Anonymous wrote:DCUM often uses it to mean neurodivergent.
In prior world use, it meant the kid who was heavily into theater, musicals, rode a unicycle, did mime, was into folkdance group, did standup comedy or slam poetry, etc.
Anonymous wrote:People frequently say their DC is quirky. I know the dictionary definition, but usage here seems different from "strange" or "odd". What does it mean here?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think strange and odd are more pejorative. Quirky is more someone who beats to their own drum. Possibly (probably?) but not necessarily neurodiverse. I have one like this who doesn’t have any formal dx but has different interests from the rest of her kids in MS. She’s bookish, loves plants/gardening, loves mountain biking, never uses her phone, doesn’t wear anything remotely trendy (such as jeans, tank tops, hoodies, lululemon, cool sneakers -she wears Merrells and t shirts from vacations or dh SEC alma mater). She has a handful of nice friends, does great in school - shes no harder or less happy than my other two more conventional kids. I wouldn’t be surprised if down the road she gets an autism or adhd dx but I have had her evaluated and there was no finding of either
She’s not autistic. I don’t know why so many people want to diagnose their child as autistic because they aren’t basic. I’d be happy if I had a child that fit that description. She sounds great, you didn’t describe one trait that would describe a person with autism and you should feel nothing but pride.
Respectfully, boiling down the spectrum of neurodivergence to “basic” vs “autistic” is absolutely ridiculous
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's got a negative connotation in the DMV. If you picked up that person and placed them down in NYC, PDX, or SF, they'd be celebrated for their oddities.
Not true at all- weird is weird everywhere
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think of it as an artsy kid with purple hair and docs.
You just described my kid 🤣🤣
Anonymous wrote:I think of it as an artsy kid with purple hair and docs.
Anonymous wrote:It's got a negative connotation in the DMV. If you picked up that person and placed them down in NYC, PDX, or SF, they'd be celebrated for their oddities.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think strange and odd are more pejorative. Quirky is more someone who beats to their own drum. Possibly (probably?) but not necessarily neurodiverse. I have one like this who doesn’t have any formal dx but has different interests from the rest of her kids in MS. She’s bookish, loves plants/gardening, loves mountain biking, never uses her phone, doesn’t wear anything remotely trendy (such as jeans, tank tops, hoodies, lululemon, cool sneakers -she wears Merrells and t shirts from vacations or dh SEC alma mater). She has a handful of nice friends, does great in school - shes no harder or less happy than my other two more conventional kids. I wouldn’t be surprised if down the road she gets an autism or adhd dx but I have had her evaluated and there was no finding of either
She’s not autistic. I don’t know why so many people want to diagnose their child as autistic because they aren’t basic. I’d be happy if I had a child that fit that description. She sounds great, you didn’t describe one trait that would describe a person with autism and you should feel nothing but pride.