JayD210
Active Member
Having had my Autism Diagnosis nearly my entire life, I’ve come to know how it works for better or worse. It has its advantages which if you play the cards right, there are many of them. The disadvantages regardless of how you play your cards can also be numerous. Safe to say that pretty much all of us can speak to these.
In my case, what are the advantages of having Autism?
•The ability to get truly wired into things. At work when I’m doing my Investigations, my lifelong passion for anything mechanical comes out in the realm of Vehicles. Make, Model, I can even tell you what span of Model Years that Vehicle comes from. In a lot of criminal incidents, Vehicles are involved so this has proven to be an excellent tool to have.
•The ability to compartmentalize. When wired into something I’m doing, it allows me to take the big picture in its entirety and break it down into each individual part. The ability to take pure chaos, separate the details, and orchestrate it. This has also come in handy in some of the worst times of my life. The abuse from my Dad, the violent assaults I’ve been the target of by bullies and suspects alike, I find details to help in the investigation and find details to zero in on to escape the psychological impacts of what I deal with. The ability to compartmentalize has allowed me to better handle the chaos that’s been my life in the 39 years I’ve been on this earth. I credit Autism in this respect as being the reason I don’t have PTSD.
•One hell of a memory. I can remember as far back as before my 3rd Birthday. It comes in extremely handy.
What are the disadvantages.
•That ability to compartmentalize I just sang praises for isn’t a picnic. Yes it allowed me to avoid PTSD but I still remember all those things I’ve been through. They’re still there. If your brain puts the compartmentalize details in order like a Rolodex that my brain seems to be, the occasional nightmares take place.
•Anxiety is a hallmark among most of us. Despite it not having stopped me from a damn thing, I’ve always had to battle it for as long as I can remember. Has what I’ve seen in the course of my life made it worse? Maybe. One would think so. I can be sitting in a meeting or in my Office and according to nearly everyone around me, I apparently bounce my leg at 90mph off my toes and ball of my foot on my right side. My Teachers growing up said the very same thing. My Grandma M would suddenly grab my Leg hold it there. Scary thought is I don’t know when I’m doing that. Is that Anxiety or pure Autism? I don’t know, but I honestly got bigger fish to fry.
•The overwhelming feeling of never quite being a fit no matter who you’re around. Even when I’m with other people on the Autism Spectrum which I’m part of a Group of people with Autism that meet every couple weeks, I still feel uneasy, like I don’t belong there. If I get that vibe around others with Autism, the feeling among others still is much the same.
•Trust Issues. Bullying growing up. Abuse growing up. The things I’ve seen in my line of work. Having been the target of violent attacks. Having been betrayed by those I was too quick to trust. All these things. Put them together and I have a lot of life experience that dictates that I don’t trust much of anyone really. I’m still very much willing to give people the shirt off my back, assist people, and generally stick to my rule of not leaving people in bad spots hanging, but that doesn’t at all mean I trust them. I can help you but still not like you effectively. Autism has been the reason I stood out over the years and the result hasn’t always been so great, so the trust I once had in general has mostly disappeared. Add what I do for a living and that distrust goes even deeper because I work in a field that fosters that distrust even more. Another thing that breeds further distrust from me towards a person is when I try to offer pointers and people get rude about it. I find myself biting my tongue in order not to unleash a firestorm on those who have it coming because I’d rather not come off as a jerk.
There’s what the advantages and disadvantages are for me as it relates to Autism.
In my case, what are the advantages of having Autism?
•The ability to get truly wired into things. At work when I’m doing my Investigations, my lifelong passion for anything mechanical comes out in the realm of Vehicles. Make, Model, I can even tell you what span of Model Years that Vehicle comes from. In a lot of criminal incidents, Vehicles are involved so this has proven to be an excellent tool to have.
•The ability to compartmentalize. When wired into something I’m doing, it allows me to take the big picture in its entirety and break it down into each individual part. The ability to take pure chaos, separate the details, and orchestrate it. This has also come in handy in some of the worst times of my life. The abuse from my Dad, the violent assaults I’ve been the target of by bullies and suspects alike, I find details to help in the investigation and find details to zero in on to escape the psychological impacts of what I deal with. The ability to compartmentalize has allowed me to better handle the chaos that’s been my life in the 39 years I’ve been on this earth. I credit Autism in this respect as being the reason I don’t have PTSD.
•One hell of a memory. I can remember as far back as before my 3rd Birthday. It comes in extremely handy.
What are the disadvantages.
•That ability to compartmentalize I just sang praises for isn’t a picnic. Yes it allowed me to avoid PTSD but I still remember all those things I’ve been through. They’re still there. If your brain puts the compartmentalize details in order like a Rolodex that my brain seems to be, the occasional nightmares take place.
•Anxiety is a hallmark among most of us. Despite it not having stopped me from a damn thing, I’ve always had to battle it for as long as I can remember. Has what I’ve seen in the course of my life made it worse? Maybe. One would think so. I can be sitting in a meeting or in my Office and according to nearly everyone around me, I apparently bounce my leg at 90mph off my toes and ball of my foot on my right side. My Teachers growing up said the very same thing. My Grandma M would suddenly grab my Leg hold it there. Scary thought is I don’t know when I’m doing that. Is that Anxiety or pure Autism? I don’t know, but I honestly got bigger fish to fry.
•The overwhelming feeling of never quite being a fit no matter who you’re around. Even when I’m with other people on the Autism Spectrum which I’m part of a Group of people with Autism that meet every couple weeks, I still feel uneasy, like I don’t belong there. If I get that vibe around others with Autism, the feeling among others still is much the same.
•Trust Issues. Bullying growing up. Abuse growing up. The things I’ve seen in my line of work. Having been the target of violent attacks. Having been betrayed by those I was too quick to trust. All these things. Put them together and I have a lot of life experience that dictates that I don’t trust much of anyone really. I’m still very much willing to give people the shirt off my back, assist people, and generally stick to my rule of not leaving people in bad spots hanging, but that doesn’t at all mean I trust them. I can help you but still not like you effectively. Autism has been the reason I stood out over the years and the result hasn’t always been so great, so the trust I once had in general has mostly disappeared. Add what I do for a living and that distrust goes even deeper because I work in a field that fosters that distrust even more. Another thing that breeds further distrust from me towards a person is when I try to offer pointers and people get rude about it. I find myself biting my tongue in order not to unleash a firestorm on those who have it coming because I’d rather not come off as a jerk.
There’s what the advantages and disadvantages are for me as it relates to Autism.