What Is Asperger's Syndrome?

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  • เผยแพร่เมื่อ 21 พ.ย. 2024

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  • @abyssquick
    @abyssquick 11 ปีที่แล้ว +2493

    We're not antisocial. We sometimes like to be alone, yes, but don't like to "feel" alone. That drives many of us to seek social situations deliberately. But since social interaction is difficult, overstimulating and exhausting, we have trouble finding tolerant crowds to hang out with. It's why we often develop unconventional friendships, too (age disparities, or exclusively of the opposite sex) -- we'll befriend whoever relates to us, understands us, makes us comfortable. We're not antisocial.

    • @firebrand420
      @firebrand420 3 ปีที่แล้ว +66

      So much this.

    • @ADeeSHUPA
      @ADeeSHUPA 3 ปีที่แล้ว +8

      @@firebrand420 uP

    • @Connjur
      @Connjur 3 ปีที่แล้ว +35

      This 100%

    • @skippysvr4586
      @skippysvr4586 3 ปีที่แล้ว +118

      Well said. My asperger's is great at weeding out insincere people.

    • @09stoneheart
      @09stoneheart 3 ปีที่แล้ว +56

      I would say we are choosy. Which isn't a bad thing in my opinion and I think a lot of Nerotypicals could even agree. We like stable people who are not likely to do anything drastic or reckless. Calm and mellow.

  • @aqwdestructor8854
    @aqwdestructor8854 10 ปีที่แล้ว +2405

    Some of the things that really annoy me, are when people say we don't have "emotions" and that "we lack empathy" but It isn't true, we do have feelings.

    • @kathyyoung1774
      @kathyyoung1774 5 ปีที่แล้ว +164

      Desties Nation Very true. It’s just extremely difficult to “read” other’s emotions.

    • @pakabe8774
      @pakabe8774 5 ปีที่แล้ว +67

      I guess the problem is, that we function different. If they interact, one person feels something and if another person is emotional connected, the other person instantly feels the same, without any thought or mental action. What Professionals or most people do, they watch the outside and describe it. In Science this might be a good option, if you research physics or so, but what they don't do, they don't include those into their research, who could tell them the inside perspective. I guess that is a result of expecting same functionality of us like them, before they want accept our co-research. (sorry, no native speaker).

    • @NOT_SURE..
      @NOT_SURE.. 5 ปีที่แล้ว +111

      a lot of aspies feel SOOO much in the way of emotions they learn to switch some off to be able to deal with things .

    • @pakabe8774
      @pakabe8774 5 ปีที่แล้ว +24

      @@NOT_SURE.. I cant switch emotions off... that is why I collide with people...

    • @NOT_SURE..
      @NOT_SURE.. 5 ปีที่แล้ว +28

      @@pakabe8774 perhaps you do other things you dont need to do like be nice to everyone or give out too much personal info about yourself .

  • @gracelc3
    @gracelc3 ปีที่แล้ว +570

    When I first met my boyfriend he didn’t tell me he was autistic. I was very attracted to his intellect and unique sense of humor, and it wasn’t until months into our friendship that he told me about his autism. It never occurred to me that he was different aside from a few little social quirks, and he said the biggest giveaway was his unnatural tendencies with eye contact, but funnily enough I greatly struggle with even just meeting people’s eyes so I never even noticed his eye contact tendencies. As I got to know him further I found that he has a very unique sense of rationalism, a wonderful sense of sarcasm, and deep, profound emotions. Now I’m proud to call him my boyfriend. When you really take the the time to know a person with autism, you’ll find that they are not disabled, but simply wired to think and feel differently, and it has been a wonderful thing for me and my boyfriend to learn and grow together.
    Edit: one year later we’re still together and happy. I’d like to clarify that when he talks about his autism, he makes it clear that he really does feel disabled. But in getting to know him I never saw his autism as a disability or something that hinders him.

    • @carissab397
      @carissab397 ปีที่แล้ว

      But we are disabled. Disabled is not a bad word and EVERYONE need to understand that. Just because you don’t perceive an individual as disabled does not mean autistic people are not disabled.

    • @annaelisavettavonnedozza9607
      @annaelisavettavonnedozza9607 ปีที่แล้ว +25

      That’s a really beautiful & profound comment-I wish you 2 all the best in the world ❤

    • @stephenglover8828
      @stephenglover8828 ปีที่แล้ว +11

      very interesting thx for your post. I made a new friend (really like him) and he has Aspergers. So wanted to understand more. He's so intelligent and impressive. WOW

    • @JimmyJaxJellyStax
      @JimmyJaxJellyStax ปีที่แล้ว +8

      Yeah the eye contact is a big one, for me holding eye contact feels like holding a difficult yoga pose. If it's anxiety, I may have almost no eye contact but when casual and connecting, the eye contact still remains difficult like holding a heavy weight. Often zero thoughts or concerns about the case of difficulty with eye contact, it's more inherent sensitivity like touching something too hot and immediately pulling the hand away.

    • @rachel679
      @rachel679 ปีที่แล้ว +4

      I’m really happy for you guys. I have faced a similar situation but unfortunately I had to leave the relationship. Some aspies can be very unrealistic and extremely rigid and pedantic about things that makes it so hard to function.

  • @espenBredessenJones
    @espenBredessenJones 5 ปีที่แล้ว +1394

    I've been living with AS for 61 years now and I'm still here much to my own surprise . the best way to describe it is feeling like a small child trapped inside an adult body and you never really wanted to be an adult in the first place. I really enjoy being alone, except that I'm not alone as I have many dogs and cats which are far better company than any humans could ever be

    • @berlg.3382
      @berlg.3382 4 ปีที่แล้ว +17

      Christer Espevoll I like this description. Can you please supply more?

    • @sirgalah561
      @sirgalah561 4 ปีที่แล้ว +70

      I too feel the same way.. Im 55 and have klinefelters as well as finding out the symptoms of Aspergers.. Ive had problems my entire life dealing with people but now prefer being alone.. Id be perfectly happy livjng in a van moving from ine place to another with nobody to change my plans. Does that make any sense.I hope im not bothering you with my comment.

    • @YesitisDex
      @YesitisDex 4 ปีที่แล้ว +6

      Omg.....yes💯💯💯💯💯💯💯💯

    • @andrewmorton395
      @andrewmorton395 4 ปีที่แล้ว +42

      Yes it's like being a child trapt in a Adults body

    • @andrewmorton395
      @andrewmorton395 4 ปีที่แล้ว +29

      I am the same, a child trapt in a Adults body, I totally understand.

  • @scrappyny7432
    @scrappyny7432 8 ปีที่แล้ว +1902

    I apologize but I want to vent my frustration. I am 39yo male married with three great kids. I have always been different from everyone else and felt outcast most times especially growing up and in school. In April of this year I started researching AS because a friend of my wife has a child with AS and told her that our four year old son has AS. I have noticed that as my son grows he is acting exactly as I did his age when it comes to certain actions, obsessions etc. Some really stand out more than others. He is also very intelligent and active much as I was. So I started looking into AS and it has been a mind blowing experience. Nearly everything that I have researched including this video is not only my son but myself as well. Over the last few months I have come to terms with this and realize the pros and cons. It is refreshing to finally have a reason to know why I am the way I am. But even though it has really helped me grow in my career and side business and everything that I do the I have to say that the social aspect of it really sucks. I mean really really sucks. I wish I could feel what its like to have a normal prolonged conversation and interaction with people for a day. I also wish I would have known much earlier that I have AS thinking maybe I wouldn't have been so hard on myself and self forgiving of my actions. Anyway sorry for the rant.

    • @Perivale
      @Perivale 8 ปีที่แล้ว +37

      Why not go and get tested before you make yourself more worried. What if you have it? Then you can seek proper treatment. What if you don't have it? Then you can find a councilor who can help you in social situations. As for your son, if he is in school you can speak to someone on the child study team at his school. Most likely he can be tested for it for free. You would have to initiate that conversation however. Good luck and please seek out assistance sooner than later.

    • @ChauntelleARussell
      @ChauntelleARussell 7 ปีที่แล้ว +25

      Greg NY That's how I found out that I had ASD.

    • @placidscene
      @placidscene 6 ปีที่แล้ว +67

      My experience is much the same. I'm 35 and just got diagnosed. Happily married with 2 kids. I also got diagnosed with ADHD, after both my boys got diagnosed with it as well. My poor wife!...

    • @marinalida
      @marinalida 6 ปีที่แล้ว +69

      Hi there. Thanks for your post. I am what's known as "normal"" . I am super happy being married for 20 years to AS we have a daughter AS.
      I wouldn't trade them for a world. I wish sometime I were born with AS.
      They are pure hearts and beautiful souls. Thx

    • @danapertile106
      @danapertile106 6 ปีที่แล้ว +89

      Hi, I know it has been 2 years since your comment, but I would like to add mine that is so so so similar to yours. I have just turned 40. I am a woman from Europe and English is not my native language, so please forgive my possible mistakes. I am married and have two young children aged almost 6 and 8. They are healthy. I have always known I was different than other people. I was even bullied at school even though I had no idea why. Kids could just sense I was the "strange" child. I did very well at school, I played the piano and I read a lot. I was the quiet girl often praised by teachers for good behavior. But kids did not like me too much. When I was at high school, I changed my school and my new classmates were much better. I never experienced being bullied again. I even had lots of friends. With puberty, I became more self-confident, more outgoing and sociable. But I still felt I was different in many aspects. But people (including myself) thought I was just a bit more into books, a bit more thinking about things, a bit more interested in special topics. Then I went to university and my new schoolmates were okay, but again, I did not have many friends. I had one good friend, though, and he was a guy. Just a friend, nothing more. I found out that I got along better with men than with women. Men do not talk as much as women do, and that is what I like. I don´t like talking too much, I have always prefered writing. I got married, had the two above mentioned children, a nice house, two cars... everything you can dream of. Then I came across a video about Asperger´s. And suddenly it all clicked. I was watching a video about myself! So I started searching the net, more videos, more articles and I have also taken many many many online tests on Asperger´s. And all of them told me I was an Aspie. So I went to a specialist and yes, after serveral months of testing, she told me the same diagnosis! Only a year ago, I had no idea. And now I know the answer to all of my questions. I know why I am different, why I can´t keep friends, why I don´t like social chit chat, why I don´t direct sunshine on my face, loud noises, being touched and the look at the texture of bread (yes, I hate that). And I am happy now. Now I know that I am not a worse person than other people. My brain is just wired differently, but I am not worse. I may not be able to cope with some things, but I may be better at many things others "healthy" people aren´t. And I perceive it as a blessing. God bless you too.

  • @buena4343
    @buena4343 2 ปีที่แล้ว +620

    Hi. I’m a Doctor in Psychology. I’ve worked with people within the autism spectrum / high functioning (prior aspergers ) In my experience it’s not a syndrome, meaning there’s something wrong with them.They are not sick. Their brain is wired different. I found them much more empathetic, with wonderful human values and fun to be with. I rather be with an aspie, than with neurotypicals.

    • @folieadeux9551
      @folieadeux9551 ปีที่แล้ว +47

      It is a neurological disorder. I hope you are lying about being a psychologist, I have Asperger's Syndrome and it is a very difficult condition to deal with on the daily. If you cannot see that then it is WORRYING that you are treating your patients with that mindset.

    • @Unknown17
      @Unknown17 ปีที่แล้ว +18

      A syndrome is a collection of disorders, and, as such, the presence or absence of a specific disorder within the syndrome and the degree to which it interferes with the lives of its sufferers depends upon the individual. Asperger's by definition IS a syndrome because it is a cluster of varied problems. It IS a syndrome.

    • @JeanetteFaith
      @JeanetteFaith ปีที่แล้ว +18

      @@folieadeux9551 But I was diagnosed with it by one Psychiatrist, and then it was proven wrong by four others. You may indeed have it, but it and mild bipolar are BOTH often misdiagnosed. Psychiatry is a big money maker!!

