Traditional / Old Fashioned Thinking

As an older person with Autism, I was brought up in very different times with different thinking, values, acceptance, behaviour, etc (1970's & 80's).

The World has changed so much since then - both for better and worse.
There have been so many advancements - particularly in science and this has benefitted us ASD'ers immensely.

One thing that is troubling me is that I hold a lot of "principles" that in this day and age would be considered "Old Fashioned", "Traditional", maybe even "Bigotry" or worse.
There are things that I struggle to understand or accept which are based on my traditional attitude. I was brought up in an era when....

  • Boys had girlfriends and girls has boyfriends
  • You were born a boy and died a man
  • Men married women
  • Humour was not censored
  • People weren't "cancelled"

I openly discuss or rant about these topics along with some others that may be considered taboo with closed friends and family who have all become somewhat numb to my outrageousness / inappropriateness.

I have however managed to "behave" in public (stayed on the right side of the law), but occasionally do mutter things with a level of cowardice.
My concern is that now that I am officially autistic, the shackles of having to mask may have been broken and that has the potential of me saying the wrong thing at the wrong time.

Parents
  • I understand perfectly.

    It seems that we have to suffer; due to someone else's bad childhood.

    Kids aren't innocent anymore. They're egged on to be antagonistic. It's as if the State wants to Parent them.

    I don't mind Gays. At Uni, I befriended a Gay man. However, all this demand for Drag Queens to teach Primary School Kids is gross.

  • Nobody's asking for drag queens to teach primary school children. Sometimes they are asked to read to children, sure- as entertainers, in public places, because it's their job to entertain the public. Drag Queen Story Time is really no different to pantomime dames and I really don't see why there's all this fuss about it.

Reply
  • Nobody's asking for drag queens to teach primary school children. Sometimes they are asked to read to children, sure- as entertainers, in public places, because it's their job to entertain the public. Drag Queen Story Time is really no different to pantomime dames and I really don't see why there's all this fuss about it.

Children
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