This post has been de-listed
It is no longer included in search results and normal feeds (front page, hot posts, subreddit posts, etc). It remains visible only via the author's post history.
This request is coming a little open ended because I want to declare my intentions quite clearly. I am working on a project with my therapist that will ultimately result in a book. It will be a fictional story, but it will allow me to tell my past without having to actually deal with the consequences in the long run.
I would love to add a female character with ASPD as well, since I've read and heard that their interaction with the disorder does not come across like males. If you think that this is incorrect, or if you have some stories, experiences, insight... anything is welcome and will help me be able to write this character much better than these bullshit "specialists" that keep saying we're all monsters. This will be a passion project, and will probably never actually leave mine and my therapist's computers. Thank you in advance.
Ahh gotcha. I kinda have a similar experience. I more was trying to say that my exes would describe things as being "amazing, until it's not." It's more of a gradual thing in my head, but I guess it doesn't come off that way to others I'm around.
Subreddit
Post Details
- Posted
- 3 years ago
- Reddit URL
- View post on reddit.com
- External URL
- reddit.com/r/aspd/commen...
lmao kinda sounds like how most of my exes would describe me. Everything's amazing, until it's not.
As far as I can tell, the main difference that sometimes exists between males and females with ASPD is that females are less likely to be overtly intimidating physically or mentally. I at least know that I do not have the physical ability to win most fights, and being "cute" gets me what I want more often than more abrasive behaviors.