    • @folieadeux9551
      @folieadeux9551 ปีที่แล้ว +27

      @@JeanetteFaith I was misdiagnosed with borderline disorder, to later in life being told I actually am autistic. Psychiatry is a big money maker indeed.

    • @myphone-ph4hh
      @myphone-ph4hh ปีที่แล้ว +16

      ​@@folieadeux9551misdiagnosis is incredibly common and problematic in psychiatry. We wouldnt tolerate it in any other medical specialties

  • @ssoff5507
    @ssoff5507 3 ปีที่แล้ว +696

    I am literally crying, this explains my entire life

    • @quinnerney
      @quinnerney 3 ปีที่แล้ว +56

      You aren't alone, friend.

    • @funnyduck1234
      @funnyduck1234 3 ปีที่แล้ว +37

      I have reached the point of depression as mentioned in the video and i’d also like to just cry it all out

    • @ignaciogongoraherreramande119
      @ignaciogongoraherreramande119 3 ปีที่แล้ว +14

      same here man, you're not alone

    • @yoRaigg
      @yoRaigg 3 ปีที่แล้ว +18

      we in this together, better be tears of joy

    • @dotanon
      @dotanon 3 ปีที่แล้ว +49

      I think I'm in the same boat and I've somehow repressed it. I've always felt alien, since school. I feel like I've spent my life watching people and learning how they act. I've desperately put on a facade of normalcy that I continued through very unhealthy habits like alcoholism in order to dull myself. It seems like my friends don't even notice anything, but in hindsight it's because I've been trying so fucking hard to be "normal" my whole life.
      I've been telling myself for 20 years that this is some kind of phase I'll grow out of. That I'm just immature. But I've come to realise I do not act naturally in any way. Even in school, I was never learning things in totality for exams. I learned what teachers wanted from me and I was good at giving it to them. I studied the day before every exam and scored ~75 for most subjects because I felt obligated. It's just memory and pattern recognition. There are 5 marks for a question, create 5 logically consistent points in my answer using the information I DO have.
      It's like I have to manually process social interactions, and I feel like a mirror who's just showing people what they want to see.

  • @angelascott8173
    @angelascott8173 3 ปีที่แล้ว +573

    My son has Asperger's and 99% of these describe my son. He was diagnosed very early and had help at school from 5 years old. His high school had a communication support base where he went from 11-17 and he is now nearly 24 with a computer science degree. Kids deserve the best education and support they can get, no matter what difficulties they may have.

    • @masol3726
      @masol3726 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      Ppl are assholes

    • @MJ-pk1cl
      @MJ-pk1cl 2 ปีที่แล้ว +9

      I honestly think sometimes I might have it I’ve never been to a psychiatrist I know for a fact I have adhd tho

    • @leearzo8711
      @leearzo8711 2 ปีที่แล้ว +4

      Excuse me who give the diagnosed to your son, Can you please help me , I’m desperate to help my son.

    • @kathyyoung1774
      @kathyyoung1774 2 ปีที่แล้ว +6

      @@leearzo8711 Go to a psychologist or social worker. They can diagnose it. But do it. Aspies can excel when they have the support and understanding they need. They can also be taught to read some body language and facial expressions, which helps enormously in daily contact with others.

    • @kathyyoung1774
      @kathyyoung1774 2 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      @@MJ-pk1cl I also have adhd but not Asperger’s. Go to a therapist, a psychologist preferably, for a diagnosis.

  • @daveeade5074
    @daveeade5074 3 ปีที่แล้ว +374

    Do you;
    1. Have very few/no friends
    2. Enjoy time alone
    3. Become overstimulated easily (noises/sounds)
    4. Enjoy being with animals (sometimes more so than humans)
    5. Have a creative outlet
    6. Enjoy learning
    7. Suffer from bouts of anxiety/depression
    8. Exercise solo (running, cycling etc.)
    9. Wish you could interact freely with people
    10. Do you know how awesome you are
    Then yes.

    • @quinnerney
      @quinnerney 3 ปีที่แล้ว +6

      Lights do not really bother me

    • @Peanuts76
      @Peanuts76 3 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Yes, overstimulated by 3d motions graph and epileptic inducing videos....
      But i'm depressed, I'm faking my happiness honestly, i'm not that good and smart, and i suffer many abuse and trauma....

    • @visulaketagoda8621
      @visulaketagoda8621 3 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Am not anti social but I don't like to hang out with people but if they hang out with me it's ok for me but there are some on my list I recognize as worth of my attention so am I ...?

    • @desuretard8654
      @desuretard8654 3 ปีที่แล้ว

      So you have to be egotistical to have Aspergers. Sounds about right.

    • @NuLiForm
      @NuLiForm 3 ปีที่แล้ว +13

      ...i was agreeing with every one..until #10....then i bailed.

  • @weegee_hates_the_blind
    @weegee_hates_the_blind 10 ปีที่แล้ว +805

    For me, it’s more of the lack of social need. In other words, I really don't need friends and I do just fine alone. I’m quiet in large groups, but in small groups, (and I mean VERY small like even 3 people is intolerable) I’m actually quite social.
    Edit: Holy gadzooks, this comment is now 10 years old. So, an update on my life: I have a fiancée now, and I kid you not, she is literally all I need. Around her, I'm the life of the party, but as soon as we go out, I let her do all the talking. I'm borderline nonverbal around strangers. It's a lot better than my high school days-being forced into large groups, never having the opportunity to open up to anyone one-on-one. I always ended up feeling like a third wheel around everyone. By my senior year, I realized it was my last chance to have any social interaction, so I made the effort to keep in touch with one person who, miraculously, wasn't off-put by my fixation on her.

    • @NoName-mm6gh
      @NoName-mm6gh 7 ปีที่แล้ว +41

      I'm afraid too. I have asperges. Lately I started wondering why I don't have many friends

    • @bobibg4ever
      @bobibg4ever 7 ปีที่แล้ว +15

      Exactly the same. Please tell more

    • @MedicMain9
      @MedicMain9 6 ปีที่แล้ว +7

      I relate to this

    • @reecemesser
      @reecemesser 5 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      Well put weegee

    • @catm4403
      @catm4403 5 ปีที่แล้ว +4

      Very same situation here.

  • @owenshipp3819
    @owenshipp3819 9 ปีที่แล้ว +687

    I play the guitar. And I have allot of anxiety. But when I play. Everything goes normal and I become my own person!!

    • @miekotsukiyami835
      @miekotsukiyami835 7 ปีที่แล้ว +9

      owen shipp i can understand that when i do anything that's art i feel like myself. I was told it's because it's what i enjoy so i should continue it and never care if someone else doesn't like my work. P.s. i would love to hear you play i love the sound of a guitar

    • @JmurfFTW
      @JmurfFTW 6 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      You're a tv show there bud.

    • @boombapdoom493
      @boombapdoom493 6 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      That's what's up

    • @KingofgraceSARA
      @KingofgraceSARA 5 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      Cultivate that skill and do well.
      I know you will.

    • @lauranceemory4448
      @lauranceemory4448 5 ปีที่แล้ว +5

      Same here. Having/learning guitar during my teen years helped me make it through that confusing maze

  • @charchar4931
    @charchar4931 4 ปีที่แล้ว +603

    Its like you crash landed on earth but the scientists didn't give you a handbook.

    • @anak_kucing101
      @anak_kucing101 4 ปีที่แล้ว +6

      Minecraft?

    • @charchar4931
      @charchar4931 4 ปีที่แล้ว +19

      @@anak_kucing101 no aspergers syndrome

    • @anak_kucing101
      @anak_kucing101 4 ปีที่แล้ว +7

      @@charchar4931 I heard that phrase in a kids show...

    • @charchar4931
      @charchar4931 4 ปีที่แล้ว +12

      @@anak_kucing101 yes arthur! I think it describes aspergers perfectly!

    • @LuchadorMasque
      @LuchadorMasque 3 ปีที่แล้ว +4

      I was given one, but it wasnt for me

  • @Burns1993Joe
    @Burns1993Joe 6 ปีที่แล้ว +346

    I have Aspergers. A friend once described it not as a “disability”, but rather as a “different ability”.

    • @wizardsuth
      @wizardsuth 4 ปีที่แล้ว +49

      To me it's neurotypicals who seem odd, constantly obfuscating their conversations and lying without apparently realizing it. I would prefer if they were honest and straightforward.

    • @scotnick59
      @scotnick59 3 ปีที่แล้ว +9

      @@wizardsuth Well, we usually DO follow to the beat of a different drum

    • @TheSuga154
      @TheSuga154 3 ปีที่แล้ว +11

      @@wizardsuth Yes! Finally someone said it!

    • @NuLiForm
      @NuLiForm 3 ปีที่แล้ว +15

      Exactly. i have been questioning the 'disability' term all my life...this..aint that...we are Not Disabled. We are the Opposite of Disabled..we are Very Abled....to the point it scares most 'normal' people.

    • @jmk1962
      @jmk1962 3 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      I love that description. Thanks.

  • @themindvideos
    @themindvideos 8 ปีที่แล้ว +336

    I'm 34 & have just recently learned that I have Aspergers. It has explained so much & has kind of given me a new lease on life. All of the things I felt so self-conscious about & all of the things that made me feel like I was failing as an "average" person, they can all be attributed to asperger's. So the fact that I am a nurse, a Mother, a loving wife & the few close relationships I have are all blessings. I wish people knew more about people like me - that people with Asperger's are really just normal people with a different perspective. We are highly sensitive, which can be STRENGTHS. I need to get on with it & make my videos about my experience with aspergers. Thanks for posting this. It will be very helpful for my family to see it simply explained.

    • @WebVManReturns
      @WebVManReturns 7 ปีที่แล้ว +8

      I'm 34 and am thinking I have it too, due to having every symptom of it.

    • @akawhippy
      @akawhippy 6 ปีที่แล้ว +4

      Angela Walden But how do you have all that when Aspergers patients are socially awkward to start or keep relationships in the first place? Let alone getting married or having and raising children.

    • @Adhdorwhatever22
      @Adhdorwhatever22 6 ปีที่แล้ว +5

      I think sensitivity is a gift as well. Unfortunately many people would make fun of my sensitivity and be told that I couldn’t just cry whenever I got yelled at. My sister asked me what would I do when my boss yelled at me. I asked her why would they yell at me. Seems like a strange example.

    • @dukadarodear2176
      @dukadarodear2176 5 ปีที่แล้ว +7

      I had a friend in school who had what I now know to be Asperger's Syndrome.
      To his friends and acquaintances he was a bit "odd", very clever, a mine of information on the weirdest topics (but couldn't tell you how to do scrambled eggs), honest, easily fooled, helpful when he could, inoffensive, vulnerable and was very popular but mostly within our circle.
      The lecturer here associated the condition with "learning difficulties" but I have met many with the condition and all are high achievers in the academic field.
      Thank you for your post.
      Good to hear from someone on "the inside".
      It seems to be a more rare condition among girls/women than among boys/men.

    • @shoshanafox727
      @shoshanafox727 5 ปีที่แล้ว +7

      @@dukadarodear2176 girls/women have different symptoms and tend to be more undiagnosed.

