I have a neurological disability called Asperger's Syndrome.
I would like to give you some information about my disability. The
reason I am posting this message about Asperger's is to help avoid any
potential misunderstandings [though it's probably too late].
I have been diagnosed with Asperger's Syndrome (AS). AS is a
neurological condition that causes significant impairment in social
interactions. People with AS see the world differently and this can
often bring them in conflict with conventional ways of thinking. They
have difficulty in reading body language, and interpreting subtle
cues. In my situation, I have significant difficulty with natural
conversation, reading social cues, and maintaining eye contact. This
can lead to a great deal of misunderstanding about my intent or my
behavior. For example, I may not always know what to say in social
situations, so I may look away or may not say anything. I also may not
always respond quickly when asked direct questions, but if given time
I am able express my ideas.
On Usenet, the text-equivalent of my disability is probably noticed. I
do apologize profusely, for any inconvenience it causes.
Thank you very much in advance for your understanding, cooperation,
and assistance.
On Jul 28, 9:01 pm, Radium <gluce...@excite.com> wrote:
> Hi All:
>
> I have a neurological disability called Asperger's Syndrome.
>
> I would like to give you some information about my disability. The
> reason I am posting this message about Asperger's is to help avoid any
> potential misunderstandings [though it's probably too late].
>
> I have been diagnosed with Asperger's Syndrome (AS). AS is a
> neurological condition that causes significant impairment in social
> interactions. People with AS see the world differently and this can
> often bring them in conflict with conventional ways of thinking. They
> have difficulty in reading body language, and interpreting subtle
> cues. In my situation, I have significant difficulty with natural
> conversation, reading social cues, and maintaining eye contact. This
> can lead to a great deal of misunderstanding about my intent or my
> behavior. For example, I may not always know what to say in social
> situations, so I may look away or may not say anything. I also may not
> always respond quickly when asked direct questions, but if given time
> I am able express my ideas.
>
> On Usenet, the text-equivalent of my disability is probably noticed. I
> do apologize profusely, for any inconvenience it causes.
Some people have the idea that text-only interactions are easier for
people with Asperger's syndrome.
Quite a few of the regular posters around here do have trouble with
social interactions, so you will probably fit right in.
On Jul 28, 4:51 pm, bill.slo...@ieee.org wrote:
> On Jul 28, 9:01 pm, Radium <gluce...@excite.com> wrote:
>
>
>
> > Hi All:
>
> > I have a neurological disability called Asperger's Syndrome.
>
> > I would like to give you some information about my disability. The
> > reason I am posting this message about Asperger's is to help avoid any
> > potential misunderstandings [though it's probably too late].
>
> > I have been diagnosed with Asperger's Syndrome (AS). AS is a
> > neurological condition that causes significant impairment in social
> > interactions. People with AS see the world differently and this can
> > often bring them in conflict with conventional ways of thinking. They
> > have difficulty in reading body language, and interpreting subtle
> > cues. In my situation, I have significant difficulty with natural
> > conversation, reading social cues, and maintaining eye contact. This
> > can lead to a great deal of misunderstanding about my intent or my
> > behavior. For example, I may not always know what to say in social
> > situations, so I may look away or may not say anything. I also may not
> > always respond quickly when asked direct questions, but if given time
> > I am able express my ideas.
>
> > On Usenet, the text-equivalent of my disability is probably noticed. I
> > do apologize profusely, for any inconvenience it causes.
>
> Some people have the idea that text-only interactions are easier for
> people with Asperger's syndrome.
>
> Quite a few of the regular posters around here do have trouble with
> social interactions, so you will probably fit right in.
>
> --
> Bill Sloman, Nijmegen
Do you get to use a disabled license plate for that? Just curios...
><bill.sloman@ieee.org> wrote in message
>news:1185659516.302131.148550@r34g2000hsd.googleg roups.com...
>> On Jul 28, 9:01 pm, Radium <gluce...@excite.com> wrote:
>[...]
>
>> Quite a few of the regular posters around here do have trouble with
>> social interactions, so you will probably fit right in.
