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InfinityMan Introduction

InfinityMan

New Member
I'm 70 years of age. I am an Aspie. I was diagnosed as an Aspie.

I am glad to be here to share and learn.

I am retired. I live with my wife and two Chihuahua dogs who are my friends.

I will be happy to chat with others about their experiences.
 
Hi @InfinityMan, I am close to you in age, not formally diagnosed (what is the point at my age) but I now know who I am. I am also (notionally) retired - I worked as an academic so still hold an adjunct appointment, co-supervise students, co-author academic papers, and participate in research projects. There are quite a few of us from the age when our autism “wasn’t a thing”, so I expect you will find plenty of people to talk to. Welcome!
 
Nice to meet you AuAL. Yes, your right, about it not being a thing in days gone by. When I was young, the only thing that kept me out of an institution was my mother. I was seen as retarded. Slow. People just didn't know what we know today. The way to change behavior in those days was corporal punishments. Forth grade was the worst. I spent that grade getting paddled by Mrs. Browning for being disruptive, slow, not listening, interruption, not paying attention, and "being funny". She had a paddle just for me and insisted that I sign it every time she used it on me. Lol. I never did figure out what that lady had against me. Then. In those days, if you were "disciplined" in school and your dad found out, you were also "disciplined" at home. Mercilessly - especially when the report card came home. Boy! Those were the days. My mother would not let me fail. She insisted that I be just as normal as all the other kids. As a freshman in high school, I was sent to the grade school to tutor other "retarded" kids in reading. That was fun. I got through it all, and to my surprise discovered that I was gifted at nothing much but coding computer automation. What we now call AI. I wrote wonderful applications for very large corporations (mckesson, citibank, american express, safeway, American Stores, common spirit health) to use computers to manage all the other computers in large data centers. That was my career, and I was good at that, winning several technology awards. I never have figured out people, nor the minutia of everyday life, but I like being retired and gardening, and I'm loving the AI revolution.
 
Greetings. 67 here. Was also called retarded and spaz.

Not for being "slow" - I was always in the advanced classes - but because I was dyspraxic, and therefore worse than useless at sports. And of course, sports was the most crucial life skill - at least according to the other kids.

While computer programming was never my main career, I gravitated to it and have never gotten away from it. Also retired now. So busy, it's hard to imagine how I ever found time to work 40 hours a week.

I hope you enjoy your time here. There's good peeps here.
lizaed 2.webp
 
Nice to meet you Jumpinbare. Thanks. Yes. I never could do sports. The other kids just seemed to understand all the rules and methods to excel. I never got it. In later years, I understood baseball pretty well, but that's about it.
 
It would be extremely interesting if you decide to start a post on AI. There is so much speculation on where we are heading down that turnpike. Are we going to lose thousands of jobs, how can corporate America generate revenue in the longterm, and all the other unanswered questions.
 

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