  • @radboxingedits4107
    @radboxingedits4107 3 ปีที่แล้ว +179

    I remeber as a kid i was diagnosed with aspergers. The reason the doctors wanted me tested was that i would almost never listen to what my parents said, and i often misunderstood things. So they took me to get a hearing test, which i got a perfect score on. Then when the doctors asked about it 4 year old just said "I just don't want to listen." My dad was really stressed out and angry about it, so he decided to lock me in a dark room to "Reprimand the aspergers out of me" Which of course didn't work at all. My mom ended up convincing him it wasn't something to get so worked up about. I used to really like dinosaurs as a kid, and i don't mean the usual "So cool, big monster!" kind of way most kids did. Instead I would spend hours rewatching the same dino documentaries over and over again, memorizing every fact they contained, i remember once when i lost one of my favorite dinosaur toys. I had a mental breakdown and cried for several hours, my mom (the most understanding person on earth) managed to get me into thinking that another dino toy at the store was the same one, which finally stopped my crying. For the first 6 years of my life i wasn't really that different, i mean i would get worked up about unusual things and would start crying whenever i was even mildly frustrated. But i wasn't too different. Then school came, it started out fine, but i started getting made fun of by one of my classmates. He started as my friend, the kind of friend you don't really talk too outside of at lunch or when you're in the same group, but still a friend nonetheless. But this friend had ADHD, and he really struggled with attention during class, so he started doing things to distract him. Like throwing pencils, using the blunt side of scizzors to make me think he cut my hair, and hitting my cap of off my head. I kind of feel bad for him, his parents got divoced right as we really started to get into school (The swedish school system gives kids a "0th" grade to get used to getting up at a certain time and to do simple work, and this was right as "0th" grade ended) We still go too the same school, but we have a pretty big class, and we're in different groups. He almost completely stopped these things when we got our new maths and english teacher, she's been extremely understanding and helpful towards any student who struggles with anything. Although i personally believe that i have been able to work it out of my system, i still struggle with socializing. And i think because of the fact that nobody really knows that i have a reason for it, they just kind of assume i try to be weird and annoying. So most people in my class really don't like. They don't hate me. I very often hear people talking about me, thinking i can't hear, i often have people assume that i am staring at them when i zone out, or intentionally do things like bumping or stepping on the heel of their shoe. But i don't mean to do it, i just struggle with reading movements or knowing where to place my eyes. And this means that most of my class (excluding my friend group) just think i'm a jerk. I wish i was brave enough to tell this story to other people, but I'm not. My Anxiety and deppression aren't that serious, but i don't think i'm doing too well either. The simplest way i can explain aspergers is that you're playing a game with the controls changed, but without you knowing where their mapped. So just kinda press all of them until you find the right one, but sometimes you click one that does the complete opposite of what you want to do.
    Sorry about the text being so unorganized and whiny, but i really just couldn't stop writing when i finnally found a way to talk about it without actually talking to someone.
    Update: I have a massive friend group of super supportive and nice friends who all started to understand me (weirdly enough, they understand me better tha my mom does.) and the amazing teacher has made a majority of all students understand that kids with ADHD or aspergers don’t intentionally do weird or dumb stuff, its motstöt just misunderstandings or stress.

    • @jeremygalloway1348
      @jeremygalloway1348 2 ปีที่แล้ว +7

      In an oddly normal kind of way...talking to strangers can be more refreshing/almost enlightening than talking to loved ones...for the very reason they don't know you. It's really weird...but not lol. Funny ironic kindof weird

    • @BlackSeranna
      @BlackSeranna 2 ปีที่แล้ว +5

      Yeah, I hear you. I had to practice socializing - I mean, it’s easy to do when one is a kid, but it just gets harder and harder as one becomes an adult. I still don’t have it figured out. My friend says, “You seem extroverted to me!” But the truth of it is, I pretend like I am in a play. I try to emulate how others are, and I have had to study how people get through a conversation with others. I don’t have any problem with my own family members, they all know me and I know them, so I can be how I naturally am. But when interacting with others, it’s not easy at all, and afterwards I feel so full of anxiety.

    • @judytaylor3099
      @judytaylor3099 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Thank you for letting your feelings be known. I think this will help me better understand and interact with my grandson who has aspergers. I wish you well.

    • @ERTChimpanzee
      @ERTChimpanzee 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      Why did you wrote an essay?

    • @voii9654
      @voii9654 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Glad you're doing alright now! It's sad you had to go trough a lot of stuff and i think you described it pretty well so take this big fat *W* and i hope you will continue doing good and i also wish the best to your friend with ADHD! Have an amazing year

  • @martymcfly002
    @martymcfly002 2 ปีที่แล้ว +57

    The awkward standing / not knowing what to do with your hands really hit home for me. Also the small talk problem, and not knowing when a conversation should end. For many years I have been treated for social anxiety but my new therapist suggested it could be Aspergers. Thank you very much for the video.

    • @Tavs.fāters
      @Tavs.fāters ปีที่แล้ว

      Yeah, the same with me😅😂 I think only with logic without taking into account emotions. Don't know how to start small talk. How people communicate fells fake and weird, for example, laughing at joke if it isn't funny, so it wouldn't be awkward. I catch my self saying insensitive things, because I go straight to logical thinking and problem fixing without sympathy. Don't know how and when to show sympathy and empathy. I can't explain how I fell, foreign felling to me😅 Interested into details and how everything works and is put to gather. Can't even by vacuum cleaner without days off research😂 Don't show emotions on my face, don't really how much or know how😅IQ is above average 120-130 +- by internet tests. Depression is a thing but I keep it under control. Don't know why I have friends, because I don't ever call just to chat or see how someone is doing.
      I hope it is just Asperger. Hopefully I'm not a sociopath😅😂

  • @peter-e2q
    @peter-e2q 5 ปีที่แล้ว +93

    I have Asperger's. I'm over 60 and only discovered it 4 years ago... my life has begun to make sense. This is the absolute bet short description I've ever heard! It is me to a T. thank you!

    • @jaimejimenez4199
      @jaimejimenez4199 3 ปีที่แล้ว +4

      I found out this year. I’m 31. I no longer feel odd. It’s so good to understand yourself. I’m about to start crying to be honest. Crying from happiness

    • @peter-e2q
      @peter-e2q 3 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      @@jaimejimenez4199 FABULOUS! Once we begin to accept ourselves, nothing else in the world matters. You can just enjoy it. The extra fun is noticing how people react to you if/when they spot something, but now it makes sense, it's no threat, no longer means you're (we're) 'stupid'.
      Gets better.

    • @sonyastone6318
      @sonyastone6318 3 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      I am 64 and I too discovered this about myself.

    • @peter-e2q
      @peter-e2q 3 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      @@sonyastone6318 Hi Sonya, now you know, I hope you are learning to enjoy our special view on life - certainly not sheep!

    • @peter-e2q
      @peter-e2q 3 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      @@batcheeboy5077 thanks for sharing that. A sad, typical and happy story all at the same time :)
      I can see similarities in my life. I’m now alone again but actually, reasonably happy.

  • @72blxxdbpsfoo
    @72blxxdbpsfoo 2 ปีที่แล้ว +33

    This literally made my day at the age of 35, and explained everything about my life... I need to learn more about this.

  • @Thkaal
    @Thkaal 10 ปีที่แล้ว +265

    "Tend to talk about themselves."
    Yes. I myself (see, there it is) thought for years that's how a conversation is. Every single person I ever spoke to only ever talked about themselves or how the world related to them. When other people told me this wasn't the case, and I would quote the person in question, the person speaking to me about the other would say, "See, he was talking about this or that." And it STILL sounded like the person was talking about his or herself.
    Honestly, I still see and hear people talking about themselves. It takes a long time for me to go through all the possibilities and I often end up with, "This person is talking about himself."

    • @Thkaal
      @Thkaal 9 ปีที่แล้ว +44

      *****
      I've had to explain it several times. Almost every time I am told that people don't always talk about themselves. But I have never heard anyone not talk about something that is of import to them. Even the news (every single news service) only reports on things important to those in that particular news service.

    • @Roger-tc9gj
      @Roger-tc9gj 7 ปีที่แล้ว +50

      You see, everybody always talks about themselves. The difference here is that a "normal" person will never truly accept it or admit it because it's frowned upon in our society and we have been brainwashed to think it's selfish and bad. What is selfishness anyway? Aren't we supposed to be selfish? I guess I must have Aspergers then. Don't worry pal, you're actually smarter than those who are socially acceptable. Your Aspergers is a gift and your greatest strength.

    • @the_eerie_faerie_tales
      @the_eerie_faerie_tales 6 ปีที่แล้ว +28

      Exactly! I don't get it, seems like everyone else can talk and express their thoughts and feelings, yet when I do it for some reason it's not appropriate? Everyone else gets an opinion but me? I think it's just because my values are so different from most people's... I don't care about celebrities, sports, luxury toys, a girls weekend wine trip, kids, god crap, eating meat... If someone brings up the weather, I talk about the anthropocene. I despise small talk and always seem to gravitate towards "what you're not supposed to talk about".. Politics (I'm progressive) religion (I'm atheist), science - especially climate science right now, justice/activism, veganism, green energy and environmental conservation... I like discussing *ideas* rather than engaging in what I consider superficial chatter. And look, I get it, most people aren't interested in what I'm interested in, or at least certainly not to the same degree.

    • @kidcitylynnwood6324
      @kidcitylynnwood6324 6 ปีที่แล้ว

      You are partially correct.

    • @godlyvex5543
      @godlyvex5543 6 ปีที่แล้ว +17

      I have AS and I have a lot of trouble talking about other people, so what I do is I try to find out what they like, and talk about what I personally know about the subject. If I run out of stuff to talk about there, I bring up another subject that might be related, and see if they know anything about that. It's kinda like talking to an NPC in a video game, where I choose different dialogue options and once they're exhausted I bring up another one.

  • @spartan1171865
    @spartan1171865 9 ปีที่แล้ว +680

    I hate admitting I have Asperger's syndrome. Nothing has come good from it. I have been bullied from it most of my life. Well ever since the early years of primary school. From that point on I have suffered from bullying all the way up to now. I am now 18 and in my final year of school. How I have lasted this long is completely beyond me. There have been times when things have gotten that bad and I have been treated like shit from a lot of people all my life that I just wanted to end it all. People with Asperger's syndrome seem to go through life harder than others. Sure everyone can go through tough times but it just seems harder on our end trying to move through life.

    • @rhyothemisprinceps1617
      @rhyothemisprinceps1617 7 ปีที่แล้ว +80

      I'm hoping your family is nice to you at least; mine wasn't.

    • @frankiesanchez2632
      @frankiesanchez2632 7 ปีที่แล้ว +16

      kick there ass

    • @thorlover8866
      @thorlover8866 7 ปีที่แล้ว +31

      And hang in there, we got this.

    • @JannesonMultiMediaEditor
      @JannesonMultiMediaEditor 7 ปีที่แล้ว +69

      I had asbergers but my family kept it a secret from me and told the doctor not to make the diagnosis official because they were worried about me being labeled. Well... I was labeled anyways. Everyone knew something was different about me, -I- knew something was different about me, they just didn't have a name to put to it so they called me stupid instead. While telling people doesn't help... I think understanding why you are that way does. Other people don't need to know. The diagnosis is there to help you not them. I didn't get my real diagnosis until I was 26 after I became depressed, anxious and suicidal. It's not diagnosed as asbergers anymore so now I'm diagnosed as autistic. I know it never would have fixed the hard times but I think that getting the therapies and professional help would have made my life a lot easier. But I can't fix that. All I can do is get therapy now so I can make myself more employable.

    • @shatheprodigy
      @shatheprodigy 7 ปีที่แล้ว +66

      i have asbergers in addition to ptsd, from child abuse. here is my advice. im 26. start your own business ASAP or you will be miserable. adulthood is no easier. i have a small lawn care business and im thinking about getting a food car. some thing simple that you cant get fired from, and u can control the type of people who u have to work with.

  • @greenfroggy333
    @greenfroggy333 2 ปีที่แล้ว +227

    The part where he mention friendships really hit me personally, because I have the syndrome and have always suffered with friendship issues. I remember in primary school having a stage in my life where I had no one to play with during recess or lunch, and so I would talk to whatever teachers where on yard duty. This went to the point where I had a closer bond to the teachers rather then my actual peers. I also began to memorise which teachers were on yard duty and when, considering that not all teachers were ones that I was willing to talk to because I didn’t have a pre-existing bond to them. I would also hate working in groups, because I would always feel like an outcast and none of my ideas would ever go through as I had a different way of thinking opposed to everyone else. I am also very opinionated on almost everything I think, so that didn’t get me any popularity points. I was also a firm and open christian, which also had the same affect (primary school kids are mean). Eventually I got back into a social group and was able to enjoy my last year of primary school (year 7).