>
>Were not a bunch of autistic savants right? Humm...
"Auuugghh augghhh hhhuhh huhuugg Ahhh ahh ah er er er"
....Anything better than that is fine by me.
> I have a neurological disability called Asperger's Syndrome.
>
> I would like to give you some information about my disability. The
> reason I am posting this message about Asperger's is to help avoid any
> potential misunderstandings [though it's probably too late].
Yup. Cross-posting this to six unrelated NGs made that a moot point.
On 28 Jul, 19:01, Radium <gluce...@excite.com> wrote:
> On Usenet, the text-equivalent of my disability is probably noticed. I
> do apologize profusely, for any inconvenience it causes.
Does this mean you're going to stop posting all those "How can I
modulate a 5 Hz carrier with a 100 GHz tone at a rate of 1 electron
per hour" type questions?
contrex wrote:
>
> On 28 Jul, 19:01, Radium <gluce...@excite.com> wrote:
>
> > On Usenet, the text-equivalent of my disability is probably noticed. I
> > do apologize profusely, for any inconvenience it causes.
>
> Does this mean you're going to stop posting all those "How can I
> modulate a 5 Hz carrier with a 100 GHz tone at a rate of 1 electron
> per hour" type questions?
It means that you're responding to a troll who had to stoop quite low
to fake a message from another troll..
--
Service to my country? Been there, Done that, and I've got my DD214 to
prove it.
Member of DAV #85.
On 28 Jul., 23:51, bill.slo...@ieee.org wrote:
> On Jul 28, 9:01 pm, Radium <gluce...@excite.com> wrote:
>
>
>
>
>
> > Hi All:
>
> > I have a neurological disability called Asperger's Syndrome.
>
> > I would like to give you some information about my disability. The
> > reason I am posting this message about Asperger's is to help avoid any
> > potential misunderstandings [though it's probably too late].
>
> > I have been diagnosed with Asperger's Syndrome (AS). AS is a
> > neurological condition that causes significant impairment in social
> > interactions. People with AS see the world differently and this can
> > often bring them in conflict with conventional ways of thinking. They
> > have difficulty in reading body language, and interpreting subtle
> > cues. In my situation, I have significant difficulty with natural
> > conversation, reading social cues, and maintaining eye contact. This
> > can lead to a great deal of misunderstanding about my intent or my
> > behavior. For example, I may not always know what to say in social
> > situations, so I may look away or may not say anything. I also may not
> > always respond quickly when asked direct questions, but if given time
> > I am able express my ideas.
>
> > On Usenet, the text-equivalent of my disability is probably noticed. I
> > do apologize profusely, for any inconvenience it causes.
>
> Some people have the idea that text-only interactions are easier for
> people with Asperger's syndrome.
>
> Quite a few of the regular posters around here do have trouble with
> social interactions, so you will probably fit right in.
>
> --
> Bill Sloman, Nijmegen- Skjul tekst i anførselstegn -
>
> - Vis tekst i anførselstegn -
quite a few famous inventors/engineers/ scientists are believed to
have some form
of autism or aspergers, it's also been called engineers
disorder ....
<langwadt@ieee.org> wrote in message
news:1185721437.218452.315580@d55g2000hsg.googlegr oups.com...
On 28 Jul., 23:51, bill.slo...@ieee.org wrote:
> On Jul 28, 9:01 pm, Radium <gluce...@excite.com> wrote:
>
>
>
>
>
> > Hi All:
>
> > I have a neurological disability called Asperger's Syndrome.
>
> > I would like to give you some information about my disability. The
> > reason I am posting this message about Asperger's is to help avoid any
> > potential misunderstandings [though it's probably too late].
