stickygirl
All the witches
- Joined
- Jan 3, 2012
- Posts
- 23,374
Forgive me but I had to ask about the blade runner reference. My friends son was diagnosed with aspergers when he was 3. I was told that it's harder to diagnose it in girls than in boys. Anyway, I was wondering, my friends son doesn't react very well to sarcasm but love slapstick and puns. Is that an aspergers thing, of is he maybe feigning amusement for my benefit? I didn't want to ask my friend for fear of sounding like "what's wrong with your kid?".
Ohh.... I get a little rush of excitement reading a question like that because I can infodump - also a trait.
Bladerunner #I 'Blush response' was a piece of Vangelis music used in the film, and I think was the psychological profiling used to distinguish replicants from humans in the film. Bluff response/Blush response...*shrugs*
Girls are no more difficult to diagnose with autism than women diagnosed having heart attacks. In both cases the 'classic' symptoms describe male centric observations. Although the final ratio male/female autism is unclear, it is now recognised that there are more females with autism than was originally suggested. Girls have better socialising skills than boys so learn to mask their feelings and build acceptable interactions faster than boys - same for autistic kids, so to diagnose girls needs a more skilled approach.
There are no fixed rules to autism because they're individuals and have a mix of characteristics. So for instance I don't mind hugging but I'm uncomfortable shaking hands. I can act well on stage because I role play every day so it's fun, but I hate public speaking ( as myself ). So some aspies will be into slap-stick humour, others will be incredibly sarcastic, sometimes the same person.
What we're not good at is intuitive stuff - understanding what people mean when they only hint or give clues instead of simply saying it out straight....but again not all aspies.
With your friend's son, I'd simply ask what he finds fun or is interested in. Don't expect to guess, but you can ask constructively.
*Since I'm on a roll*. Asperger's is now a forbidden term, because the German scientist has been linked to nazi medical experiments. It is also suspected he stole the concept from a Russian woman psychiatrist, Grunya Sukhareva, who had been working with autistic children for twenty years and postulated a characterisation for autism. She visited Asperger before the war.
* Sitting on a roll would be a classic
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