I agree. For me, the problem has always been the socialization and difficulty in working with others/communication, rather than the actual tasks themselves. Unfortunately, in the vast majority of workplace environments that's enough to undermine one's job and even a whole career. I decided to leave the office environment and instead began working from home as a freelance writer. Even then, I have some difficulties with effectively communicating with editors, etc. but it is worlds better than anything else I've ever tried doing. Supposedly, my writing skill helps make up for my lack of tact or social awareness. In an office environment, that is decidedly NOT the case!
Yes and no. There are some caveats to that. How many hours you can do as an aspie, and which roles you can take up. But yes, there is a place for us in most work places in some capacity.
I excelled in the Army. Do what you're told, and work on what you're bad at. I got promoted really fast and Belonged for the first time in my life. My last career was in aerospace as a tech. It was absolute hell. Very high visibility and high stress. I'm working on my cyber security pen tester degree and certs right now. This is a solo care mostly..I hope. A meeting or two a day and that's it.
Been a train driver since the age of 35, and a damned good one. Drove in Sydney for 13 years and now Melbourne. Best job ever. You know well in advance exactly what you're going to do each day. Limited interaction with passengers, and easy to slip into the 'role' each day, and no deciding what to wear because the uniform is provided Most challenging parts are the downtime and social interactions with other drivers, but they're mostly a good bunch and it's easy to slip away to a quiet corner somewhere and just do your own thing -- as I am doing right now, and they don't really care. I think a few of us are on the spectrum.
Great job, this was a good idea. My favorite job was technical jobs - Quality Assurance - I love breaking new software and finding all the bugs as well as computer forensics - something that involves intense concentration and detail. BTW - I like your new hair cut.
I worked in retail and customer service for many years, and it was definitely a poor fit. I was often irritable and unintentionally rude, and I developed a bad reputation. Thankfully, I now work from home. I'm a patient navigator who calls COVID patients, interviews them about their experiences, arranges for them to be contacted by contact tracers, and sends them isolation release letters. I like it, because I'm in my safe space (home), plus I often speak Spanish (a special interest). The downside is that dealing with so many people can be exhausting.
Wherehouse picking and packing sounds great!!!....I love to have things organized and that is organizing things in a box!!!....Enjoyed this video, thanks!!!
I like task and deadline type of jobs..where I work, basically on my own. My favorite job was making dentures..There was precision involved as well as art skills to make the 'teeth' look as natural as possible.
I’m 61. I learned I am an Aspie than a year ago. But now it all makes so much sense. My favorite job before my current career was like some of your others, a cab driver. Now, I am an Emergency nurse. The reason I love them both so much is for something I have told people most of my life. They both employ, “hi, nice to meet you. How can I help you? Happy I could help you. Goodbye.” I can get my social interaction in very short bursts, meet some cool people, learn some cool things about them, and then be done with them. 😂
I’m an MD, family medicine in a rural city. I specifically asked to be allocated in the rural area of my city, instead of working at the Healthcare Unit downtown, mostly because the horns of the trucks and cars going by the main street simply drive me insane, and the excessive flow of people (even if they are not for me to see, too much people around is too damn much).I also do a weekly 24h ER shift at the local hospital (unlike the healthcare unit, the hospital was build on a side road and doesn’t get any traffic except of people that specifically go there. It also located besides a huge Yam Farm that I get to contemplate from the window of the medical office. I have always been a scientifically-oriented student, got straight 10’s (here grades go from 0 to 10), loved natura sciences, so I ended up applying for the Medical course at 18 as soon as I finished school. Once in, at the medical course I basically HAD to learn to talk to people (fake it until you make it). I am very quick in my job (seeing patients) and strive for objetive diagnosing and placing of treatment. I have no patience with the psychiatric ones, they ramble and don’t get to the point. The best about seeing a patient is that I direct the conversation, going through those invisible charts with diagnostic criteria in my mind toco-me up to a conclusion, along the treatment to be done. I absolutely pride myself intaking a fast pace and literally getting rid of them quickly AND with a correct diagnosis, not because I don’t care, but because I get drained and exhausted if I let them take reign and ramble at will (this applies to both jobs - Family