>
> > I have been diagnosed with Asperger's Syndrome (AS). AS is a
> > neurological condition that causes significant impairment in social
> > interactions. People with AS see the world differently and this can
> > often bring them in conflict with conventional ways of thinking. They
> > have difficulty in reading body language, and interpreting subtle
> > cues. In my situation, I have significant difficulty with natural
> > conversation, reading social cues, and maintaining eye contact. This
> > can lead to a great deal of misunderstanding about my intent or my
> > behavior. For example, I may not always know what to say in social
> > situations, so I may look away or may not say anything. I also may not
> > always respond quickly when asked direct questions, but if given time
> > I am able express my ideas.
>
> > On Usenet, the text-equivalent of my disability is probably noticed. I
> > do apologize profusely, for any inconvenience it causes.
>
> Some people have the idea that text-only interactions are easier for
> people with Asperger's syndrome.
>
> Quite a few of the regular posters around here do have trouble with
> social interactions, so you will probably fit right in.
>
> --
> Bill Sloman, Nijmegen- Skjul tekst i anførselstegn -
>
> - Vis tekst i anførselstegn -
quite a few famous inventors/engineers/ scientists are believed to
have some form
of autism or aspergers, it's also been called engineers
disorder ....
> <bill.sloman@ieee.org> wrote in message
> news:1185659516.302131.148550@r34g2000hsd.googlegr oups.com...
>> On Jul 28, 9:01 pm, Radium <gluce...@excite.com> wrote:
> [...]
>
>> Quite a few of the regular posters around here do have trouble with
>> social interactions, so you will probably fit right in.
>
> Were not a bunch of autistic savants right? Humm...
Most ungifted people ("Muggles" ;-) have strong prejudices, and to cover up
for their own lack of abilities, they usually assume that if you are gifted
in one area, it means that you have to suffer somewhere else, or at least
must be some kind of "freak" (in the original "monster" sense of the word).
Fortunately, that's wrong, and typically a higher IQ means "the flood rises
all boats".
People tend to have friends with similar intellectual level, so it's easier
to find local friends if you have an average IQ.
To go back to the original poster: In general, intelligent people see the
world differently, and this can often bring them in conflict with
conventional ways of thinking. Don't worry about that, the emphasis
of "conventional ways of thinking" is on "conventional", not on "thinking".
It's tougher in parts of the world where elitism is shunned, and easier
where it is rewarded. In other words: Don't move to Texas ;-).
On Jul 28, 12:01 pm, Radium <gluce...@excite.com> wrote:
> Hi All:
>
> I have a neurological disability called Asperger's Syndrome.
>
> I would like to give you some information about my disability. The
> reason I am posting this message about Asperger's is to help avoid any
> potential misunderstandings [though it's probably too late].
>
> I have been diagnosed with Asperger's Syndrome (AS). AS is a
> neurological condition that causes significant impairment in social
> interactions. People with AS see the world differently and this can
> often bring them in conflict with conventional ways of thinking. They
> have difficulty in reading body language, and interpreting subtle
> cues. In my situation, I have significant difficulty with natural
> conversation, reading social cues, and maintaining eye contact. This
> can lead to a great deal of misunderstanding about my intent or my
> behavior. For example, I may not always know what to say in social
> situations, so I may look away or may not say anything. I also may not
> always respond quickly when asked direct questions, but if given time
> I am able express my ideas.
>
> On Usenet, the text-equivalent of my disability is probably noticed. I
> do apologize profusely, for any inconvenience it causes.
>
> Thank you very much in advance for your understanding, cooperation,
> and assistance.
<bill.sloman@ieee.org> wrote in message
news:1185659516.302131.148550@r34g2000hsd.googlegr oups.com...
> On Jul 28, 9:01 pm, Radium <gluce...@excite.com> wrote:
>> Hi All:
>>
>> I have a neurological disability called Asperger's Syndrome.
>>
>> I would like to give you some information about my disability. The
>> reason I am posting this message about Asperger's is to help avoid any
>> potential misunderstandings [though it's probably too late].
