Coping: A Survival Guide for People with Asperger Syndrome
Looking on the bright side
- Many things are easier for intelligent autistic people than
they are for non-autistic people.
- Autistic people can be especially good at learning facts,
skills and talents when (A) they want to and (B)
when the right sources are available to them. This can provide
good career prospects and is sometimes enough to compensate for
any disabilities.
- Useful gifts that autistic people might have include
photographic memories, musical talent, heightened awareness of
visual logic and extraordinary potential for computer programming.
- To show consistent punctuality in the workplace and to produce
meticulously accurate high standard work, always meeting deadlines
may earn you extra respect from your manager or supervisor.
- Some people say that honesty is not always the best policy but
if you can recreate the truth accurately to the right people and
yet be able to withhold the truth when confidentiality is needed
your unsurpassable honesty might earn you great respect.
- If you are generally a quiet person who often only speaks when
it is worth while this can sometimes be very welcome in the
workplace.
- Having not been bound all your life by the unwritten rules of
society may have made you a highly original thinker.
- In many situations where non-autistic people might be provoked
or feel intimidated , autistic people can be unaffected and keep a
clear head. You might be completely detached and immune to tense
atmospheres and bad vibes which other people have to suffer. The
problem with this however, will be that you are also immune to
danger signals but this book might help you to recognise them.
- If you wish, you might be able to get formal allowances and
benefits to help you out in life. Try not to see it as cheating.
If you have had a hard enough life then perhaps you deserve this
special consideration. Also, this might come in handy if ever you
need to present yourself in a court of law in which case it may be
a good idea to get the backing of a good psychologist who
understands the problem.
Coping: A Survival Guide for People with Asperger
Syndrome
Title page
Foreword
Introduction
Getting the best from this
book
Worrying
Looking on the bright side
Body language
Distortions of the truth
Conversation
Humour and conflict
Sexually related problems and points about
going out
Finding the right friends
Keeping a clean slate
Coming clean
Education
Living away from home
Jobs and interviews
Driving
Travelling abroad
Opportunities
A Personal in depth analysis of the
problem
Further Reading