Medicine and Emergency). I do plan however to eventually quit family medicine and remain only with one weekly hospital shift at some point in my life: I am investing in cattle and if it pays off, I might reduce the load of contact I have with people to stat managing our cattle. Cows are the best people. Humans annoy and tire me to no end. Mostly I like to be around my family, that I believe are all in the spectrum (one brother more than the other, and even my mom). We are also all atheists in our family, so people are specially annoying because they can’t accept we don’t believe. I don’t dare tell the patients I don’t believe in god, they might be too upset of me, and I currently can’t afford to not work. Most of Mysore colleagues know though, I make a point of telling them so they don’t insist in me going to church,. I love going to Cathedrals, they are beautiful, but don’t make me sit through mass or cults with all those people surrounding me while the minister/priest is there talking crap I can’t believe in. The point is, though, medicine is a good field for aspergers because the structure of the anamnesis (the process through which we collect data from the patients) happens to guide your work and it becomes automatic, which greatly contributes for the work being tolerable and sometimes even enjoyable. Some things we see at the ER that can’t be unseen, most of the times cool things. Even though there is a structure sequence of questions you follow through, each patient has their own problems and it’s never completely dull.
I’m an MD too, nephrology. People in med school tried to tell me I’d never be able to be a doctor because I couldn’t interact with others. The fact is, I have a loyal following of patients and am getting lots of referrals. I have had many patients tell me they appreciate how I thoroughly explain things to them and how I am honest with them. And one of the reasons we can actually do well in medicine is because we take time to go over details so we can come up with a diagnosis and suitable treatment plan. Unfortunately, our field is packed with a lot of narrow-minded bigots who think all doctors have to be neurotypical and being neurodiverse is some sort of weakness or liability.
Great video! Psychology is a fantastic job for an aspie because of heightened levels of affective empathy. Fair mindedness and literalism work well in a therapeutic encounter - an aspie therapist doesn't make any assumptions about the client and takes him or her at face value. Also, there is plenty of scope for research and teaching etc if psychology is a special interest.
Great video!! I have enjoyed working 5 different types of job, actually.. (1) translating, commercial/technical/legal: precise on the detail, people understand when you tell them to shut up and go away, and because my memory is mainly visual, it's simply switching the tags on things that I understand...(note: NOT interpreting which is verbal instead of written, where you have to listen with one ear and speak the other language while the other person is talking. That does not happen). (2) teaching, particularly entry-level ESL: class size is limited, the courses repeat and what you need to do is defined; (3) relocations - checking out a geographic area and assembling the information a new transferee will find useful, then giving a one-on-one, at most one-on-two briefing.. also, in new geographic areas, searching out real estate agents for a good housing/school/work commute fit.; (4) Admin work, in an office by myself handling what comes in and all the paperwork needed for various processes.. assembling & collating information. (5) writing, non-fiction, mainly magazine articles on topics I have pitched and explored on my own. From your video, I suspect my ex is also on the spectrum, he's in accounting / financial control, very detailed and unemotional, and our son tells me that when he left his last job they had to hire 3 people to do what he had been doing single-handedly because he enjoyed it. I would recommend "Understand Myself", a personality analysis that can help you think about what you can and can't do in a very non-judgmental way. Jordan Peterson and a group have drawn it up. "You will see below where you stand in comparison to others in the general population on the major traits and their aspects: Agreeableness: Compassion and Politeness, Conscientiousness: Industriousness and Orderliness, Extraversion: Enthusiasm and Assertiveness, Neuroticism: Withdrawal and Volatility, Openness to Experience: Openness and Intellect"...because all those vary - I'm intensely curious about the world, but without intending it am seen as not very polite, etc.; I'm very open to new ideas, assertive and don't back down, but not volatile (aka, avoid making a scene), it explains a lot about the jobs that I have held successfully, and those areas that have gotten me out of a job. Check it out at www.understandmyself.com/
Nurse, in the operating room, at night. Low case load, one patient at a time and 98% of the time they are asleep., ha! I have my cleaning and instrument stocking routine. Mostly getting stuff for the surgeons, so memorizing where supplies are and getting them as quickly as possible.
