I know someone who has it and he's annoying. I greatly dislike him.
I know someone who has it and he's annoying. I greatly dislike him.
There's one guy I met on the Computer Science floor of my college with it. He is kind of socially inept, but he admits that he knows he is. He also has a tendancy to either be moving rhythmically at all times or "twitch".
He's kind of annoying, but I know it's due to his syndrome and I feel bad for him, but he just doesn't know when to stop talking sometimes.
"In the garden sleeps a messenger."
Arrode (retired): RDM75/BRD70/WHM65/NIN37/BLM37
That is precisely my thoughts about this.
Isn't Asperger supposed to be a rare disease? Maybe there is some sort of correlation between people with Asperger and people who play Final Fantasy but I'm very suprised at the number of people in this thread alone who have said that they have Asperger. Not accusing those people of anything, just sayin' that I'm very surprised given how rare this disease is supposed to be.
No, but I probably have made cow disease.
Erm, I don't want to sound rude, but Asperger's is not a disease. People are born with it. If you're going to have precise thoughts on something, you should research it a little bit first. I know a lot of people with Asperger's like Final Fantasy, but so what? Far more people without it like Final Fantasy, obviously. I'm trying to say you can't make a comparison. Many people with Asperger's like computers, but that's because they become fascinated by them more easily. Still, many people without it like computers. It is rare, yes, but you may be thinking of the rarity of pure autism. It's less than one in every thousand people who have Asperger's... could be more rarer.Originally Posted by Miriel
"Asperger syndrome is listed as a "rare disease" by the Office of Rare Diseases (ORD) of the National Institutes of Health (NIH). This means that Asperger syndrome, or a subtype of Asperger syndrome, affects less than 200,000 people in the US population." - National Institutes of Health (NIH)
Well, they certainly don't know what the hell they're talking about because it's definitely not a disease. I guarantee it.
Here: http://www.disability.vic.gov.au/dsonline/dsarticles.nsf/pages/Asperger's_syndrome?OpenDocument - click it, press control and F, type 'disease' and hit return.
Jesus, I should take charge of their job because they don't know what they're doing and saying AS is a disease is quite hurtful actually. They shouldn't say that. Also, I know AS is rare, but that rare? I don't know.
Yep. It's not a disease, it's a syndrome, as evidenced by the name.
Yeah, I got Asperger's Syndrome, at least this school doctor said so.
Anyway, it's obviously a pretty mild one: I've got some social problems and tend to grow obsessed with stuff, but that's about it.
There's little point about flipping out over semantics. People sometimes say "disease" when what they are really meaning is "condition" or "syndrome."
It certainly doesnt' invalidate everything else they say just because they placed "disease" after "Asperger's" when that's the case.
Like I said, I wasn't accusing any specific individual, here or anywhere else, of wanting to be an Aspie when they're just anti-social. But I do believe it probably happens with some regularity. An Aspie might/will know an Aspie, but a non-Aspie is not in the best position to make that determination about his or herself, especially when they want it to be true.
Asparagus syndrome?
My cat had that once.
(Asperger's Syndrome is a form of autism, but its pretty low-end in comparison. Those who have Asperger's normally appear to suffer from ADD but they're still capable of having normal social relations in comparison to those with Autism who are by nature socially innept. Also, Asperger's normally don't excell in forms of logical, mathamatical or visual excellence. They're pretty normal people, sometimes a little eccentric... but so are a lot of people. I can get more information from a friend who has Asperger's if you like.)
Boldly go.
Wow, there's a lot of people here with it. I don't think I've met anyone with it. I worked as a Special Needs Assistant last year, but there was no-one in our school who had Asperger's. Do people with it usually go to non-mainstream schools (like the boy in The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time)?
I haven't got any syndromes or disorders. Woohoo!
Dang man, Ender is right on the money every time.
Shaun, there's no need to get all upset just because I said (and the source I quoted) calls it a disease. It's not like I meant "disease" as an insult. It's just semantics arguing over "disease" or "syndrome". I mean, that's not even a point worth arguing over.
I got the 99th percentile of verbal aptitude myself in my IQ exam. No lie.
The rest wasn't nearly as good.
I think people with Aspergers manifest their added intelligence in one major area. There is a common example of a boy being obsessed with maps, literally knowing directions after riding one way in a car. Most people with Aspergers probably have some kind of passion, sometimes in an obsessive way almost similar to an idiot savant.
I am an amazing reader and writer. I just have a passion and talent for it.
And as for the whole "Syndrome/Disease" debate, why not just call it a gift? It creates difficulties for me, but it also helps me. Different brain structure breeds good things as well as bad. Mostly you can label a distinct strength to some form of art in mental ilness, ADD, Aspergers... most so-called ilnesses. I have mood variation as well as Aspergers; 5 years of my life was torment. But yet, I can draw inspiration from it now. I can live the pain my characters in my writing feel, and add more emotion to their problems.
Last edited by Vincent, Thunder God; 10-28-2006 at 03:02 AM.
I got upset because a disease is not something you are born with. Are some people in this world just plain stupid, or what? No offence to you Miriel, but them calling it that means they're not taking it seriously, and if a fact like that directly affected you, you would be offended as well.
Ender, I know once again that you weren't saying it about me, but, in a way, I do hope I have it. Why? So I know there are more people similar to me. No other reason. I already have people other than myself who're convinced I have AS, but sometimes I think my traits are more on the side of autism, as I always prefer to be alone and don't want any social interaction.
So, don't get me wrong, but please don't go thinking that people 'like to think they have AS' for a way of bragging or sympathy. If you suspected you had AS, there's nothing that isn't deadly serious about it. This is a life-changing discovery for anyone, and the assessment I'm having next month will hopefully bring an end to my current quest for truth.