Edited to add: And no, medication has never been suggested, offered, nor desired.
    IEE 649 sx/sp cp

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    It might not be rocket science but it could involve some brain surgery...
    ILI (FINAL ANSWER)

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