>>
>> I have been diagnosed with Asperger's Syndrome (AS). AS is a
>> neurological condition that causes significant impairment in social
>> interactions. People with AS see the world differently and this can
>> often bring them in conflict with conventional ways of thinking. They
>> have difficulty in reading body language, and interpreting subtle
>> cues. In my situation, I have significant difficulty with natural
>> conversation, reading social cues, and maintaining eye contact. This
>> can lead to a great deal of misunderstanding about my intent or my
>> behavior. For example, I may not always know what to say in social
>> situations, so I may look away or may not say anything. I also may not
>> always respond quickly when asked direct questions, but if given time
>> I am able express my ideas.
>>
>> On Usenet, the text-equivalent of my disability is probably noticed. I
>> do apologize profusely, for any inconvenience it causes.
>
> Some people have the idea that text-only interactions are easier for
> people with Asperger's syndrome.
>
> Quite a few of the regular posters around here do have trouble with
> social interactions, so you will probably fit right in.
"Sergio Sanmiguel" <sanmiguel.st@gmail.com> wrote in message
news:1185661131.260326.208060@x40g2000prg.googlegr oups.com...
> On Jul 28, 4:51 pm, bill.slo...@ieee.org wrote:
>> On Jul 28, 9:01 pm, Radium <gluce...@excite.com> wrote:
>>
>>
>>
>> > Hi All:
>>
>> > I have a neurological disability called Asperger's Syndrome.
>>
>> > I would like to give you some information about my disability. The
>> > reason I am posting this message about Asperger's is to help avoid any
>> > potential misunderstandings [though it's probably too late].
>>
>> > I have been diagnosed with Asperger's Syndrome (AS). AS is a
>> > neurological condition that causes significant impairment in social
>> > interactions. People with AS see the world differently and this can
>> > often bring them in conflict with conventional ways of thinking. They
>> > have difficulty in reading body language, and interpreting subtle
>> > cues. In my situation, I have significant difficulty with natural
>> > conversation, reading social cues, and maintaining eye contact. This
>> > can lead to a great deal of misunderstanding about my intent or my
>> > behavior. For example, I may not always know what to say in social
>> > situations, so I may look away or may not say anything. I also may not
>> > always respond quickly when asked direct questions, but if given time
>> > I am able express my ideas.
>>
>> > On Usenet, the text-equivalent of my disability is probably noticed. I
>> > do apologize profusely, for any inconvenience it causes.
>>
>> Some people have the idea that text-only interactions are easier for
>> people with Asperger's syndrome.
>>
>> Quite a few of the regular posters around here do have trouble with
>> social interactions, so you will probably fit right in.
>>
>> --
>> Bill Sloman, Nijmegen
>
> Do you get to use a disabled license plate for that? Just curios...
Possibly, it might to help full to other road users to know you won't
be driving like an idiot.
>
"Michael A. Terrell" <mike.terrell@earthlink.net> wrote in message
news:46AC970E.784E8FE1@earthlink.net...
> contrex wrote:
>>
>> On 28 Jul, 19:01, Radium <gluce...@excite.com> wrote:
>>
>> > On Usenet, the text-equivalent of my disability is probably noticed. I
>> > do apologize profusely, for any inconvenience it causes.
>>
>> Does this mean you're going to stop posting all those "How can I
>> modulate a 5 Hz carrier with a 100 GHz tone at a rate of 1 electron
>> per hour" type questions?
>
>
> It means that you're responding to a troll who had to stoop quite low
> to fake a message from another troll..
Either that or you are an autistic with a troll obsession.
>
>
> --
> Service to my country? Been there, Done that, and I've got my DD214 to
> prove it.
> Member of DAV #85.
>
> Michael A. Terrell
> Central Florida
"Richard Henry" <pomerado@hotmail.com> wrote in message
news:1185895368.512089.56780@e16g2000pri.googlegro ups.com...
> On Jul 28, 12:01 pm, Radium <gluce...@excite.com> wrote:
>> Hi All:
>>
>> I have a neurological disability called Asperger's Syndrome.
>>
>> I would like to give you some information about my disability. The
>> reason I am posting this message about Asperger's is to help avoid any
>> potential misunderstandings [though it's probably too late].
