Am I the only one to dislike the term 'aspie' in describing a person with aspergers?

 

I have Asperger's Syndrome, but I am also a unique human-being, who is probably very different to any other person with aspergers or without aspergers.  We all have social difficulties, anxieties around order, perfection, routine, interests, obsessions etc. These difficulties affect us in unique ways and take many manifestations. Once you have met one person with asperger's, you have met one person with asperger's. Yet, to say 'I am an aspie', or 'aspies are good at...'' , is to reduce all our diversities to one label and stereotype. But we are more than a label. THerefore, I never describe myself as an 'aspie'. I find the word, rightly or wrongly, patronizing, bland, and false.

 

Parents
  • do you think they could be a better name for autism integral so people don't get scared and it wont effect health insurance and getting a job i don't know what that could be though do we have to tell them that we have it but i think we should keep the name aspergers because if we keep changing the name people wont know what we got.

    sorry i keep mixing things up but i use to hate people saying i had autism it use to make me cry but not any more.

    oh i think i might of wrote in the wrong thing and that why i got shutted at i see.

Reply
  • do you think they could be a better name for autism integral so people don't get scared and it wont effect health insurance and getting a job i don't know what that could be though do we have to tell them that we have it but i think we should keep the name aspergers because if we keep changing the name people wont know what we got.

    sorry i keep mixing things up but i use to hate people saying i had autism it use to make me cry but not any more.

    oh i think i might of wrote in the wrong thing and that why i got shutted at i see.

Children
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