I think it's cruel to put up with this kind of behavior and use her disability as a reason to excuse it. Basically, you're enabling her when you could be a true friend by giving her the feedback she needs to possibly one day change her shitty attitude. There's nothing wrong with telling her that you choose to avoid people who say things like that. Maybe she will eventually change. And maybe she won't.
Ask Lemmy
A Fediverse community for open-ended, thought provoking questions
Rules: (interactive)
1) Be nice and; have fun
Doxxing, trolling, sealioning, racism, and toxicity are not welcomed in AskLemmy. Remember what your mother said: if you can't say something nice, don't say anything at all. In addition, the site-wide Lemmy.world terms of service also apply here. Please familiarize yourself with them
2) All posts must end with a '?'
This is sort of like Jeopardy. Please phrase all post titles in the form of a proper question ending with ?
3) No spam
Please do not flood the community with nonsense. Actual suspected spammers will be banned on site. No astroturfing.
4) NSFW is okay, within reason
Just remember to tag posts with either a content warning or a [NSFW] tag. Overtly sexual posts are not allowed, please direct them to either [email protected] or [email protected].
NSFW comments should be restricted to posts tagged [NSFW].
5) This is not a support community.
It is not a place for 'how do I?', type questions.
If you have any questions regarding the site itself or would like to report a community, please direct them to Lemmy.world Support or email [email protected]. For other questions check our partnered communities list, or use the search function.
6) No US Politics.
Please don't post about current US Politics. If you need to do this, try [email protected] or [email protected]
Reminder: The terms of service apply here too.
Partnered Communities:
Logo design credit goes to: tubbadu
you can cut anyone off for any reason.
The only thing I'm looking at is the age 19. A lot of people are stupid when they're 19, including her. It could be that she doesn't have enough life experience to question what she's been taught, so she defaults to what she was taught.
It is up to you to decide to be around her as she grows up and you find out who she will become.
You're gonna see a whooole lot of "ASD here, kick her arse"
Add mine to the pile.
While I know it's not exactly the same situation, bear with me. There's a leadership book called What got you here won't get you there by Marshall Goldsmith.
It's focus on C suite people, their habits, and how their personality affects their career aspects, etc.
The reason I bring it up is because in pointing out characteristic flaws the author talks about how people say, well this is who I am, or I'm just bringing my whole self to work as reasoning for behaving the way they do. Then the author goes on to say how this is an excuse for the unwilling behavior to change as people don't want to change who they are as a person, but rebuts with "is changing this one aspect of how you behave going to drastically change you as a person?"
While I acknowledge that this person is young, I would say that pointing out that not saying anything is an option. She doesn't need to change who she is, just how she behaves and respecting others costs nothing. Additionally, if she is not willing to look at how her behavior hurts others then she is unwilling to mature. Being neurodivergent is not a justified excuse to be mean towards others. While it may be harder for her to understand, explaining that her words hurt people emotionally and asking her why she thinks hurting others is okay could be a good starting point.
It goes back to the old saying, if you don't have something nice to say, don't say anything.
No. Being disabled isn't an excuse for bigotry.
Nah. Being disabled, old, minority or family does not mean you are a good person.
start calling her a he or him. tell her you're under no obligation to refer to her as her preferred pronoun.
after a day or two ask her how it made her feel to have her request denied. then draw the point that what you just did is how she treats people, and they felt the same way she did.
if she demands you to stop, tell her "this is just the way the world is".
Not a bad plan. What parents fail to teach the society must finish.
I mean cut em some slack sure, but don't feel responsible for her actions. It's good that you realise it and as someone with ADHD it's immensely helpful when someone points out obvious things I'm doing wrong.
Executive mental functions thats seemingly normal for you could be impossible for them sometimes. Expect someone like that act matured in another 10 years, unless they fall off a 'cliff'.
Usually society would spit them out much earlier
I can't speak for you, but in my current position, I don't have the mental space for reeducating a person like this so I kinda have to let them go and fall off the cliff as to speak. Hopefully they'll find a way back but it's hard to change bigots.
