Saturday, October 20, 2012

How I View Differences In Myself And Others

My life has been one gigantic quagmire of compassion, a gigantic structural piece of bringing myself and others back together, making friends out of mere strangers, and making close friends in as short a span of a few days. My own life has been structurally exciting because of the people who have made my life great. Due to my high-level of empathy and structuring the pieces of ingenuity and fully strong comprehension of what people who live to strengthen the lives of others. The point is this: not two people are the same and not everyone makes up the world similarly. It takes all sorts of people to run the world and that's the beauty of it: the necessity of making strong relationships is what makes it a world to thrive on. Because of my autism though, that's the best of it- to see people for who they are and what they bring to the table- a true strength in so many areas. The people who you might've feared a year ago and that you might not of understood a month ago and gotten off on the wrong foot with- that person might end up being your best friend. Honestly, some of my close friends were intimated by me at first- a full hulking 6'5" of muscle and big feet, how can you not? But more importantly, people have changed those notions and I've strengthened my own attitudes as well. Some of the people that I respect the most they've had to earn my respect, but most of them, I trust them until there is a reason not to. People are great just the way they are, and viewing autism as one of my gifts rather than my excuses or explanations or crutches is one of the more important things to continue learning about the community as a whole. Life is fully structuring as we speak to many different ideals. How we perceive our differences make or break us at some points, but I choose my differences and others to coincide and strengthen it more fully and continue to greet people's structuring platforms. AutBott out, stay tuned for a topic soon: trying to consider what challenges lie ahead.

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