>>
>> I have been diagnosed with Asperger's Syndrome (AS). AS is a
>> neurological condition that causes significant impairment in social
>> interactions. People with AS see the world differently and this can
>> often bring them in conflict with conventional ways of thinking. They
>> have difficulty in reading body language, and interpreting subtle
>> cues. In my situation, I have significant difficulty with natural
>> conversation, reading social cues, and maintaining eye contact. This
>> can lead to a great deal of misunderstanding about my intent or my
>> behavior. For example, I may not always know what to say in social
>> situations, so I may look away or may not say anything. I also may not
>> always respond quickly when asked direct questions, but if given time
>> I am able express my ideas.
>>
>> On Usenet, the text-equivalent of my disability is probably noticed. I
>> do apologize profusely, for any inconvenience it causes.
>>
>> Thank you very much in advance for your understanding, cooperation,
>> and assistance.
>
> Does it make you repeat things a lot?
An obbsesion with cross posting (detecting rather than doing it) is a highly
autistic trait.
Ditto for top posting.
"UCLAN" <nomail@thanks.org> wrote in message
news:fBUqi.21690$XH1.7550@newsfe15.phx...
> Radium wrote:
>
>> I have a neurological disability called Asperger's Syndrome.
>>
>> I would like to give you some information about my disability. The
>> reason I am posting this message about Asperger's is to help avoid any
>> potential misunderstandings [though it's probably too late].
>
> Yup. Cross-posting this to six unrelated NGs made that a moot point.
"UCLAN" <nomail@thanks.org> wrote in message
news:fBUqi.21690$XH1.7550@newsfe15.phx...
> Radium wrote:
>
>> I have a neurological disability called Asperger's Syndrome.
>>
>> I would like to give you some information about my disability. The
>> reason I am posting this message about Asperger's is to help avoid any
>> potential misunderstandings [though it's probably too late].
>
> Yup. Cross-posting this to six unrelated NGs made that a moot point.
What makes you think they are unrelated? They may be unrelated to
you but you are not the only person in the world.
Are you autistic by any chance? (or just a bit of a c*nt).
Lord Turkey Cough wrote: ** and top-posted - fixed **
> "UCLAN" <nomail@thanks.org> wrote in message
>> Radium wrote:
>>
>>> I have a neurological disability called Asperger's Syndrome.
>>>
>>> I would like to give you some information about my disability. The
>>> reason I am posting this message about Asperger's is to help avoid
>>> any potential misunderstandings [though it's probably too late].
>>
>> Yup. Cross-posting this to six unrelated NGs made that a moot point.
>
> An obbsesion with cross posting (detecting rather than doing it) is
> a highly autistic trait. Ditto for top posting.
True. Only those with small minds avoid the natural systems, and
fail to truncate excessive cross-posting lists. BTW, PLONK.
--
"Vista is finally secure from hacking. No one is going to 'hack'
the product activation and try and steal the o/s. Anyone smart
enough to do so is also smart enough not to want to bother."
I strongly sympathies your situation, I have also being reading on
this to educate my self on this since I read your post over the
weekend.
Best regards, Suminda Sirinath Salpitikorala Dharmasena
P.S. Any way I wondering is it a good idea to post this in a public
forum unless you are anonymous. I hope that people would be
understandingly and educated about this in the future. - S.S.S.D
P.P.S. I have bookmarked some resources at http://del.icio.us/sirinath/
if you already come across what I have stumbled upon. - S.S.S.D
On Jul 29, 12:01 am, Radium <gluce...@excite.com> wrote:
> Hi All:
>
> I have a neurological disability called Asperger's Syndrome.
>
> I would like to give you some information about my disability. The
> reason I am posting this message about Asperger's is to help avoid any
> potential misunderstandings [though it's probably too late].