    • @greenfroggy333
      @greenfroggy333 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@Cortesevasive What do you mean?

    • @greenfroggy333
      @greenfroggy333 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@Cortesevasive I more so meant what do you mean about ovethinking?

    • @kitty_k4to
      @kitty_k4to 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@Cortesevasive huh

    • @greenfroggy333
      @greenfroggy333 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Oh damn he 100% left

    • @patchr5491
      @patchr5491 2 ปีที่แล้ว +8

      Well I'm sorry you have to struggle with that. But I'm so glad you believe in Jesus!!!! He made you just as you are for a reason. You can help others!!! Maybe you should look for a support group who has the same disorder. God bless and thank you for sharing!

  • @isaacretana549
    @isaacretana549 10 ปีที่แล้ว +89

    I have never been diagnosed with Asperger's, but I've always struggled with many stages in my life. I'm no psychologist, so I won't go as far as saying I have this disorder. But mostly everything on that board applies to me and it definitely answers a lot of questions why I do things or say things the way I do.

    • @jatodoosuur5849
      @jatodoosuur5849 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      With the gradual using of dr imenherbal recommendation for autism , whom I met on TH-cam , my son is totally free from autism with his speech cleared and behavior ok as he now respond to orders and act right . Thank you Dr imenherbal for your help

    • @mrfelixnewblankatm8827
      @mrfelixnewblankatm8827 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      living with asperger's has been difficult for me and this Dr imenherbal I meet on channel makes me feel great that someone knows what my life is like ...

    • @continablockett8640
      @continablockett8640 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      I feel like I have this but I just drink to feel normal and have normal conversation with people

    • @Christhreeonesix
      @Christhreeonesix ปีที่แล้ว

      ​@Azim Premji be gone bots

    • @florisvandenberg7424
      @florisvandenberg7424 6 หลายเดือนก่อน

      I believe many Aspies are self diagnosed.

  • @renannaw
    @renannaw 6 ปีที่แล้ว +157

    The ‘one sided conversation’ thing really bothers me, when I’m talking to somone I try to talk about them and then they try to talk about me and it really makes me feel uncomfortable.

    • @edgemadefoxe367
      @edgemadefoxe367 3 ปีที่แล้ว +28

      I'm always the side that doesn't talk and just listen (i mostly get lost into my own thought)

    • @chriswilliams1096
      @chriswilliams1096 3 ปีที่แล้ว +11

      In my 30's I started experimenting by making sure I asked more questions than made statements. It took a lot of discipline but, with practice, conversations became more productive. It also helps that you have some time to watch others facial expressions and try to match them to what they are saying.
      Most of my adult social life has been about inventing little social experiments and see if the results match my predictions. I have mentioned this to NT friends and they mostly think it's funny (in an endearing way).

    • @sallgoodman2323
      @sallgoodman2323 3 ปีที่แล้ว +5

      @@chriswilliams1096 I can relate to the experiments you pursued in social situations. I learned to do the same thing, by asking questions and listening whereas before I would carry on with my topics of interest. However, I find it harder to maintain focus on the flow of the conversation which is impacting my relationship with my wife and daughter. It's a lifelong process to be sure. Thanks for sharing your thoughts 👍

    • @97I30T
      @97I30T 3 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@edgemadefoxe367 Same, I'm almost always the one who gets caught on the receiving end of a one-sided conversation. It's quite frustrating at times. I try to contribute to the conversation but I usually just get talked over or interrupted.

    • @somenothing7914
      @somenothing7914 3 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@97I30T if ppl consistently overtalk u, explain it to them if u think they really care. if u dont, probably not the best people to be talking to

  • @florisvandenberg7424
    @florisvandenberg7424 6 หลายเดือนก่อน +8

    For the majority of my life i felt there's something wrong with me and i needed to change. Then i realised i'm an Aspie and something clicked. Now i can accept me for who i am. There are benefits of being Asperger too, you know.

  • @candlelight_8182
    @candlelight_8182 6 ปีที่แล้ว +328

    Upon reading 70% of these comments I feel like there are some things I must make clear
    #1 Yes, Asperger's is a funny word.
    #2 No, we're not retarded.
    #3 While there are people with Asperger's who're assholes (just like they're people with any form of disability, mental illness, etc. who're assholes) most of the time we just don't understand that situation or the conversation, we don't intend to be mean.
    #4 as with everyone we do have the ability to make friends, it's just more difficult for us.
    #5 Asperger's was removed from the DSM5 because medical experts wanted all forms of autism to be grouped into the same category, most people on the spectrum (like me) prefer the term Asperger's over high-functioning autism for many reasons. For me they're A) because I found people understand Asperger's more than autism, and B) because the term autism as more weight to it that Asperger's. What I mean is that when most people hear Asperger's they think of people who're just odd or may need a bit of extra help. When people hear Autism they tend to think of those kids who sit in the corner and rock back and forward all day and talk to trees or whatever.
    #6 We're not trying to be smartasses, that's just the way we talk.
    #7 Ok, this is something I thought I'd never have to say in my whole life, Asperger's is NOT A FUCKING POLITICAL THEORY!!!

    • @OneCatShortOfCrazy
      @OneCatShortOfCrazy 6 ปีที่แล้ว +48

      #8 we like making lists :P

    • @atypicalaspie7208
      @atypicalaspie7208 4 ปีที่แล้ว +22

      Hey! Some of us do talk to trees. 😀

    •  4 ปีที่แล้ว

      @ukkr second amendment protects gun rights of even people with diagnoses. in other countries though AS will often disqualify you from owning a gun or driving a car even

    • @beachbum4691
      @beachbum4691 4 ปีที่แล้ว +11

      @@OneCatShortOfCrazy Yup' :) I've actually been told that I think and speak in lists, to me it's just being consice.

    • @beachbum4691
      @beachbum4691 4 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @ Sad when it impacts a career :(

  • @christianalmli9085
    @christianalmli9085 10 ปีที่แล้ว +339

    I was diagnosed with a mild form of it when I was 14. I'm 23 now and I feel very strongly towards never having had it in the first place. There was definitely a point in my life where a combination of social anxiety, lack of social skills and just plain being a a weird and awkward teen could make people draw the conclusion that I suffer from that syndrome, but the me of today contrasts the 14 year old me in so many ways that I just think I must have been wrongly diagnosed.

    • @Eli-uj7nl
      @Eli-uj7nl 9 ปีที่แล้ว +18

      Woah!! I'm 14 right now (male) and think I have AS, but I sound exactly like what you were describing your 14 year old self as - social anxiety, awkwardness, lack of social skills. I'm very confused if I have it or not now. Did you overcome it or did it just go away (social awkwardness)? Please help.

    • @russelladams7134
      @russelladams7134 9 ปีที่แล้ว +14

      Well you should know yourself better than anyone else. I had a learning disability at as a 5 year old kid. School was sometimes difficult for me. College was very difficult. Several years ago I was diagnosed with Asperger's syndrome. I'm 47 years old. My earlier years was very difficult interacting with people.

    • @christianalmli9085
      @christianalmli9085 9 ปีที่แล้ว +6

      Elijah Wilkinson Well, one out of two things are the case here: Either one can have Asberger syndrome, but later, through social training and exercises get to a point where your previous tendencies and impulses don't apply to you anymore, or you simply have it and you're forever bound to act a certain way because of it. I really odn't know which one of those is true.
      As for helping you out, I appreciate and am honored that you think I'm in any way qualified to give you advice about this, but I'm really not sure I am. All I can say is that for me, a combination of opening up to people, letting total go of my low self esteem and just plain getting older seems to have shed my awkward idiosyncrasies to the point where I can confidently say I'm quite normal and healthy and unafraid of social interaction with people. Also, one of the biggest factors of Asbergers is the lack of empathy and understanding how other people around you think and relating to their behavioral patterns. How I overcame this obstacle was simply just engaging with them and learning from others. And don't get the wrong idea, it's not like I cracked and then memorized the patterns to a rubics cube, it's more a case of all the pieces just sliding into place on their own for me to see.
      In short, life happened and I emerged a different person. I think it takes an extreme case of Asbergers for it to have a proper iron grip on you as a neurological disorder for you to break out of. If you just have social anxiety, which is quite common at your age, you might just need to learn to like yourself more and learn the fact that other people aren't that different from you, and they're certainly not on a higher level than you either.

    • @MeadeSkeltonMusic
      @MeadeSkeltonMusic 9 ปีที่แล้ว +9

      christian almli Well I was recently diagnosed at age 36. I was also 14 years old when a less clinical diagnosis was made. As a teenager, I had extreme difficulty making friends and was the "class clown" making comments that were taken as inappropriate. Over time things can get less pronounced, but they never completely go away. For example, I thought I make perfect eye contact now. When the Dr said I only made eye contact about 5% of the time. You may think you are better as an adult, but that is because as adults our brain chemistry does change and judgement improves. Still, you can't reform completely and the symptoms are still present, but to us seem "normal". But not to neurotypicals
      I have gotten good at faking being normal. However, under stress the mask breaks and I can easily have a melt down. For example when getting suck on a topic or an issue that is bother me, it gets so overwhelming I could not even go to work. And then I have lost jobs because of this. Aspergers may improve over time, but its mainly due to putting on a mask and copying normal behaviors which are not innate and do not come naturally to the affected individual.

    • @bambinosto
      @bambinosto 9 ปีที่แล้ว

      christian almli i've just got diagnosed with it actually just got home and i'm 22 so i guess i'm late to the party

  • @LuisElChido8
    @LuisElChido8 ปีที่แล้ว +6

    People used to call me narcissist and egocentric for years, no one wanted to be my friend when I was very young because I was “different” and “weird”. Now that I am adult I still struggle making friends, sometimes it is hard to make a conversation and talk appropriately. I have a girlfriend and she wants me to stay with her most of the time, but I LOVE to be alone for a certain time and she gets mad for that.
    I am 21 years old, a few months ago, my mom confessed I have Asperger’s syndrome and I never knew that, now that she confessed it, it explains everything.

  • @ingenious4t
    @ingenious4t 8 ปีที่แล้ว +17

    This is the clearest explanation we've ever witnessed of Aspergers. Thank you Dr Sheldon.

    • @GhostIntoTheFog
      @GhostIntoTheFog 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      Thank him for what? Explaining a disorder no longer recognized by the medical community?

  • @highplainsdrifter699
    @highplainsdrifter699 4 ปีที่แล้ว +51

    Older aspie here, it's like playing the board game manopoly , no matter how hard you try to win, it's always back to the starting line again.

  • @lostsoul4784
    @lostsoul4784 3 ปีที่แล้ว +12

    This guy just described my entire life in 6 minutes and 43 seconds

  • @cowlord120
    @cowlord120 9 ปีที่แล้ว +46

    I'm 22 and was diagnosed with aspergers when I was very young. I had a lot of difficulty socializing with people when I was younger and felt very isolated. When I finally made friends as an early teenager I remember really struggling with appropriate behavior. I sort of felt like I could act however I wanted without consequence. I put a lot of effort into improving my social skills and some friends of mine now said they would have never guessed I was on the spectrum, I've even been told by teachers and friends that I have a high EQ and very socially aware. In terms of socializing I now deal with social anxiety but in very specific settings like at my small liberal arts college or around new coworkers. It's very odd and hard to explain. However in some places I feel very comfortable and come of as charismatic. I also have a hard time with sarcasm when I first meet someone, as well as my tone of voice not matching how I feel (so like I may sound annoyed at someone when I'm really not) I also thought the AD/HD aspect was interesting because it reminded me of how I sometimes struggle in reading or sitting down to do work. I'm sorry to ramble. I've just been thinking a lot about my relationship with aspergers and how it has changed or even if I had it to begin with. Cheers everyone!