She doesn't need slack for that. She needs firm redirection. If she's not able to take that, then cut contact.
I suggest you tell her that this is a problem, and that this is affecting your friendship. That if she does not try to educate herself, that you will have to reconsider the friendship.
Tell her that trans people have something called gender dysphoria. Reference Wikipedia and DSM. Prove that this is a real thing. Just like her autism. The best would probably be to just send her a couple of links with a short, but honest take on how this is a problem for you. Let her read it herself om her own time.
The last thing you should do is let the friendship end without talking to her. Its important to confront people, and give them a chance to change their mind. People deserve that.
I can't understand your situation but, I personally would be cutting contact regardless of disability. Nothing stated effects your decision making process, they are willingly having those values even if they may not understand the impact of their decision, I would rather stay far away.
Being "mentally much younger" is not an excuse to be an asshole. I've personally known five and six year olds who understand quite well that some people love and marry people the same gender as themselves, and also accept being corrected on whether someone is "he," "she," or even "they."
Bigotry isn't natural, it's learned behavior you can accept and reinforce through your responses to her, attempt to correct, or simply judge her by and decide whether or not to continue involving her in your life.
(If Ella isn't capable of matching the mental age of a toddler, the help she needs is probably beyond your ability or responsibility to provide.)
Ask her if her parents jumped off a cliff if she'd do it too.
No, it didn't answer your question, nor is it helpful or useful advice. I just think it'd be funny and her parents absolutely used it on her at some point... it's a mandatory phrase all parents are legally required to say to their kids at least once. It's part of the contract you sign when the hospital gives you a baby.
Hi! I'm also a lady with au/ADHD.
Ella is a twat. Having a disability/handicap does excuse dehumanizing someone else. She can be hateful with her parents if she really wants, but don't tolerate that shit.
She's on a slippery slope for a larger part of society to start dehumanizing her based on her diagnosis/identity, too. Glass houses, I guess. 💅
On a slightly related note, some kid I went to school with constantly got away with touching girls inappropriately because he blamed it on his ADHD. He gleefully kept getting away with it. It was absolutely disgusting. He graduated and ended up going to prison a couple years later. Turns out, "it was my ADHD!" is not a viable defense in the real world! 🤡
Reminds me of Rosanne when she tweeted racism and then blamed it on Xanax. Guess what she does now? Hint, it's not TV and it involves a red hat.
Turns out, being a shitty person makes you a shitty person. Who knew?
My brother in laws little sibling is pretty autistic and has a history of being semi-trans-not-understanding..? He saw someone who is a trans male and started HRT a few months ago (i.e. does not fully pass yet) and when he saw the trans man and was told that he was a man he said "but he looks like a girl..?"
for context my brother in law is ALSO trans and has been fully out and passing for like 5 years (beard n all), so he should've understood what it was like for 'trans man' to be like his brother.
He's done this with a nonbinary person too, but tbf most people don't understand how nonbinary works without autism.
What I'm trying to say here is that there's a difference between hate and not understanding. Sounds like the person you're talking about is being hateful, so have no shame in cutting contact.
Also if you don't feel comfortable with someone you don't need an excuse to yourself to justify leaving.
Part of growing up is challenging the ideas you got from your parents and learning to treat people with the respect you'd like them to use with you. If she wants to continue being friends she needs to do this part of growing up.
she's guilty, mental illness doesn't mean total inability, they can learn and they should have empathy
I'm no psychologist but I'm pretty sure there's no disability that makes you a bigot.
I think you have to decide who you want to hang out with. Do you hang out with people a lot younger. If not why? Im guessing likely because they are immature, no?
Is there a reason you have to interact with this person? It seems like if you're in a situation where her response comes with an LOL, your best course might be just to not engage. If you're in a position of responsibility with teaching her how to interact then gently repeating that respecting how someone would like to be addressed is probably warranted, even if it doesn't seem terribly effective the first (many) times.
Cutting someone slack doesn't mean letting them go on behaving badly, it means understanding they need help to behave better.