>
> I have been diagnosed with Asperger's Syndrome (AS). AS is a
> neurological condition that causes significant impairment in social
> interactions. People with AS see the world differently and this can
> often bring them in conflict with conventional ways of thinking. They
> have difficulty in reading body language, and interpreting subtle
> cues. In my situation, I have significant difficulty with natural
> conversation, reading social cues, and maintaining eye contact. This
> can lead to a great deal of misunderstanding about my intent or my
> behavior. For example, I may not always know what to say in social
> situations, so I may look away or may not say anything. I also may not
> always respond quickly when asked direct questions, but if given time
> I am able express my ideas.
>
> On Usenet, the text-equivalent of my disability is probably noticed. I
> do apologize profusely, for any inconvenience it causes.
>
> Thank you very much in advance for your understanding, cooperation,
> and assistance.
>
> Regards,
>
> Radium
On Aug 3, 1:52 am, "Lord Turkey Cough" <spamd...@invalid.com> wrote:
> <bill.slo...@ieee.org> wrote in message
>
> news:1185659516.302131.148550@r34g2000hsd.googlegr oups.com...
>
>
>
>
>
> > On Jul 28, 9:01 pm, Radium <gluce...@excite.com> wrote:
> >> Hi All:
<snip>
> > Some people have the idea that text-only interactions are easier for
> > people with Asperger's syndrome.
>
> > Quite a few of the regular posters around here do have trouble with
> > social interactions, so you will probably fit right in.
>
> Speak for yourself you stupid c*nt.
Ony an autistic person would even notice it was cross posted.
It's a highly aytistic trait, obsessive interest in mindly and irrelevant
details whilst completely ignoring wha is relevant and important.
Time you went for an examination.
"CBFalconer" <cbfalconer@yahoo.com> wrote in message
news:46B28862.75B4A857@yahoo.com...
> Lord Turkey Cough wrote: ** and top-posted - fixed **
>> "UCLAN" <nomail@thanks.org> wrote in message
>>> Radium wrote:
>>>
>>>> I have a neurological disability called Asperger's Syndrome.
>>>>
>>>> I would like to give you some information about my disability. The
>>>> reason I am posting this message about Asperger's is to help avoid
>>>> any potential misunderstandings [though it's probably too late].
>>>
>>> Yup. Cross-posting this to six unrelated NGs made that a moot point.
>>
>> An obbsesion with cross posting (detecting rather than doing it) is
>> a highly autistic trait. Ditto for top posting.
>
> True. Only those with small minds avoid the natural systems, and
> fail to truncate excessive cross-posting lists. BTW, PLONK.
>
> --
> "Vista is finally secure from hacking. No one is going to 'hack'
> the product activation and try and steal the o/s. Anyone smart
> enough to do so is also smart enough not to want to bother."
>
>
>
> --
> Posted via a free Usenet account from http://www.teranews.com
>
<bill.sloman@ieee.org> wrote in message
news:1185659516.302131.148550@r34g2000hsd.googlegr oups.com...
> On Jul 28, 9:01 pm, Radium <gluce...@excite.com> wrote:
>> Hi All:
>>
>> I have a neurological disability called Asperger's Syndrome.
>>
>> I would like to give you some information about my disability. The
>> reason I am posting this message about Asperger's is to help avoid any
>> potential misunderstandings [though it's probably too late].
>>
>> I have been diagnosed with Asperger's Syndrome (AS). AS is a
>> neurological condition that causes significant impairment in social
>> interactions. People with AS see the world differently and this can
>> often bring them in conflict with conventional ways of thinking. They
>> have difficulty in reading body language, and interpreting subtle
>> cues. In my situation, I have significant difficulty with natural
>> conversation, reading social cues, and maintaining eye contact. This
>> can lead to a great deal of misunderstanding about my intent or my
>> behavior. For example, I may not always know what to say in social
>> situations, so I may look away or may not say anything. I also may not
>> always respond quickly when asked direct questions, but if given time
>> I am able express my ideas.
>>
>> On Usenet, the text-equivalent of my disability is probably noticed. I
>> do apologize profusely, for any inconvenience it causes.
>
> Some people have the idea that text-only interactions are easier for
> people with Asperger's syndrome.
>
> Quite a few of the regular posters around here do have trouble with
> social interactions, so you will probably fit right in.