I’m an aspie, so is my husband he is a veteran from the Navy he thrived in the navy he misses that experience though he also has excelled in his career as a network/software engineer also.
Engineering is super stressful. Your hard work and dedication will be rewarded by your coworkers (and boss) dumping the most difficult and intractable problems on you, with insufficient time and resources to solve them (setup to fail). People will take advantage of you, and turn around and throw you under the bus if anything goes wrong. People suck.
Are you sure your name isn’t Eric 😂 that is 100% my spouse he is a network/software engineer now working for Verizon it’s always praise when do this or that, help this or that or if he’s stuck in a low battery faze from them draining him he feels upset cause they say rude things cause he’s not FULL on 24/7 for them to use:(
"BS" actually stands for "bullshit" so I assume this is a way of saying they don't like dealing with the emotional or dramatic aspects of social interaction with customers.
Well, of course there is the usual way to deal with anything which doesn't fit the rules: the wildcard rule, i.e., the rule that someone can break my rules. I use it a lot to get through the day.
I worked in an office, loved putting everything in order. Then worked from home doing massage, currently buying and selling (from garage sales, antiques etc). Was my happiest when I housesat (I still earned a small wage) but loved minding people's pets and having total privacy, turning up in a new town where no one knew me! Was the best!
Aaron Daniel Donaldson this is what I am. Behind the scenes working with the test samples is great, but working with the public to obtain them, not so much.
Better yet, a research lab tech, if you can cope with having to speak to one or two higher-ups or PhD students once in awhile to get instructions. That way no public to collect samples from ! But myself, I stopped because I was too isolated, not from people but from the outside, I felt like I was in a box ! I really wanted to be a crime scene lab tech when I was younger and I would have rocked at it and I can bear gruesome sight, no one wants to do that job really (they just liked it because of the show CSI). But the day I was to be tested for that job (there are only 2 jobs at most every few years that become available in my country), I could not go because of lack of transportation, and let it go.
Wish there was something permanent in video games. Nothing out here in AZ for game tester. I've done Quality Assurance jobs mostly retail anything away from cashier and people. Stocking and unboxing things was fun got boring I always wanted a career with something though. Thinking about Navy but I think I'm too caring and compassionate. Plus I had the military life growing up. Not sure would love to work in the police force. Mostly amazing at video games, computers, graphic design and art.
This was very interesting and helpful. I’m being pushed out of my teaching career due to burn out and bullying. Does anyone have experience in the United States post office? I’d like to hear about it. Thank you!
I've always been into photography/videography which I'm tryna create self employment out of so I have my own business within those fields which is why I created a youtube channel.... But off topic I really feel you need to get abit more better quality camera and microphone as to what you can afford.... Atleast that's better quality than what you've got now. I find the quality of the videos you do annoying but that's my problem to deal with not yours lol. But I would suggest now that you have more viewers is to upgrade the quality of your video and audio so as people get the best quality videos from you which shows you're putting the effort into your videos in my personal opinion. I'm not saying get the best camera and mic out there as I don't have the best camera and mic for my channel but having more better quality videos and audio helps you grow as people are seeing you're putting in the effort for them to enjoy the videos they watch of yours. But thanks for the entertaining video anyways I do enjoy your content it's just the quality of the video and audio that annoys me lol.... But keep up the good work.
For me i was a licensed social worker for ten uears with MSW ect. I thought my prblems centered around ADD. then whilenstuding for my LISW ( independent billing ability of insurance hehehee) i discovered ASBURGERS. I work as a security officer for officers that get sick. I gives me variety that i like in terms of my interests and routine likes ect. Though it is work and i would like something better to do but appreciate would i know about my wiring so to speak.
