Funny how culture shapes perception. As a German that sentence didn't even strike me as overly long.
torpak
I'm quite useless for at least the first one and a half hours after waking up. My strategy is ritualization. In this time I do the same things in the same order every working day: I get up, make breakfast for our cat, take my meds, switch on the coffee machine so it can heat up, shower, shave, brush my teeth, dress, emty the dish washer, make coffee for my self and (if she is already awake) one for my wife. Then pack my lunch, grab my headphones and go to the bus stop. All those things I can do with minimal brain capacity since I have done them the same way thousands of times. And when I arrive at work I'm at least 80% awake.
The only thing that surprises me is that anyone is surprised by this. If you buy a physical book from anywhere, you own it. If you "buy" the rigth to play a movie (or read a book) from amazon, you own nothing. Usually they don't show that so clearly but that's the reality.
I'm sad to admit it but those are not mutaly exclusive.
I don't exactly understand what is remarkable here. But maybe that is because I'm not from the USA.
I (AuDHD diagnosed last year) am very glad that I met my wife (NT as far as we know) in the 90s. I think that was a more forgiving time. Since i'm completely clueless in regards to flirting, non verbal signals and reading between the lines, my (now) wife had to basically ask me to kiss her for me to realize that she might be interested in me. So I can't really give advice other than: be friendly and wait for the rigth person to choose you. Regarding personality types I can say that I'm often indecisive and tend to overthink things while my wife is very practical and a bit dominant. It works rather well for us.
I recently found out that it's not common to always buy the same brand of generic food types like apple juice, fish fingers, cereal,...
I have never owned or operated a car and this doesn't really make me want to.
I'm German myself but since I am a programmer I like the US-Keyboard more than the German one. The easy fix for me was using US-intl-nodeadkeys so I can use the right alt key to type those stupid German umlauts. This should work at least for most (Western-)European languages.