I think the OP was talking about isolation stemming from having aspergers if I’m correct.
Apologies - I didn't just mean Aspergers, or Autism, but all pain, all trauma.
I could just have posed the question, "Does anyone else feel like an alien?", but, lacking any context, it seemed rather inane to me. So I backed it up with a slice of my own experience and of how I came, at a young age, to feel and rationalise my non-Humanness.
While my AS is certainly an issue, what makes it an order of magnitude worse is the Anxiety that increases over time as I try to integrate with Humans, the increasing discouragement and sense of worthlessness of constant rejection and the very real sense of
alienation.
Chuck in a healthy dose of PTSD from living with the constant stress of just getting through each day of a whole lifetime, facing constant reminders of all that I can never do, and here's a big old alien meltdown waiting to happen.
I guess I'm a passable writer, but I always struggle with the balance of how much information to include and how I'm putting it across to the reader - I aimed for an engaging question without also inadvertently sounding like a victim, or being too nonchalant, or too blunt/offensive, considering my audience.
When I wrote, "
The separation and isolation others can never know", I wasn't referring to others on this forum, rather those who don't see, have not experienced, and so cannot understand what it is to live with trauma in any form.
Again, my apologies to everyone that I didn't make myself clearer.
A brief comment on the discussion of IQ upthread - as a proven Master of the Misconstrued myself, I understood the tone of
@Cyberluddite's post to be purely informative, though I could see how it might be taken otherwise, especially as this tends to be quite a sensitive subject prone to causing offence.
Some excellent information in those links I'd love to discuss sometime, on another thread, perhaps.
@Multitudes said something interesting. He has Asperger's -- yet I don't.
Here's something I think is a common and inaccurate assumption made of Aspies - just like aversion to touch, or inability to make eye contact. While differing neurology equates with different abilities, not all Aspies are highly intelligent, and not all highly intelligent people are Aspies.
There's a popular saying within the Autistic community:
"When you've met one person with Autism.. you've met one person with Autism". :)