    • @aerozz8851
      @aerozz8851 ปีที่แล้ว

      Thank you! I'm 20 years old and its good to know that I am not the only one struggling with this. Hope 29 treats you well.

    • @SebbyPlaysMusic
      @SebbyPlaysMusic ปีที่แล้ว

      I just recently did an evaluation and I want to tell you that you shouldn't feel sorry for your tendencies because you're weird and it's beautiful. :)
      I kept thinking "well what if I come off weird?" regarding common social interactions. So I apologize for it. But honestly, if I can't be myself, why would I try to change that to fit in? In those circumstances, I lose either way. So now I hope I'm weird. Because weird means something new and that means I have a purpose.

  • @npc1821
    @npc1821 7 ปีที่แล้ว +42

    I have Aspergers. I was diagnosed when I was 11 and through my whole life I struggled with communication and social ques. But through years of observing and practicing I feel like I have mastered that and honestly I'm like the life of the party now and I have no difficulty gaining friends. Although I still struggle in other areas like being in large crowds and bright lights but it's manageable so I'm pretty happy where I am in my life. If anyone struggles with this just know that you can operate very well with this syndrome if you learn to control it.

    • @Foxiniofficial
      @Foxiniofficial 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      how did you overcome it ?

    • @Koeras16
      @Koeras16 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      @@Foxiniofficial Sounds like that person just had the 'Fake it until you make it' attitude.

    • @flyfin108
      @flyfin108 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      you will end up with stress disorder with that, it dosnt matter if you learned to tolerate social situations well, its still taxing

    • @Dacarts
      @Dacarts 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

      I had that attitude, and it's so damn taxing like someone else mentioned@@Koeras16

  • @sergiogonzalez5958
    @sergiogonzalez5958 4 ปีที่แล้ว +53

    When I was in 4th grade, I was diagnosed with ADHD but my family didn’t know much about it and didn’t want me to take any meds so we didn’t pay much attention to it. But now that I found this video I felt that he was completely describing me. And its crazy how many things now make sense.

    • @bellatrixblklestrange8926
      @bellatrixblklestrange8926 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Omg same here I was told I had adhd and the teachers and doctors wanted me to be on meds but my parents refused, watching this video is a big eye opener it also explains my life! I am going to ask my dr. about this!

    • @koriwaldrip7426
      @koriwaldrip7426 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      I think I have AS and ADHD. I was diagnosed with ADHD at 18. Never got treatment but im trying to get it now that Im in my 20s

  • @romeynaicker4082
    @romeynaicker4082 5 ปีที่แล้ว +19

    I have a 16 year old who has AS . He is socially isolated and that depresses him and he also suffers with anxiety. Loves mathematics but can’t be bothered with his other subjects. Luckily the school that he goes to supports him and they understand that he is different. Having a child who is different means that you are not only raising him but it also becomes a community issue. I have had to be involved throughout his schooling life but it comes with the package.

  • @Lunnalee100
    @Lunnalee100 5 ปีที่แล้ว +309

    And there is virtually zero help for adults with Asperger's. Also, it was removed from the dsm. Sadly it's a life long struggle

    • @krisweaver8939
      @krisweaver8939 5 ปีที่แล้ว +21

      There is help; it's expensive. I was diagnosed in my late 20's. I live in southern California and UCLA medical has a great diagnostic program. I had to write a time line of my life from as far back as I could remember: school, work, social life, personal life experiences. There were 3 days of testing from specialists. The final segment was either parent (my mother) coming in for her own private interview about my childhood; milestones, behaviors, etc. It took over a month and the cost was 5,000 dollars; my insurance did pay for half. But now I have a diagnosis as well as continuing treatment from the specialists at UCLA. It's like anything else. If you really want to do it, it is available, but you're going to have to pay or it.

    • @littleredhen3354
      @littleredhen3354 5 ปีที่แล้ว +34

      Agree! Getting a definitive diagnosis does nothing because there is no support system in this country for aspies. They are ignored and their very real struggles are dismissed.

    • @debramccafferty2918
      @debramccafferty2918 5 ปีที่แล้ว +9

      Amanda Arteno , my son is living in his own in subsidized housing but he has a lot of support from his Dad and me. I don’t believe he could do it without someone and wish there were group homes for Aspies. We worry what will happen to him and will he be a burden to his sisters.

    • @larrygrebler5054
      @larrygrebler5054 5 ปีที่แล้ว +11

      I know just what you mean. In my day there wasn't any info out there. Have had and still do have a very hard life. With God's help I get by.

    • @pakabe8774
      @pakabe8774 5 ปีที่แล้ว +30

      @@SatanenPerkele I don't need cure, I need tolerance - if acceptance is to much for many.

  • @suziehartwright
    @suziehartwright 2 ปีที่แล้ว +10

    Thank you for making and sharing this video. Also, thank you to everyone in this comment section who shared their thoughts, thinking process, experiences, feelings, insights and desires. May you continue reaching your goals and happiness.

  • @smnl0192
    @smnl0192 9 ปีที่แล้ว +744

    The 'literal' thing is more of a misinterpretation of aspergers humour in most cases. It's our way of fooling around.

    • @ShawntotheTay
      @ShawntotheTay 9 ปีที่แล้ว +4

      +SMNL019 hahahahaha! too good

    • @crazedautisticanarchist9704
      @crazedautisticanarchist9704 8 ปีที่แล้ว +133

      I really do both I do the literal thing as a joke and by accident (usually when it is least convenient)

    • @smnl0192
      @smnl0192 8 ปีที่แล้ว +90

      Mordred S I love the jokes tough. People react so confused when you look up to the skies and say "really? I don't see it..." after they said "it's raining cats and dogs"

    • @crazedautisticanarchist9704
      @crazedautisticanarchist9704 8 ปีที่แล้ว +24

      +SMNL019 I know its hilarious

    • @alinelaura7714
      @alinelaura7714 8 ปีที่แล้ว +20

      +SMNL019 For a while in my life I did believe it (6-7 years, don't judge me), but as soon as I knew that that was an expression, I pretended a lot that I didn't just to joke around xD

  • @sarahw7936
    @sarahw7936 ปีที่แล้ว +10

    My son was just diagnosed at 6. I have three other children without this diagnosis and they’re all a joy as well in the way God has made them. My 6 year old is absolutely amazing though! He has an outstanding memory (knows every country in the world and most by square mileage/size), and is honestly just remarkable in so many ways. I feel like this diagnosis, though tough to swallow initially for many people, is actually a huge blessing. He is an amazing kid - and I’m noticing more people like him and they are all amazing humans made in the image of God. I’m really glad his school encouraged us to get him assessed because instead of being frustrated about the little things that can be bothersome as parents of a young child with Aspergers, we are more understanding and actually appreciative of our son’s gifts/differences. He is extremely intelligent and loving. He definitely has different demands and needs than my other kids - but he amazes us every day. So incredibly thankful to be his mom ❤

    • @CdEmm50
      @CdEmm50 ปีที่แล้ว

      Stop fucking so much.

  • @rouissiachraf
    @rouissiachraf 3 ปีที่แล้ว +8

    I love how he managed to deliver such amount of information in such a short time

    • @rouissiachraf
      @rouissiachraf 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      @Wesley Hinson doc herbs ?

  • @jakemedeiros3929
    @jakemedeiros3929 2 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    Diagnosed today at 20 years old. Crying in front of my computer, so glad to finally have an answer to who I am and why I felt so wrong and different.

    • @al1665
      @al1665 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      There's nothing wrong with you

    • @koriwaldrip7426
      @koriwaldrip7426 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Yep I felt the same way when I read about AS and ADHD too. Currently trying to get evaluated again so I can at least start treatment for the adhd part 🤦🏾‍♀️

  • @coffeecat086
    @coffeecat086 2 ปีที่แล้ว +6

    I love the way you have explained all of this. I have a diagnosis of Asperger’s and am have my six year tested as well. I see many symptoms I exhibited as a child. I’m hoping that whatever the issue is that we can make school experience for him so he doesn’t go through the same issues that I did.

  • @redfade5144
    @redfade5144 3 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    I wish this was my teacher, he explains it all slowly and nicely.

  • @dylanarmstrong9328
    @dylanarmstrong9328 5 ปีที่แล้ว +21

    I struggled a lot with AS as a kid but over time after becoming more aware of what I was doing I was able to stop it. I now have very little issue interacting with others and I feel more self aware than others thanks to that. I was lucky in the regard that I didn’t develop any neurological disorders such as ADHD, anxiety, or depression. My biggest problem was just that I would regularly act out in ways that were sometimes off putting to others. As I matured this issue slowly resolved itself through self reflection and experiencing further relationships.

  • @kaytlinraymond4586
    @kaytlinraymond4586 9 ปีที่แล้ว +151

    My boyfriend has this syndrome and I learn from it everyday. I try not to get mad, but at some point I do have to explain to him what the simple things are and to be honest I think its adorable. Even though I dont know what its like, I still love him no matter what and I still think people need to learn what this is so they don't be mean. It really bothers me when someone makes fun of him

    • @adam.5333
      @adam.5333 6 ปีที่แล้ว

      Kaytlin Raymond I know what it’s like you just find out how to make weird noises you then get ADDICTED to them like I do this gawg gawg gawg also an elephant noises u with my touch at my lips lbumbum lbumbum please don’t laugh it’s a serious syndrome and I hope he dosent have it also I only have about 3 friends and I don’t like that everyone else has like 10! I don’t know if you can cure it but pray for him. And your bad at grammar so yeah watch my grammar it bad.

    • @laodemuhammadyanibay3143
      @laodemuhammadyanibay3143 6 ปีที่แล้ว

      who name your friends and where you from?

    • @shawnhigginbotham5268
      @shawnhigginbotham5268 5 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      I'm on the spectrum of asbergs minor Austium I use to have a gf I dated a girl for 8 months we broke.up for.4 months Than got back together than she broke up with me 7 months later maybe just fell out of love with me and I think its because of my disability

    • @MaoRatto
      @MaoRatto 5 ปีที่แล้ว +6

      It's essentially by having Asperger's Syndrome. It's like you are emotionally cut off everyone else, you have to take things at face value as it is concrete, when you look at someone's face it appears as essentially a blue screen of death or blurry as if can't read facial expressions, it is guessing every step of the way. It just repeats and repeats.
      As since you have no collective consciousness, you are forced to do individual things only as you can't understand or feel other's emotions, but instead you have to work your ass off by rationalizing the most mundane things ever.
      It takes a toll on everyone as they will always say you're a weirdo, but how are you supposed to know your odd behavior if you have no collective consciousness?

    • @joyful_tanya
      @joyful_tanya 5 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Kaytlin Raymond my son has Aspergers and I understand completely. He is now 28 and wants nothing to do with me. It saddens me greatly because I love him, but I understand 😢

  • @nerfherder4284
    @nerfherder4284 2 ปีที่แล้ว +9

    I think some of these things come from a feeling of being overwhelmed or too intense. I have a hard time with eye contact because it is so intimate, and social interactions are energy consuming and intense. This video is a great explanation of "this" 😁

  • @elisabethsalmeron4502
    @elisabethsalmeron4502 4 ปีที่แล้ว +76

    I just recently starting going out with this extremely nice guy, he’s sweet and caring and I love him to bits. It was around the first few times we started calling that he explained he had Aspergers and how it was on the spectrum. Growing up I had a few friends who had it but I never really noticed. I’ve been taking the past few weeks to study up on it more and it’s been really fascinating to learn about, it’s also helped me better understand some of the things he isn’t very good at or triggers him. This video was really helpful! It also expanded more in depth some of things that were confusing me ((like the social cue things and blunt honesty. I mean, I appreciate the honesty, but it is a bit shocking when I’m randomly sitting with him and straight says he wants to hook up.)) Thank you for the video 🥰

    • @neggsta10
      @neggsta10 4 ปีที่แล้ว +6

      Hi girl! That's legit why I'm here! I just started going out with a guy and am learning for the same reasons. I know more about how it affects children but not so much adults, so I'm trying to learn more about adults with Aspergers so that I can understand him better. He is also really nice and caring like the guy you know, but blunt and doesn't always get cues. The nice thing is that they are usually extremely smart and intellectual, and verbally sophisticated :)

    • @sevnesioran6193
      @sevnesioran6193 3 ปีที่แล้ว +6

      I'm got very lucky with my gf. She understands me even though she is quite normal.
      When I, out of nowhere, tell her that I want to lick her face as a demonstration of love she laughs a lot.
      But I really mean it.
      Anyway, I'm glad you and your SO are getting along as well.