I am currently looking for a new career because my current one is draining me too much with long hours and crazy three-customers-at-once !! Does anyone has insight about Aspies in the leather and shoe-making small businesses ? I recently got interesting in leather work because of some shoes I bought and I realised our neighbour town is a specialist of luxury leather accessories making so I could probably get teaching to be employed there but I don't want something outside of my limits (physical and mental).
I work on public transport with people who have autism, lol. It's repetitive, structured and I can relate to my clients and give them the service they require. Because it's repetitive, and it involves travel, it gives me the freedom to contemplate unified theory www.tinyurl.com/aunifiedtheory and fragrance system design on the move; and between shifts waiting for the bus ride home.
Well linguistics is different than speaking multiple languages. Linguists do scientific research for languages. But I like to learn languages, create them, and the scientific parts of it
This really does emphasize the point that being an Aspie is, in and of itself, no handicap to most any occupation.
As the French say, "Mais oui!"
I agree. For me, the problem has always been the socialization and difficulty in working with others/communication, rather than the actual tasks themselves. Unfortunately, in the vast majority of workplace environments that's enough to undermine one's job and even a whole career. I decided to leave the office environment and instead began working from home as a freelance writer. Even then, I have some difficulties with effectively communicating with editors, etc. but it is worlds better than anything else I've ever tried doing. Supposedly, my writing skill helps make up for my lack of tact or social awareness. In an office environment, that is decidedly NOT the case!
Yes and no. There are some caveats to that. How many hours you can do as an aspie, and which roles you can take up. But yes, there is a place for us in most work places in some capacity.
I excelled in the Army. Do what you're told, and work on what you're bad at. I got promoted really fast and Belonged for the first time in my life.
My last career was in aerospace as a tech. It was absolute hell. Very high visibility and high stress.
I'm working on my cyber security pen tester degree and certs right now. This is a solo care mostly..I hope. A meeting or two a day and that's it.
Been a train driver since the age of 35, and a damned good one. Drove in Sydney for 13 years and now Melbourne. Best job ever. You know well in advance exactly what you're going to do each day. Limited interaction with passengers, and easy to slip into the 'role' each day, and no deciding what to wear because the uniform is provided Most challenging parts are the downtime and social interactions with other drivers, but they're mostly a good bunch and it's easy to slip away to a quiet corner somewhere and just do your own thing -- as I am doing right now, and they don't really care. I think a few of us are on the spectrum.
Great job, this was a good idea. My favorite job was technical jobs - Quality Assurance - I love breaking new software and finding all the bugs as well as computer forensics - something that involves intense concentration and detail. BTW - I like your new hair cut.
I worked in retail and customer service for many years, and it was definitely a poor fit. I was often irritable and unintentionally rude, and I developed a bad reputation. Thankfully, I now work from home. I'm a patient navigator who calls COVID patients, interviews them about their experiences, arranges for them to be contacted by contact tracers, and sends them isolation release letters. I like it, because I'm in my safe space (home), plus I often speak Spanish (a special interest). The downside is that dealing with so many people can be exhausting.
I move furniture. I get to travel,excersize and packing a truck with all that odd shaped stuff is so satisfying. Like a giant game of tetris.
Wherehouse picking and packing sounds great!!!....I love to have things organized and that is organizing things in a box!!!....Enjoyed this video, thanks!!!
I like task and deadline type of jobs..where I work, basically on my own. My favorite job was making dentures..There was precision involved as well as art skills to make the 'teeth' look as natural as possible.
I’m 61. I learned I am an Aspie than a year ago. But now it all makes so much sense. My favorite job before my current career was like some of your others, a cab driver. Now, I am an Emergency nurse. The reason I love them both so much is for something I have told people most of my life. They both employ, “hi, nice to meet you. How can I help you? Happy I could help you. Goodbye.”
