• @RebekahWSD@lemmy.world
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    17 days ago

    This is where having a twin worked for me. Until they fucking split us up like assholes! (It helped though, at least for me. I had a friend in elementary)

  • LexamM
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    9 days ago

    When I was in first grade, the teacher called everyone by name to line up for recess. Somehow she missed my name. I didn’t say anything I just sat because I wasn’t called. Then they all went to recess. A little while later the teacher noticed me missing and came back to the classroom to find me crying in my seat.

  • Lumelore (She/her)
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    8 days ago

    I pretty much just sat at my desk, spaced out, and disassociated through most of grade school. In first grade I got detention for having a snowball fight, except I never did fight, and I was just picking up the snow to eat it (I was obsessed with eating snow as a kid). I was so confused and after that I felt like I couldn’t play or engage with anything, so I began to disengage as well.

    It’s only recently that I’ve realized disassociating and disengaging have made me very lonely and are no longer helpful to me and I’ve started trying to put more effort into socializing, but I’m also not that great at it.

    • @twice_hatch@midwest.social
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      98 days ago

      It feels sometimes like I have the need to socialize but not the desire or the drive, and often if one little thing goes wrong I feel like shit

      Like if one had no drive to eat food, and a variety of allergies

  • @serenissi@lemmy.world
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    239 days ago

    Thankfully no. My school had lot of non asshole kids (I think kids are usually trained to be selfish assholes) who were kind and patient enough to socialize with weirdos (aka undiag autistic kids) like me. They were the reason I developed somewhat functional (though absolutely not ‘normal’) social life in adulthood. We are still friends, unfortunately we are spread all over the world nowadays cause life.

    I think culture matters too, autistic spectrum friends of mine who went to US schools tend so say having very different experience. Opposite anecdotes were from kids in asia.

      • @serenissi@lemmy.world
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        48 days ago

        I think both traits are taught and at the same time innate at the same time. While growing up, we learn an abstract value system that shapes when we want to be selfish and when not.

            • Angry_Autist (he/him)
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              14 days ago

              Ok then you should know that there is a fucktonne of research about behaviors before values are capable of being learned

              • @serenissi@lemmy.world
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                4 days ago

                I totally know. What I said is what ‘I think’ not what I ‘discovered’. There’s isn’t more science in it than in an educated guess. Taking a course doesn’t make me a behavioral scientist and even then claiming what I know is absolute is pure bs.

                • Angry_Autist (he/him)
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                  14 days ago

                  … ok so then you know that without social training humans don’t really have a value system besides ‘make sure my needs are met’…

  • ddh
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    9 days ago

    Guess I got lucky. Our primary school library was open at break times and even though the librarian was a bit cranky she let me read all the Asterix and Tintin books I wanted.

  • LumpyPancakes
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    148 days ago

    My primary school had bolted some tractor tyres on their sides to springs and placed them in the play area.

    They were nice and warm in the sunshine so I would curl up inside them and rest.

    I was somewhat of a loner.

  • Binette
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    129 days ago

    i would walk around in big circles, which coincided with the walking pattern of the surveillants (or whatvere you call the in english), so we started talking.

    this did not help beating the “teacher’s pet” allegations.

    • faythofdragons
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      128 days ago

      The school district I grew up in called them ‘monitors’. It’s always neat when languages line up like this, because ‘surveil’ and ‘monitor’ mean the same thing in english.

    • @AnarchistArtificer@lemmy.world
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      98 days ago

      I love Wikipedia so much. I love being able to just take a random meander through whatever I find interesting. Often, it’s not “real learning”, that I do, because accumulating random fragments of information isn’t the same as actually gaining knowledge, but it sure is fun.