    • @strongindependentblackwoma1887
      @strongindependentblackwoma1887 3 ปีที่แล้ว +4

      Wait a guy with asperger syndrome doing hook ups.... amazing :O

    • @elisabethsalmeron4502
      @elisabethsalmeron4502 3 ปีที่แล้ว +5

      @@strongindependentblackwoma1887 Er yeah we ended up not working out since he literally just wanted a hook up and got pissed when I kept saying no lmao

    • @thinginground5179
      @thinginground5179 3 ปีที่แล้ว +5

      @@elisabethsalmeron4502 yikes that escalated quickly

  • @a13xlaircey666
    @a13xlaircey666 7 ปีที่แล้ว +15

    Right on the nose! This guy actually IS an expert, and is obviously NOT just some dumb neurotypical with a degree and title like most of the so-called "experts" are out there! Just for that, I am subscribing! Thank you, sir, for actually being professional, and spreading truth and awareness, and not just horror stories and lies!
    P.S: I excelled in all my classes, bringing home multiple 100's on my report cards in high school. I'm not the only one, but although it is surprisingly common, especially in math, it is not something to automatically be expected. Also, I have a strange learning style: either I get something completely, or I don't get it at all, and if I learn something I "don't get at all", it just clicks almost instantly!

  • @JaneDoe-bc8hx
    @JaneDoe-bc8hx 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    That chart and the man's reading of it was the best explanation of Asperger's Syndrome that I have ever heard. Perfect. Thank you.

    • @JaneDoe-bc8hx
      @JaneDoe-bc8hx 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      I couldn’t agree more. It is excellent.

    • @cryptohonesty7662
      @cryptohonesty7662 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@JaneDoe-bc8hx but what else is there ??

  • @lindaleelaw5277
    @lindaleelaw5277 3 ปีที่แล้ว +7

    At 74, the inept feeling never goes away.

  • @DominatorLegend
    @DominatorLegend 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

    I hate having Asperger, it has been nothing but a curse to me. The school's psychologist detected "anomalies" in me as far back as when I was 4 years old, but I never did the test until 21 years later, which yielded positive.
    Because of how people have treated me throughout my life I've come to develop a huge mistrust of everyone and everything - my "fight or flight" sense goes off with literally anybody that speaks to me. It's also one of the reasons, along with noise, why I've come to hate cities, seeing them more as human hives than anything. Luckily I live in a small rural town.

  • @blueapple1061
    @blueapple1061 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    This is my mother. I am so relieved that she was not as cruel purposely as I had previously believed.

  • @igrifftv6633
    @igrifftv6633 5 ปีที่แล้ว +10

    One sided conversation hit the hardest for me. I always have a wall up and don’t let ppl in it’s burned a lot of relations. People don’t truly get to know you for you until they see your highs and your lows and I only exhibit my highs like I’m always okay. Always there for ppl but don’t want no one there for me. Rather suffer in silence than seek help it’s toxic but I’m getting better haha

  • @Joelvete6
    @Joelvete6 9 ปีที่แล้ว +69

    I'm asperger but I can understand sarcasm and I'm also a comedian. I'm into the minority of course.

    • @taktako4692
      @taktako4692 4 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @amin_ rahman he's saying he has Asperger's. He said it different

    • @antonioazulamarillo7579
      @antonioazulamarillo7579 4 ปีที่แล้ว +5

      I have an excessively sarcastic mother (did I spell it correctly).
      That's why I understand sarcasm.
      It was always: understand the joke or DIE.

    • @tanziasahmad
      @tanziasahmad 4 ปีที่แล้ว +13

      @amin_ rahman Autism Spectrum Disorder affects everyone on the spectrum differently. If you meet one person on the spectrum, you've only met one. But what everyone on the spectrum has in common, is that they face difficulties/possess traits in all of these areas; social communication & interaction, hyper/hypo-sensitivies (to touch, smell, textures, sight, sound, balance and movement), engage in repetitive behaviours, obsessive interests and routines. Having difficulties in all of these areas will look different to one Autistic individual in comparison to another Autistic individual.

    • @samuelasanderinos1521
      @samuelasanderinos1521 4 ปีที่แล้ว +5

      LoL I’ve heard the majority of standup comedians are on the autistic spectrum. It’s because their minds deconstructed what humor is to recreate it.

    • @edgemadefoxe367
      @edgemadefoxe367 3 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      My humour only consists of sarcasm and hyperboles

  • @ZeykronZ
    @ZeykronZ 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    I'm up at 2am losing my mind right now. This man just perfectly described my insecurities and told me it's consistent with SOMETHING. This feels like finding a missing puzzle piece

  • @TheLadyDiazepam
    @TheLadyDiazepam 5 ปีที่แล้ว +11

    I've never been formally diagnosed, but I think this is me. I'm no genius (IQ 125), but I did very well academically, and not very well socially. Things started to go pear-shaped in 3rd grade--that's the first time I remember a teacher yelling at me for working ahead, completing more lessons than required, or solving a problem too quickly. This was to happen many times in the following years. (My school district was standard-issue, white suburban America, and most of the teachers were dumb Elementary Education majors.) I was bad at sports, so I was miserable in gym class (teacher was a gung-ho meathead who belittled me), and didn't discover individual sports until university. Teachers were always after me to "come out of my shell." I read at 12th grade level by the time I was 6th grade, but nearly failed Reading class because the material was so boring. I was, and still am, extremely noise-sensitive. I can remember being on a school bus, having a pounding headache because every other child on the bus was screaming at the top of its lungs, and thinking, "I wish they'd all die." Finally found my tribe in high school, thank God.

  • @alanastone5241
    @alanastone5241 5 ปีที่แล้ว +17

    I am a loner but only because I love the internet so much and It is so educational.

  • @1985JM
    @1985JM 3 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    I was diagnosed with Aspergers back in 2003 I was 17 years old & back then there was very little information about the disorder but thankfully nowadays there is way more help out there .

  • @dashiell3524
    @dashiell3524 ปีที่แล้ว +19

    I am 20, and I already have an official diagnosis of Aspergers. I generally found it difficult to communicate and interact well in group conversations and often remained silent and inattentive, yet I would successfully communicate during one to one conversations. Furthermore, I generally struggled to maintain eye contact while conversing, as I feared how I would be coming out. However, in academics, I excelled in mathematics while achieving mediocre to low grades in other subjects and struggled to sustain focus for long durations. The factors of attention deficiency and anxiety had further impeded my outlook and emotional well-being, leading to me questioning my abilities. After watching this video, I am becoming a lot more self-satisfied compared to how I was during the diagnosis. Additionally, I am getting reminders of my obsessions with international affairs, politics, and maps, which appeared awkward in the company of people, and it has made me self-satisfied.
    P.S. Apologies if I didn't articulate well, as the English language was my weakest subject.

    • @imprwikiimprwiki6898
      @imprwikiimprwiki6898 ปีที่แล้ว +4

      It’s interesting to me that you apologise for your vocab and yet this reads as more detailed than average

    • @dashiell3524
      @dashiell3524 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @imprwikiimprwiki6898 I thought so. However, I put this comment down out of fear that someone would hurl abuses at me. I'm getting the impression that I wasn't thinking rationally.

    • @Pippie5555
      @Pippie5555 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      Adarshvarma. I love how you write "it has made you self-satisfied". What a good expression.
      Nice. ❤

    • @dashiell3524
      @dashiell3524 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @Pippie5555 Thank you for your kind words.

  • @pgscontinuingjourney
    @pgscontinuingjourney 3 ปีที่แล้ว +7

    I really wish someone would have told me this year's ago. I was socially isolated for almost most of my life. That led to obesity, self isolation, shyness, slow learning, no opportunities to play any sports and living in fear because of being gay. I have been different from my family for years. But I feel now as if it is a continuing process for me to overcome my disabilities, even if I still have moments when I get mad at myself. But at the end of the day, I would rather have one true friend than a group of large false friends. If I have no boyfriend right now, I am at peace with being single. I am more active now than when I was younger. Most importantly, I had lost a incredible amount of weight. So thanks for sharing this!

    • @lightbeingpontifex
      @lightbeingpontifex 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      how to lose weight; eat once a day or not at all, no carbs no sugars, + exercise + all vitamins and minerals,,,

  • @laurachristianson1688
    @laurachristianson1688 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    This hits home for me, at 66 it describes most of my growing up period in the sixties. I was fortunate enough to have teachers from the second grade onward who gave me space. Extra books in second grade, individual reading program in 4th grade, advanced classes with other nerds in middle school, and X-classes in high school . I never had very many friends but I found peace in my solitude. Oddly enough my firstborn son is the same, now on is late thirties he still lives with his father, and works at the same job I obtained for him at the golf course I was working at, a groundskeeper with an MBA. I don’t think he ever understood why I had to leave his father (severe emotional, physical abuse) we were so close until I had to leave.

  • @welderella
    @welderella 5 ปีที่แล้ว +18

    It’s only after I leave a conversation do I realize what the person’s body language meant, if I think of it at all. I was told to talk about things that interest others, or ask them about themselves. But I could see that even though I was asking basic questions, the people were looking away.
    But even then I still didn’t not know how to walk away from the conversation. So, finally one person did. I look back on conversations from decades ago and realize the person gave me an incredible amount of body language to indicate they needed to leave, but I kept talking to them. In the middle of a conversation it is difficult to understand body language in real time. I’ve also been called pit on my body language numerous times, either being told it is not appropriate or dismissive, or my body language is saying one thing, and I’m saying another. As a child I always felt like other people understood social situations, even children my age, but I didn’t seem to understand. I always felt like other people were given a book of explanations, but I wasn’t. I was often laughed at when I didn’t understand what was going on. I had severe ADD symptoms, but no one had any answers or understanding back then. I was considered “intelligent”, so many times my struggles were overlooked.
    I have terrible balance and coordination, bumping into things constantly. Things like dodge ball were a nightmare. I was very bad at sports. Math made sense to me, and initially I excelled at math. But home life problems distracted me from my ability to learn.
    My dad was always socially inappropriate, talked about himself, lost interest in conversations if things didn’t understand him. No matter how much of his behavior was brought to his attention, he just never seemed to “get it”. Like me he had severe ADD, and ADHD, was alcoholic, but the two of us understand humor. I still take things literally. I have neighbors that say “stop over any time”, but something tells me they really don’t want me to. Or people will say “call me”, or be nice, but don’t really mean it. Others know this, and understand social niceties, but I don’t.
    Do I have this syndrome? I don’t know. I’ve noticed I want social interaction less and less, and my ability lately, to communicate with others has really gotten impaired. I think when I don’t practice at being social, I do more poorly.
    I’m glad for the internet. Boy, do I wish I had it when I was younger.

    • @rr.studios
      @rr.studios 3 ปีที่แล้ว

      Dont ask the internet, ask a medical licensed professional.

    • @flyfin108
      @flyfin108 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      "I look back on conversations from decades ago" i think many of us have no idea how "wierd" this sentence is for normies. i found its the one that confuses em most. when you start conversation from where it left 6months ago.
      one of my mates asked me that, could you atleast give some premises to what are you talking about

  • @frankbeltran1412
    @frankbeltran1412 9 ปีที่แล้ว +827

    Isn't there a better way to say Aspergers? I forget the correct pronunciation. People keep sounding it out "Ass Burgers".