I can get my social interaction in very short bursts, meet some cool people, learn some cool things about them, and then be done with them. 😂
I’m an MD, family medicine in a rural city. I specifically asked to be allocated in the rural area of my city, instead of working at the Healthcare Unit downtown, mostly because the horns of the trucks and cars going by the main street simply drive me insane, and the excessive flow of people (even if they are not for me to see, too much people around is too damn much).I also do a weekly 24h ER shift at the local hospital (unlike the healthcare unit, the hospital was build on a side road and doesn’t get any traffic except of people that specifically go there. It also located besides a huge Yam Farm that I get to contemplate from the window of the medical office.
I have always been a scientifically-oriented student, got straight 10’s (here grades go from 0 to 10), loved natura sciences, so I ended up applying for the Medical course at 18 as soon as I finished school. Once in, at the medical course I basically HAD to learn to talk to people (fake it until you make it).
I am very quick in my job (seeing patients) and strive for objetive diagnosing and placing of treatment. I have no patience with the psychiatric ones, they ramble and don’t get to the point. The best about seeing a patient is that I direct the conversation, going through those invisible charts with diagnostic criteria in my mind toco-me up to a conclusion, along the treatment to be done. I absolutely pride myself intaking a fast pace and literally getting rid of them quickly AND with a correct diagnosis, not because I don’t care, but because I get drained and exhausted if I let them take reign and ramble at will (this applies to both jobs - Family Medicine and Emergency).
I do plan however to eventually quit family medicine and remain only with one weekly hospital shift at some point in my life: I am investing in cattle and if it pays off, I might reduce the load of contact I have with people to stat managing our cattle. Cows are the best people. Humans annoy and tire me to no end. Mostly I like to be around my family, that I believe are all in the spectrum (one brother more than the other, and even my mom).
We are also all atheists in our family, so people are specially annoying because they can’t accept we don’t believe. I don’t dare tell the patients I don’t believe in god, they might be too upset of me, and I currently can’t afford to not work. Most of Mysore colleagues know though, I make a point of telling them so they don’t insist in me going to church,. I love going to Cathedrals, they are beautiful, but don’t make me sit through mass or cults with all those people surrounding me while the minister/priest is there talking crap I can’t believe in.
The point is, though, medicine is a good field for aspergers because the structure of the anamnesis (the process through which we collect data from the patients) happens to guide your work and it becomes automatic, which greatly contributes for the work being tolerable and sometimes even enjoyable. Some things we see at the ER that can’t be unseen, most of the times cool things. Even though there is a structure sequence of questions you follow through, each patient has their own problems and it’s never completely dull.
I’m an MD too, nephrology. People in med school tried to tell me I’d never be able to be a doctor because I couldn’t interact with others. The fact is, I have a loyal following of patients and am getting lots of referrals. I have had many patients tell me they appreciate how I thoroughly explain things to them and how I am honest with them. And one of the reasons we can actually do well in medicine is because we take time to go over details so we can come up with a diagnosis and suitable treatment plan. Unfortunately, our field is packed with a lot of narrow-minded bigots who think all doctors have to be neurotypical and being neurodiverse is some sort of weakness or liability.
Great video! Psychology is a fantastic job for an aspie because of heightened levels of affective empathy. Fair mindedness and literalism work well in a therapeutic encounter - an aspie therapist doesn't make any assumptions about the client and takes him or her at face value. Also, there is plenty of scope for research and teaching etc if psychology is a special interest.
Trying to find a job. Waiting for a call back from the interview. Fingers crossed.
As an aspie I took a job as a carpenter, it is extremely rewarding, and my "hyperproductivity" is highly sought after in my company.
Great video!! I have enjoyed working 5 different types of job, actually.. (1) translating, commercial/technical/legal: precise on the detail, people understand when you tell them to shut up and go away, and because my memory is mainly visual, it's simply switching the tags on things that I understand...(note: NOT interpreting which is verbal instead of written, where you have to listen with one ear and speak the other language while the other person is talking. That does not happen). (2) teaching, particularly entry-level ESL: class size is limited, the courses repeat and what you need to do is defined; (3) relocations - checking out a geographic area and assembling the information a new transferee will find useful, then giving a one-on-one, at most one-on-two briefing.. also, in new geographic areas, searching out real estate agents for a good housing/school/work commute fit.; (4) Admin work, in an office by myself handling what comes in and all the paperwork needed for various processes.. assembling & collating information. (5) writing, non-fiction, mainly magazine articles on topics I have pitched and explored on my own. From your video, I suspect my ex is also on the spectrum, he's in accounting / financial control, very detailed and unemotional, and our son tells me that when he left his last job they had to hire 3 people to do what he had been doing single-handedly because he enjoyed it.
