Regular reminder that being an asshole is not a symptom of any form of neurodivergence. (You can replace “neurodivergent” with depressed, anxious, bipolar, etc. and the diagram works equally well)

ETA: social faux pas, awkwardness, and genuine symptoms of neurodivergence don’t make you an asshole. I shouldn’t have to say this? An “asshole” is someone who enacts a pattern of abusive, controlling, harassing, and/or harmful behavior with no remorse or concern for how other people are affected.

  • isaacd@lemmy.worldOP
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    4 days ago

    This is true! But there’s a very easy way to tell the difference.

    When you find out you hurt someone’s feelings, do you apologize, express how terrible you feel about it, and try to do better? Not an asshole.

    Do you double down, make excuses, and blame them for feeling bad? Asshole.

    Saying the wrong thing doesn’t make you a jerk. Not caring about other people’s feelings, does.

    • ArbitraryValue@sh.itjust.works
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      4 days ago

      Do you double down, make excuses, and blame them for feeling bad? Asshole.

      I often inconvenience people in a particular way. (I’m very frequently late.) I apologize a lot but then I keep doing the same thing. It’s really hard for me not to, I get why this frustrates people, and I don’t blame anyone who refuses to put up with the inconvenience. However, people often assume that I keep inconveniencing them because I don’t respect them, and I want them to understand that that’s not what’s going on.

      • isaacd@lemmy.worldOP
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        4 days ago

        Hey that’s valid! A good friend of mine has the exact same thing. He’s up front about it, he apologizes when it’s excessive, and he’s more than happy to explain why it’s difficult for him. It’s just a thing, and if I’m going to be his friend, that means accepting it about him.

        In other words, he’s done his best to help me understand him. Now it’s my turn to not be an asshole.