    • @ryanj6514
      @ryanj6514 9 ปีที่แล้ว +74

      +Josef Goebel In UK it's pronounced ass-per-gers

    • @Kikuye
      @Kikuye 9 ปีที่แล้ว +30

      +Josef Goebel I just say it like "asp" as in the snake, asp. Asp - ergers.

    • @Cookie-xm2ts
      @Cookie-xm2ts 9 ปีที่แล้ว +111

      I literally just call it ass burgers because it's easier to say and it makes me happy :)

    • @jessicalamoureux8726
      @jessicalamoureux8726 8 ปีที่แล้ว +19

      I say it with the 'P'. -As-PER-gers

    • @freakoutofficialchannel883
      @freakoutofficialchannel883 8 ปีที่แล้ว +13

      It's asp er jers spelt aspergers

  • @az_man_1624
    @az_man_1624 3 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    As someone with Aspergers i had no idea what it actually was. This video helps alot.

  • @AndySalinger33
    @AndySalinger33 8 ปีที่แล้ว +13

    I really appreciate your chart and in-depth explanation. Life is hard. This helped at least one lone soul.

    • @crazy4jas
      @crazy4jas 3 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      I feel the same

    • @louiscomadena3230
      @louiscomadena3230 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@crazy4jas I feel the same too

  • @fritzschumacher6047
    @fritzschumacher6047 9 ปีที่แล้ว +304

    Almost every person I've ever met of above average intelligence fits this.

    • @Le_8x
      @Le_8x 4 ปีที่แล้ว +44

      Fritz Schumacher, Aspergers is common in talented and gifted people.

    • @fritzschumacher6047
      @fritzschumacher6047 4 ปีที่แล้ว +33

      @@Le_8x It seems to be the definition of talented and gifted people as opposed to "normies".

    • @raymondkidwell7135
      @raymondkidwell7135 3 ปีที่แล้ว +24

      @@fritzschumacher6047 That is more of a play on perception. For one- people with higher intelligence may not share the same interests as others or have a hard time finding people to interact with on their same level. As a result they may bury themselves in books or school work or some other task, and thus not develop good social skills. This is mainly due to a lack of practice rather than any innate difference. The jock who is hanging out with his friends every day developing social skills vs the nerd who is reading books and thus finds social interaction to be awkward. Then the second aspect would be a person of average intelligence may perceive the things a person of high intelligence says or does as weird simply because the person is thinking on a higher level.
      Aspergers could simply be an extreme case of social isolation rather than a chemical imbalance (I don't know enough about it and even the "experts" don't seem to have clear information on what it is). For example, people who read a lot or are on the computer a lot tend to develop near sightedness. It is a real medical condition that results from the lifestyle of being a geek. Of course some people may be near sighted for other reasons, but perhaps a similar phenomenon could be occurring with social behaviors, motor coordination etc.

    • @jon3706
      @jon3706 3 ปีที่แล้ว +16

      Don't get all high and mighty there isn't even that much evidence of increase in intelligence for people with asperger's just difference in interest. Its more of a cognitive trade off than a higher intelligence.

    • @marymonsterandcreatormary3783
      @marymonsterandcreatormary3783 3 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      That’s me.

  • @dan-iy5rs
    @dan-iy5rs 3 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Thank you for all comments. I am working with ASD kids and this discussing taught me a lot. Everybody, who works professionally in this field, should read your experience, feeling or how to deal with problems on daily basis. I will sent this video(because of comments ) to all my colleges.

    • @jmk1962
      @jmk1962 3 ปีที่แล้ว

      Thank you for being here and being willing to learn. My daughter and aspergers and I was shocked at how many psychiatrists had no clue about it or how to handle or understand her considering it is a neurological condition, they should know better but don't which is shocking.

    • @GhostIntoTheFog
      @GhostIntoTheFog 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      Please don’t encourage your colleagues to view this video. “Asperger’s syndrome” hasn’t been a valid diagnosis in the United States and other countries that use the DSM since 2013, and the ICD (the international version of the DSM) dropped it earlier this year. It was the medical equivalent of calling someone “high-functioning,” which is pejorative and judges autistic people based on how well we mask. The label is dead, no matter how many autistics mired in internalized ableism and martyr parents mired in externalized ableism don’t want it to be.

  • @dakotabrown7447
    @dakotabrown7447 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    Just recently been looking into myself as someone with adhd and aspergers it honestly makes alot of sense now..

  • @chrisd8760
    @chrisd8760 2 ปีที่แล้ว +7

    I have Tourette’s syndrome and I’ve always wondered if I can have Asperger’s too. I tend to have obsessions, particularly with 80s culture. Been obsessed with it for 18 years now. I dress it, collect photos that were taken from that era, do lots and lots of research on the decade because it just seems so awesome as well as collecting anything that was from that decade. Especially the year 1986, anything to do with that year entices me! The economics, educational system, political views. It was so different back then (even though I wasn’t around). Anything from that era and I mean anything gets me excited. The sound quality of. Lives from that era was great too. And I love sharing my affection with that time with everyone.

  • @CesarNostradamus-wj9uq
    @CesarNostradamus-wj9uq หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Still one of the best explanations.

  • @redictor
    @redictor 8 ปีที่แล้ว +47

    I honestly didn't know that the change in routine was part of my condition. That explains so much... nor did I know about the self discussion being a legit part of it as well. Again, explains a lot for me... and now I feel real bad for the times I've rambled about my own stuff yet when it came to other people talking about their stuff, I always lose interest.
    Also, the part where one get bothered by noise, it's always different in each individual. The roommate of one of my family's friends have aspergers, and he's really bothered by the sound of pages turning, meaning that in order for the other guy to study, he literally has to move to another room. Personally, I'm bothered by the sound that happen when you smack your lips or you're chewing on something... ESPECIALLY if you open the mouth even slightly while still chewing. It is IMPOSSIBLE for me to sit with other people and eating, even my own family, without me having to rush down my food and leave asap! Thankfully they're okay with me eating in my room, even more so after learning of my condition.

    • @walrusmcgee
      @walrusmcgee 8 ปีที่แล้ว +4

      I have a problem with interrupting people when they speak.

    • @redictor
      @redictor 8 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Robin i'm on the opposite side of that, people can interrupt me repeatedly when i try to speak up and i almost never fight back

    • @nenechi4ever
      @nenechi4ever 8 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      I don't think I have Asperger's, but I can totally feel you! I hate eating together with my family since I got 3 smaller siblings who apparently can't eat properly. They are also very loud, so I stay in my room for most of the time.

    • @idontgiveah00t
      @idontgiveah00t 8 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Elias Persson I failed a grade I was getting straight A's in because they didn't let me do one topic per day. [homeschool]

    • @MotherofImps
      @MotherofImps 8 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      I had a pathological hatred of balloons popping, and fireworks when I was a kid. now, I cannot stand the sound of someone knocking on a door, and ringing phones. Also, the sound of large groups of people makes me feel uncomfortable...I can't pick out individual noises in group situations...it all becomes a wall of sound.

  • @imjustsomeguy
    @imjustsomeguy 3 ปีที่แล้ว +9

    I'm certain that I have this. I'm almost in my mid-20s and I learned about Asperger's Syndrome not too long ago. When I was in high school, I was diagnosed with social anxiety. In my early 20's, I was diagnosed with ADHD. After being diagnosed with both of these, I still felt like I have something more than just ADHD and social anxiety. For a long time, I couldn't figure out what is really wrong with me until this year. I never watched this but I heard that when Elon Musk was on SNL, he said that he had Asperger's. At the time, I heard of it before but never knew what it was. So I googled it and the characteristics were identical to what I have

  • @tessgregory987
    @tessgregory987 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    I finally figured out I was autistic a few months ago and my husband finally told me that he'd pretty much always known it. I think he thought I'd be upset if he told me, but actually, so many things now slot into place with my diagnosis, and I no longer think I was odd.
    I was, and am, autistic, and I am so happy to know this at last.
    I'm 65, by the way - so it took me a long time to work it out, but knowing that there were countless people in my family with autism, and figuring out my son's autism, helped me along the way.

    • @tessgregory987
      @tessgregory987 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      @Wesley Hinson Reported. That is nonsense.

  • @xelphif
    @xelphif 9 ปีที่แล้ว +6

    I have aspergers. Came here to learn more. I definitely have it.

  • @balancedstereo
    @balancedstereo 5 ปีที่แล้ว +46

    They say Einstein probably had Asperger’s and his words mirror my own thoughts, so LIKE this if you agree . . . . "There came a turning point for me -- I came to understand that the virtue of my type lies in what I think, and not in how well I express my feelings -- My thoughts encompass me, so I can't easily engage in chatter; just as one wielding a hammer can't then easily play the violin -- I can love humanity it seems, but I'm just not cut out for close personal ties -- I've never really belonged to any country, circle of friends, or even to my own family -- My need to restore within myself has increased over the years -- The resulting isolation is often bitter, but I have never really regretted it completely -- If I'm cut off from the sympathy of others, then I'm also independent of their opinions and prejudices -- I feel the Solace and Virtue that lies in the Insignificance of the Individual and it makes me happy -- I have always sought to gain just a glimpse of the order that lies hidden in nature -- Our search for understanding is all that really matters -- The rest can truly be forgotten.” . . . . Albert Einstein, "How I See the World" . . .

    • @alemujica3163
      @alemujica3163 5 ปีที่แล้ว +6

      Balanced Stereo damn. I could see myself writing this at some point in my life. Especially the inability to form close ties, not regretting being alone even when it’s hard, and finding that the highest calling and purpose one can have in life is learning and understanding the world.

    • @THE_DEMO_GOAT
      @THE_DEMO_GOAT 5 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      All fucken makes sense now 🤯

    • @THE_DEMO_GOAT
      @THE_DEMO_GOAT 5 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@SatanenPerkele Nein

  • @bebopbeth7
    @bebopbeth7 3 ปีที่แล้ว +5

    You nailed this video! Such good info. I wish I saw this 10 years ago when we knew nothing about Aspergers. Teachers need to learn about Aspergers in the child’s Kindergarten years. We didn’t find out til my son was 14, two years ago.

  • @marcgetz81
    @marcgetz81 ปีที่แล้ว +8

    This was very helpful! Thank you for this video! I am a 27 year old male and I have a lot of the symptoms of aspergers. I am considering doing some sort of test for aspergers just to hopefully help me in life and understand myself more and hopefully explain why I am how I am. I've struggled so much with having friends and have always been kind of a loner. I am married though and I think and actual diagnosis of aspergers would help my marriage and help my wife understand me more. The way I am holds me back in life as far as jobs. I've worked since I was 18 and I drive but most jobs are very uncomfortable for me and I have major issues with change and I like a routine schedule. I am very socially awkward. I take anxiety medication and it helps some but I feel like if I actually do have aspergers it would explain a lot for me. Being an adult is pretty hard for me with the responsibility that comes with being an adult. I don't understand sarcasm and I take things literally almost all the time and body language is hard for me to read. Also I think my wife might have this or a form of autism so that might make sense why we match so well together, lol.

  • @MontanaReallySucks
    @MontanaReallySucks 11 ปีที่แล้ว +8

    I was labeled with Asperger's syndrome. I am working on a PhD in psychology, now, and I find this label a little strange for me personally. Although I have had communication problems with people, I imagine they may not be any greater than neuro-typical people. My suggestion for people with Asperger's is to explore Buddhist psychology. The stresses of modern life may be partially to blame for this Asperger's concept. Many people are having trouble integrating cognitions and affects.