I would recommend "Understand Myself", a personality analysis that can help you think about what you can and can't do in a very non-judgmental way. Jordan Peterson and a group have drawn it up. "You will see below where you stand in comparison to others in the general population on the major traits and their aspects: Agreeableness: Compassion and Politeness, Conscientiousness: Industriousness and Orderliness, Extraversion: Enthusiasm and Assertiveness, Neuroticism: Withdrawal and Volatility, Openness to Experience: Openness and Intellect"...because all those vary - I'm intensely curious about the world, but without intending it am seen as not very polite, etc.; I'm very open to new ideas, assertive and don't back down, but not volatile (aka, avoid making a scene), it explains a lot about the jobs that I have held successfully, and those areas that have gotten me out of a job. Check it out at www.understandmyself.com/
Nurse, in the operating room, at night. Low case load, one patient at a time and 98% of the time they are asleep., ha! I have my cleaning and instrument stocking routine. Mostly getting stuff for the surgeons, so memorizing where supplies are and getting them as quickly as possible.
I love your hair. It looks so soft and nice color.
I’m an aspie, so is my husband he is a veteran from the Navy he thrived in the navy he misses that experience though he also has excelled in his career as a network/software engineer also.
Engineering is super stressful. Your hard work and dedication will be rewarded by your coworkers (and boss) dumping the most difficult and intractable problems on you, with insufficient time and resources to solve them (setup to fail). People will take advantage of you, and turn around and throw you under the bus if anything goes wrong. People suck.
Are you sure your name isn’t Eric 😂 that is 100% my spouse he is a network/software engineer now working for Verizon it’s always praise when do this or that, help this or that or if he’s stuck in a low battery faze from them draining him he feels upset cause they say rude things cause he’s not FULL on 24/7 for them to use:(
Yes. I just came out of the engineering world. It was by far the worst job I've ever had.
"BS" actually stands for "bullshit" so I assume this is a way of saying they don't like dealing with the emotional or dramatic aspects of social interaction with customers.
I agree with your BS definition.
Well, of course there is the usual way to deal with anything which doesn't fit the rules: the wildcard rule, i.e., the rule that someone can break my rules. I use it a lot to get through the day.
I worked in an office, loved putting everything in order. Then worked from home doing massage, currently buying and selling (from garage sales, antiques etc). Was my happiest when I housesat (I still earned a small wage) but loved minding people's pets and having total privacy, turning up in a new town where no one knew me! Was the best!
I've done city bus driving, law enforcement, Uber, loss prevention and inside sales as well as medical assisting
I recommend medical laboratory scientist/technician (MLS/MLT)
Aaron Daniel Donaldson this is what I am. Behind the scenes working with the test samples is great, but working with the public to obtain them, not so much.
Better yet, a research lab tech, if you can cope with having to speak to one or two higher-ups or PhD students once in awhile to get instructions. That way no public to collect samples from ! But myself, I stopped because I was too isolated, not from people but from the outside, I felt like I was in a box !
I really wanted to be a crime scene lab tech when I was younger and I would have rocked at it and I can bear gruesome sight, no one wants to do that job really (they just liked it because of the show CSI). But the day I was to be tested for that job (there are only 2 jobs at most every few years that become available in my country), I could not go because of lack of transportation, and let it go.
It’s hard for me being an Aspie with a learning disability that slows my ability to pick tasks up quickly. It’s so hard to get a job. Any job :(
Me too. It's so difficult. Especially now that everything hinges on being social.