  • @marieboutin9054
    @marieboutin9054 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    thank you for your video. I recognise myself in what you are describing. Such a hard life I've had. Made efforts again and again to no avail. Could not continue teaching as social contacts were exhausting me. Did not have a successful life at all. I 'm glad to be old in a way. Have a family who did not help at all;

  • @margarethralph9770
    @margarethralph9770 2 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    I was diagnosed at 72. Know i have experienced a life of hell. Some people saw something different in me as a child already something that gave them the right to abuse and victimize me at 5 id been raped and sexually exploited for the rest of my life. I thank God for tears and melt downs cos they helped me cope. Today i know it was a walk of life i chose to do from heaven thinking i could do it for the teaching behind it. I look back and realize what a pure gem i was in handling my walk as best i could. I have taken the lessons and im not angry or bitter at anyone. It was my learning path and it made me an amazing person by not being bitter or angry. Im content that i walked my path as best i could considering the circumstances i needed to cope with.

    • @butterflytiffany
      @butterflytiffany 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      Sending you so much Love 💗💗💗 you sound like a beautiful person Margareth. Blessings of Healing, wholeness, and peace to you 💕

  • @ultimoguerreiro82
    @ultimoguerreiro82 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    Socialization is tiring for us, but we can do it. We can train ourselves to function well in society and lead a pretty "normal" life.

  • @heycoreytoo
    @heycoreytoo 3 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    I was born in 1961. If I'd been born in 1991, when general awareness of autism began to grow, I'm quite certain I would have been diagnosed as being somewhere on the autism spectrum. Instead, I was just a weird kid. This video and many of the public comments reflect some of my own experiences in life.
    Somewhere in my 20s, I learned that my ability to stay very focused for extended periods, among other traits, was something most people don't have. It served me well over the course of my career. So, to be clear, it isn't all bad. And self-awareness is a big plus in anyone's life.
    Oh ... and I was a master of social distancing lonnng before it was a thing. :-D
    I just wanted to say, eight years after publishing this video on TH-cam, its message is still having a positive impact on the audience it reaches. Thank You!

    • @koen8185
      @koen8185 ปีที่แล้ว

      Well well , I could have written this myself , thanks for your comment ,
      by the way , I'm from '61 too , just turned 62 ,
      greetings from A'dam... 🍻

    • @koen8185
      @koen8185 ปีที่แล้ว

      Oh , forgot to say this about social distancing ,
      my anxiety and problem with family distancing ,
      I was out , but couldn't refuse a nice invitation years ago , a family reunion ,
      and then it happens , you're sucked in again ,
      I thought I was out , but they keep on pulling me back in !
      There is a golden rule amongst Aspies ,
      At all costs , keep the family at distance...

  • @Mrcruz6935
    @Mrcruz6935 8 ปีที่แล้ว +93

    I have aspergers and I have lots of friends who are nice to me

    • @BoyDanny93
      @BoyDanny93 8 ปีที่แล้ว +5

      +Liam Cruz i wouldn't be happy saying that, they're being nice to you just to make you feel you're not left out

    • @Mrcruz6935
      @Mrcruz6935 8 ปีที่แล้ว +22

      BoyDanny93 no they not they like me as a friend

    • @Mrcruz6935
      @Mrcruz6935 8 ปีที่แล้ว

      Fern Coleone shut up

    • @PSLegend999
      @PSLegend999 8 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      +Liam Cruz sorry, I misread the lines. yup it's good, those are your true friends, hang on to them.

    • @Mrcruz6935
      @Mrcruz6935 8 ปีที่แล้ว

      +Fern Coleone ok

  • @tritonbradford1688
    @tritonbradford1688 6 ปีที่แล้ว +7

    My I.Q. is 176. I have aspergers syndrome. When I first found out. I didn't want to accept it. Now that I have. It has helped me to understand myself a lot better. I have all the issue's that come with it.

    • @solluxcaptor7908
      @solluxcaptor7908 5 ปีที่แล้ว

      It took me a while to accept my aspergers aswell

  • @tayebkoo5238
    @tayebkoo5238 3 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    I have a friend who is an asperger I'm trying to understand him more and more this video was very helpful
    Specially because sometimes it's not easy to understand or communicate with him in normal ways

  • @charlesmiddleton3247
    @charlesmiddleton3247 ปีที่แล้ว +5

    It's nice to know there are many others out there just like me in the sense of having this. But I'd like to think of it as a gift we have been given. We are definitely different, but in our own special way! I just hope that those who are not like us, would see our world for just a moment and understand we are human too. Thank you for this wonderful video :-)

  • @grassCrow
    @grassCrow ปีที่แล้ว +3

    not having many friends means they understand that most friendships are shallow … they just do not consider people that have shallow relationships as actual friends … some people think everyone is their friend

  • @fatboysgarage7984
    @fatboysgarage7984 3 ปีที่แล้ว +5

    I find that music and working on cars helps me to focus. Music helps to soothe my mind wether I'm playing it on guitar or listening to it. Working on cars has helped tremendously with my fine motor skills and it makes me think of the steps I need to take to fix an issue. My father has pointed out to me that I tend to get a little ahead of myself, but have aquired a knowledge that, at times, rivals his own. I don't really agree with him, but I take it as a compliment nonetheless.

    • @lightbeingpontifex
      @lightbeingpontifex 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      i cant stand not listening to music without getting annoyed and as for hobbies learning,,, and finding out secrets governments are hiding,,,

  • @iheartnerdyness2875
    @iheartnerdyness2875 8 ปีที่แล้ว +15

    I have Asperger syndrome and it's kind of hard to explain cause my pov in my opinion is very conplex

  • @esthermiller2713
    @esthermiller2713 3 ปีที่แล้ว +8

    You’ve described my 79 year old husband EXACTLY. His family had known something was wrong with him. But back then it wasn’t looked into.....probably because they were a British family who moved to Johannesburg South Africa when Colin was seven. Also, perhaps back then in the ‘40’s & ‘50’s, Asperger’s hadn’t actually been looked into & named yet. Colin never was able to learn to tie the laces of shoes; never learned to ride a bike; never learned to drive a car. But he was especially interested in several certain topics, memorizing with ease the details of each subject (geography, biblical facts, astronomy) & easily memorizes phone numbers. He’s in a good mood as long as his daily routine isn’t interrupted. But when invariably is....from time to time.....he becomes angry & agitated & rude. Later on, when he’s able to return to his routine, he apologizes. He has friends.....but prefers to not spend time getting together with them & chatting.....unless they’re licensed ham radio operators like he himself is. Before he & I met....& married when he was 65 & I was 60.....I’m told that Colin always avoided getting together with church friends for a chat before the service.....or at any other function.....but his friends told me Colin became a much-changed man after we got together. I influenced & encouraged him enough to draw him out. Now, after 14 years of marriage, we laugh a lot & joke around a lot,......but I’m still struggling with patience. Living with an Aspie isn’t easy! 😁👍🏻❤️🇨🇦

  • @MurseSamson
    @MurseSamson 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    This presentation was so incredibly interested and informative. Thank you so much for educating us on this! Very insightful and easy to understand. Thank you

  • @Thesimmers123
    @Thesimmers123 4 ปีที่แล้ว +5

    I'm 22 and have always felt like something is off. I never got diagnosed when I was younger cause people just assumed I was lazy or stupid, but the specifics of doing sports and such alone, and the balance one really caught me. The amount of times I roll over my ankle when running, and it doesnt sprain or break fascinates me, and my partner says I sometimes have t rex arms.

  • @youdungoofied5692
    @youdungoofied5692 4 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    This was so helpful, thank you so much . My boyfriend has Aspergers syndrome.

  • @Volcomlancer
    @Volcomlancer 3 ปีที่แล้ว

    I’m 31 and have always just considered myself as “wired wrong” but after watching this video i think it’s pretty spot on for at least most things about me.

  • @ckilr01
    @ckilr01 5 ปีที่แล้ว +5

    I grew up like that. I was fascinated with entomology, mythology and moved to other topics. Also a perfect memory but I did not like to relate to people. I learned at 18 to start watching and mimicking the way people who successfully relate to others. I went through the military after and appeared normal by acting like others I observed. I became a good mimic. I was in intelligence specialists but changed after 3 years due to a cut down. I actually came up with new ideas in the military that changed things, like using computers back when it was windows 3.1 and wordperfect to print maintenance cards and the items listed. Also I came up with changes in the special order system that had me investigated for a unheard of sales and stock turn over. 1.3 was normal mine was 4.1. Then I was taken to a meeting of all ships store people to give a live presentation of how to do the job and was elevated in that area to the leading sales expert. I was injured after I got out and only do light security now. Anyone want an old broken sales expert with asperger's to work for or with them? I am also great with computers.

  • @StuckInCinema21
    @StuckInCinema21 8 ปีที่แล้ว +9

    I didn't know I had Aspergers until 6th Grade. I was confused with myself, and didn't feel like I eas doing the right things. But now I know I have it, and know the Symptoms, I now understand why I felt out of place. I am learning to control myself, such as the Sensitive Hearing, Body Movements (Which I used to swing my arms around back and forth, Clapping my hands Front and Back, sometimes hitting people), and trying to get better at the Discussing Self vs Others. I am Fascinated with Movie Making, Directing, and Acting

  • @BogDustForBreakfast
    @BogDustForBreakfast ปีที่แล้ว

    Hello, im 37 and i have Aspergers . was diagnosed when i was 5-6 years of age . always had trouble finding / keeping friends. luckily i married the most loving and understanding person i know!. ive found over the years i say inappropriate things quite frequently . my learning wasnt really comprimised due to having aspegers. i learnt better hands on. im a spray painter and funny enough i have this TH-cam channel teaching my trade . ive had many comments saying i teach in a way which is really easy to understand . possibly this is also due to having aspegers .. ive always doubted i had it . but the older i get i feel i notice it more often. i fear its getting worse some days . or maybe i just notice the traits of aspegers. to any Parents reading this . have faith im sure your kids will excel at something they are passionate about just like i have . thanks for reading

  • @jocelynthomas5104
    @jocelynthomas5104 2 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    To marry a person like this is very challenging. One must love with a deep heart. Many dont understand what mild spectrum autism syndrome is! If you find yourself married to one with this condition, my heart goes out!! Even more so when children are involved! They have AMAZING QUALITIES! They contribute to society in many ways and are in most situations extremely successful. But God help you if your married to one diagnosed with this. Even MILD its beyond significant! You need to be an independent person, strong, with high empathy.

  • @MuntInACup
    @MuntInACup 2 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    I never realised until now but most of these symptoms or quirks I struggled with in my early life but managed to overcome in my adult life, and in no way was that easy. I'm 30 now and I'm only just starting to feel normal and accepted compared to my peers. I wish I was properly diagnosed when I was younger because maybe I would of avoided or better coped with things growing up. throughout my adult life I've been screamed and yelled at I've been emotionally abused I've been physically beaten, all because I'm different from other people, but I've managed to overcome all of that, and I'm only just now starting to function like a normal adult. I still have a long way to go but this is inspiring.

    • @TheAnarchist99
      @TheAnarchist99 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      I relate to this. I'm an aspie (low functioning) and I've been through something similar. Actually I had an aspie friend who was outstandingly bright and even though he was a bit socially awkward , he managed pretty well and was very high functioning as opposed to me , I've been expelled from two different colleges due to low grades which were caused by my depression and my social awkwardness and I'm friendless, I'm not that smart either so I compare myself a lot to other people which makes me suicidal at times. I'm 23 btw

    • @MuntInACup
      @MuntInACup 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@TheAnarchist99 I get that. I am very insecure about my intelligence as well, I was always treated at the "dumb kid" in school. I'm 30 now and although I do feel a little insecure from time to time, I can confidently say that it does get easier with time.

  • @carolnahigian9518
    @carolnahigian9518 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    This... Explains... a LOT of what my MOTHER suffered..!

  • @Peanuts76
    @Peanuts76 3 ปีที่แล้ว +5

    Being Asperger's we always feel overwhelmed with social interactions because how much the stimulus we face at those times, we overwhelms by how much sensory and emotions come from many people at once
    Oh and i feel so stressed out with 3d gaming and epileptic inducing videos, my brain couldn't handle that and go panic attacks....