Very interesting. Well made video.
wonderful video...thanks!
Wish there was something permanent in video games. Nothing out here in AZ for game tester.
I've done Quality Assurance jobs mostly retail anything away from cashier and people. Stocking and unboxing things was fun got boring I always wanted a career with something though. Thinking about Navy but I think I'm too caring and compassionate. Plus I had the military life growing up. Not sure would love to work in the police force. Mostly amazing at video games, computers, graphic design and art.
This was very interesting and helpful. I’m being pushed out of my teaching career due to burn out and bullying. Does anyone have experience in the United States post office? I’d like to hear about it. Thank you!
I've always been into photography/videography which I'm tryna create self employment out of so I have my own business within those fields which is why I created a youtube channel....
But off topic I really feel you need to get abit more better quality camera and microphone as to what you can afford.... Atleast that's better quality than what you've got now.
I find the quality of the videos you do annoying but that's my problem to deal with not yours lol.
But I would suggest now that you have more viewers is to upgrade the quality of your video and audio so as people get the best quality videos from you which shows you're putting the effort into your videos in my personal opinion.
I'm not saying get the best camera and mic out there as I don't have the best camera and mic for my channel but having more better quality videos and audio helps you grow as people are seeing you're putting in the effort for them to enjoy the videos they watch of yours.
But thanks for the entertaining video anyways I do enjoy your content it's just the quality of the video and audio that annoys me lol....
But keep up the good work.
Wisconsin jobs where live my son 29 years work at few jobs but. I thought a training for a job may be the way my son can get a job
The heavy tunning out I can hear in all of this just makes me giggle a bit. But I get it.
It’s tuning out the outside world while your inside world is having an adventure, party of thought 😂
For me i was a licensed social worker for ten uears with MSW ect. I thought my prblems centered around ADD. then whilenstuding for my LISW ( independent billing ability of insurance hehehee) i discovered ASBURGERS. I work as a security officer for officers that get sick. I gives me variety that i like in terms of my interests and routine likes ect. Though it is work and i would like something better to do but appreciate would i know about my wiring so to speak.
Sounds good, just a shame that I can never get past the job interview
Haha! This is funny! (It is sarcasm, right?)
Rick Kikta
Nope, just a (hopefully) funny statement of fact
charimonfanboy Well, in that case, for it to be funny to me, it depends on why you can't get past an interview. Why can't you?
Rick Kikta
Lack of eye contact, inability to read people and lack of social skills mostly.
Rick Kikta
1 second ago
charimonfanboy
I like your wit, and your apparent succinct communication style. Both employable traits.
I am currently looking for a new career because my current one is draining me too much with long hours and crazy three-customers-at-once !! Does anyone has insight about Aspies in the leather and shoe-making small businesses ? I recently got interesting in leather work because of some shoes I bought and I realised our neighbour town is a specialist of luxury leather accessories making so I could probably get teaching to be employed there but I don't want something outside of my limits (physical and mental).
Hi there! Great video! BS stands for bullshit. Take care! ☺
I work on public transport with people who have autism, lol. It's repetitive, structured and I can relate to my clients and give them the service they require. Because it's repetitive, and it involves travel, it gives me the freedom to contemplate unified theory
www.tinyurl.com/aunifiedtheory
and fragrance system design on the move; and between shifts waiting for the bus ride home.
Only seeing this now. 1:48: BS stands for Bullshit.
my crush is autistic too and he is a super successful Business Leader. he buys companies! :)
💕
No linguists :(
Lol oh yes. I’m undiagnosed. But speak Italian, English, French and basic German lol
Well linguistics is different than speaking multiple languages. Linguists do scientific research for languages. But I like to learn languages, create them, and the scientific parts of it
I had to google translate the last one is that romanian?
Linguists is what you asked about tho....
J.K. I have a hebrew alphabet on my phone. I have an apple phone though
Electricians?
Bs means bull shit
.B.S. means "bull shit"
1:47 Bullshit
Bs means bullshit :(
BS stands for Bullsh*t